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+The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Maids of Paradise, by Robert W. (Robert
+William) Chambers
+
+
+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: The Maids of Paradise
+
+
+Author: Robert W. (Robert William) Chambers
+
+
+
+Release Date: March 9, 2009 [eBook #28295]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MAIDS OF PARADISE***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Roger Frank and the Project Gutenberg Online
+Distributed Proofreading Canada Team (http://www.pgdpcanada.net)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 28295-h.htm or 28295-h.zip:
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/8/2/9/28295/28295-h/28295-h.htm)
+ or
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/8/2/9/28295/28295-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MAIDS OF PARADISE
+
+A Novel
+
+by
+
+ROBERT W. CHAMBERS
+
+Author of "Cardigan" "The Conspirators" "Maid-at-Arms" etc.
+
+Illustrated
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: "'LOOK THERE!' SHE CRIED, IN TERROR" [See p. 81]]
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+New York and London
+Harper & Brothers
+Publishers 1903
+
+Copyright, 1902, by Robert W. Chambers.
+All rights reserved.
+
+Published September, 1903.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+As far as the writer knows, no treasure-trains were actually sent to
+the port of Lorient from the arsenal at Brest. The treasures remained
+at Brest.
+
+Concerning the German armored cruiser _Augusta_, the following are the
+facts: About the middle of December she forced the blockade at
+Wilhelmshafen and ran for Ireland, where, owing to the complaisance of
+the British authorities, she was permitted to coal.
+
+From there she steamed towards Brest, capturing a French merchant
+craft off that port, another near Rochefort, and finally a third. That
+ended her active career during the war; a French frigate chased her
+into the port of Vigo and kept her there.
+
+To conclude, certain localities and certain characters have been
+sufficiently disguised to render recognition improbable. This is
+proper because "The Lizard" is possibly alive to-day, as are also the
+mayor of Paradise, Sylvia Elven, Jacqueline, and Speed, the latter
+having barely escaped death in the _Virginius_ expedition. The
+original of Buckhurst now lives in New York, and remains a type whose
+rarity is its only recommendation.
+
+Those who believe they recognize the Countess de Vassart are doubtless
+in error. Mornac, long dead, is safe in his disguise; Tric-Trac was
+executed on the Place de la Roquette, and celebrated in doggerel by an
+unspeakable ballad writer. There remains Scarlett; dead or alive, I
+wish him well.
+
+ ROBERT W. CHAMBERS.
+Ormond, Florida, _Feb. 7_, 1902.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: To E.M.C.]
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ CHAP. PAGE
+ I. At the Telegraph 3
+ II. The Government Interferes 21
+ III. La Trappe 34
+ IV. Prisoners 50
+ V. The Immortals 65
+ VI. The Game Begins 87
+ VII. A Struggle Foreshadowed 110
+ VIII. A Man to Let 136
+ IX. The Road to Paradise 159
+ X. The Town-Crier 171
+ XI. In Camp 180
+ XII. Jacqueline 195
+ XIII. Friends 207
+ XIV. The Path of the Lizard 229
+ XV. Forewarned 253
+ XVI. A Restless Man 265
+ XVII. The Circus 280
+ XVIII. A Guest-Chamber 303
+ XIX. Trécourt Garden 318
+ XX. The Semaphore 339
+ XXI. Like Her Ancestors 353
+ XXII. The Secret 381
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+ "'LOOK THERE!' SHE CRIED, IN TERROR" _Frontispiece_
+ "'ACROSS THAT MEADOW,' SAID THE YOUNG GIRL" _Facing p_. 22
+ "TO RIGHT AND LEFT, PRUSSIAN LANCERS WERE RIDING" " 62
+ "A COMPANY OF TURCOS CAME UP" " 74
+ "'HALT! HALT!' HE SHOUTED" " 84
+ "EVERY BRIDGE WAS GUARDED" " 124
+ "SISTERS OF CHARITY WERE GIVING FIRST AID" " 132
+ "I WAS ON MY KNEES" " 298
+
+
+
+
+PART FIRST
+
+
+
+
+THE MAIDS OF PARADISE
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+AT THE TELEGRAPH
+
+
+On the third day of August, 1870, I left Paris in search of John
+Buckhurst.
+
+On the 4th of August I lost all traces of Mr. Buckhurst near the
+frontier, in the village of Morsbronn. The remainder of the day I
+spent in acquiring that "general information" so dear to the
+officials in Paris whose flimsy systems of intelligence had already
+begun to break down.
+
+On August 5th, about eight o'clock in the morning, the military
+telegraph instrument in the operator's room over the temporary
+barracks of the Third Hussars clicked out the call for urgency, not
+the usual military signal, but a secret sequence understood only by
+certain officers of the Imperial Military Police. The operator on duty
+therefore stepped into my room and waited while I took his place at
+the wire.
+
+I had been using the code-book that morning, preparing despatches for
+Paris, and now, at the first series of significant clicks, I dropped
+my left middle finger on the key and repeated the signal to Paris,
+using the required variations. Then I rose, locked the door, and
+returned to the table.
+
+"Who is this?" came over the wire in the secret code; and I answered
+at once: "Inspector of Foreign Division, Imperial Military Police, on
+duty at Morsbronn, Alsace."
+
+After considerable delay the next message arrived in the Morse code:
+"Is that you, Scarlett?"
+
+And I replied: "Yes. Who are you? Why do you not use the code? Repeat
+the code signal and your number."
+
+The signal was repeated, then came the message: "This is the
+Tuileries. You have my authority to use the Morse code for the sake of
+brevity. Do you understand? I am Jarras. The Empress is here."
+Instantly reassured by the message from Colonel Jarras, head of the
+bureau to which I was attached, I answered that I understood. Then the
+telegrams began to fly, all in the Morse code:
+
+_Jarras._ "Have you caught Buckhurst?"
+
+_I._ "No."
+
+_Jarras._ "How did he get away?"
+
+_I._ "There's confusion enough on the frontier to cover the escape of
+a hundred thieves."
+
+_Jarras._ "Your reply alarms the Empress. State briefly the present
+position of the First Corps."
+
+_I._ "The First Corps still occupies the heights in a straight line
+about seven kilometres long; the plateau is covered with vineyards.
+Two small rivers are in front of us; the Vosges are behind us; the
+right flank pivots on Morsbronn, the left on Neehwiller; the centre
+covers Wörth. We have had forty-eight hours' heavy rain."
+
+_Jarras._ "Where are the Germans?"
+
+_I._ "Precise information not obtainable at headquarters of the First
+Corps."
+
+_Jarras._ "Does the Marshal not know where the Germans are?"
+
+_I._ "Marshal MacMahon does not know definitely."
+
+_Jarras._ "Does the Marshal not employ his cavalry? Where are they?"
+
+_I._ "Septeuil's cavalry of the second division lie between
+Elsasshausen and the Grosserwald; Michel's brigade of heavy cavalry
+camps at Eberbach; the second division of cavalry of the reserve,
+General Vicomte de Bonnemain, should arrive to-night and go into
+bivouac between Reichshofen and the Grosserwald."
+
+There was a long pause; I lighted a cigar and waited. After a while
+the instrument began again:
+
+_Jarras._ "The Empress desires to know where the château called La
+Trappe is."
+
+_I._ "La Trappe is about four kilometres from Morsbronn, near the
+hamlet of Trois-Feuilles."
+
+_Jarras._ "It is understood that Madame de Vassart's group of
+socialists are about to leave La Trappe for Paradise, in Morbihan. It
+is possible that Buckhurst has taken refuge among them. Therefore you
+will proceed to La Trappe. Do you understand?"
+
+_I._ "Perfectly."
+
+_Jarras._ "If Buckhurst is found you will bring him to Paris at once.
+Shoot him if he resists arrest. If the community at La Trappe has not
+been warned of a possible visit from us, you will find and arrest the
+following individuals:
+
+"Claude Tavernier, late professor of law, Paris School of Law;
+
+"Achille Bazard, ex-instructor in mathematics, Fontainebleau
+Artillery School;
+
+"Dr. Leo Delmont, ex-interne, Charity Hospital, Paris;
+
+"Mlle. Sylvia Elven, lately of the Odéon;
+
+"The Countess de Vassart, well known for her eccentricities.
+
+"You will affix the government seals to the house as usual; you will
+then escort the people named to the nearest point on the Belgian
+frontier. The Countess de Vassart usually dresses like a common
+peasant. Look out that she does not slip through your fingers. Repeat
+your instructions." I repeated them from my memoranda.
+
+There was a pause, then click! click! the instrument gave the code
+signal that the matter was ended, and I repeated the signal, opened my
+code-book, and began to translate the instructions into cipher for
+safety's sake.
+
+When I had finished and had carefully destroyed my first pencilled
+memoranda, the steady bumping of artillery passing through the street
+under the windows drew my attention.
+
+It proved to be the expected batteries of the reserve going into park,
+between the two brigades of Raoult's division of infantry. I
+telegraphed the news to the observatory on the Col du Pigeonnier, then
+walked back to the window and looked out.
+
+It had begun to rain again; down the solitary street of Morsbronn the
+artillery rolled, jolting; cannoneers, wrapped in their wet, gray
+overcoats, limbers, caissons, and horses plastered with mud. The slim
+cannon, with canvas-wrapped breeches uptilted, dripped from their
+depressed muzzles, like lank monsters slavering and discouraged.
+
+A battery of Montigny mitrailleuses passed, grotesque, hump-backed
+little engines of destruction. To me there was always something
+repulsive in the shape of these stunted cannon, these malicious metal
+cripples with their heavy bodies and sinister, filthy mouths.
+
+Before the drenched artillery had rattled out of Morsbronn the rain
+once more fell in floods, pouring a perpendicular torrent from the
+transparent, gray heavens, and the roar of the downpour on slate roofs
+and ancient gables drowned the pounding of the passing cannon.
+
+Where the Vosges mountains towered in obscurity a curtain of rain
+joined earth and sky. The rivers ran yellow, brimful, foaming at the
+fords. The semaphore on the mountain of the Pigeonnier was not
+visible; but across the bridge, where the Gunstett highway spanned the
+Sauer, gray masses of the Niederwald loomed through the rain.
+
+Somewhere in that spectral forest Prussian cavalry were hidden,
+watching the heights where our drenched divisions lay. Behind that
+forest a German army was massing, fresh from the combat in the north,
+where the tragedy of Wissembourg had been enacted only the day before,
+in the presence of the entire French army--the awful spectacle of a
+single division of seven thousand men suddenly enveloped and crushed
+by seventy thousand Germans.
+
+The rain fell steadily but less heavily. I went back to my instrument
+and called up the station on the Col du Pigeonnier, asking for
+information, but got no reply, the storm doubtless interfering.
+
+Officers of the Third Hussars were continually tramping up and down
+the muddy stairway, laughing, joking, swearing at the rain, or
+shouting for their horses, when the trumpets sounded in the street
+below.
+
+I watched the departing squadron, splashing away down the street,
+which was now running water like a river; then I changed my civilian
+clothes for a hussar uniform, sent a trooper to find me a horse, and
+sat down by the window to stare at the downpour and think how best I
+might carry out my instructions to a successful finish.
+
+The colony at La Trappe was, as far as I could judge, a product of
+conditions which had, a hundred years before, culminated in the French
+Revolution. Now, in 1870, but under different circumstances, all
+France was once more disintegrating socially. Opposition to the
+Empire, to the dynasty, to the government, had been seething for
+years; now the separate crystals which formed on the edges of the
+boiling under-currents began to grow into masses which, adhering to
+other masses, interfered with the healthy functions of national life.
+
+Until recently, however, while among the dissatisfied there existed a
+certain tendency towards cohesion, and while, moreover, adhesive
+forces mutually impelled separate groups of malcontents to closer
+union, the government found nothing alarming in the menaces of
+individuals or of isolated groups. The Emperor always counted on such
+opposition in Paris; the palace of the Tuileries was practically a
+besieged place, menaced always by the faubourgs--a castle before which
+lay eternally the sullen, unorganized multitude over which the
+municipal police kept watch.
+
+That opposition, hatred, and treason existed never worried the
+government, but that this opposition should remain unorganized
+occupied the authorities constantly.
+
+Groups of individuals who proclaimed themselves devotees of social
+theories interested us only when the groups grew large or exhibited
+tendencies to unite with similar groups.
+
+Clubs formed to discuss social questions were usually watched by the
+police; violent organizations were not observed very closely, but
+clubs founded upon moderate principles were always closely surveyed.
+
+In the faubourgs, where every street had its bawling orator, and where
+the red flag was waved when the community had become sufficiently
+drunk, the government was quietly content to ignore proceedings,
+wisely understanding that the mouths of street orators were the
+safety-valves of the faubourgs, and that through them the ebullitions
+of the under-world escaped with nothing more serious than a few vinous
+shrieks. There were, however, certain secret and semi-secret
+organizations which caused the government concern. First among these
+came the International Society of Workingmen, with all its
+affiliations--the "Internationale," as it was called. In its wake
+trailed minor societies, some mild and harmless, some dangerous and
+secret, some violent, advocating openly the destruction of all
+existing conditions. Small groups of anarchists had already attracted
+groups of moderate socialistic tendencies to them, and had absorbed
+them or tainted them with doctrines dangerous to the state.
+
+In time these groups began to adhere even more closely to the large
+bodies of the people; a party was born, small at first, embodying
+conflicting communistic principles.
+
+The government watched it. Presently it split, as do all parties; yet
+here the paradox was revealed of a small party splitting into two
+larger halves. To one of these halves adhered the Red Republicans, the
+government opposition of the Extreme Left, the Opportunists, the
+Anarchists, certain Socialists, the so-called Communards, and finally
+the vast mass of the sullen, teeming faubourgs. It became a party
+closely affiliated with the Internationale, a colossal, restless,
+unorganized menace, harmless only because unorganized.
+
+And the police were expected to keep it harmless. The other remaining
+half of the original party began to dwindle almost immediately, until
+it became only a group. _With one exception_, all those whom the
+police and the government regarded as inclined to violence left the
+group. There remained, _with this one exception_, a nucleus of
+earnest, thoughtful people whose creed was in part the creed of the
+Internationale, the creed of universal brotherhood, equality before
+the law, purity of individual living as an example and an incentive to
+a national purity.
+
+To this inoffensive group came one day a young widow, the Countess de
+Vassart, placing at their disposal her great wealth, asking only to be
+received among them as a comrade.
+
+Her history, as known to the police, was peculiar and rather sad: at
+sixteen she had been betrothed to an elderly, bull-necked colonel of
+cavalry, the notorious Count de Vassart, who needed what money she
+might bring him to maintain his reputation as the most brilliantly
+dissolute old rake in Paris.
+
+At sixteen, Éline de Trécourt was a thin, red-haired girl, with rather
+large, grayish eyes. Speed and I saw her once, sitting in her carriage
+before the Ministry of War a year after her marriage. There had been
+bad news from Mexico, and there were many handsome equipages standing
+at the gates of the war office, where lists of killed and wounded were
+posted every day.
+
+I noticed her particularly because of her reputed wealth and the evil
+reputation of her husband, who, it was said, was so open in his
+contempt for her that the very afternoon of their marriage he was seen
+publicly driving on the Champs-Élysées with a pretty and popular
+actress of the Odéon.
+
+As I passed, glancing up at her, the sadness of her face impressed me,
+and I remember wondering how much the death of her husband had to do
+with it--for his name had appeared in the evening papers under the
+heading, "Killed in Action."
+
+It was several years later before the police began to take an interest
+in the Comtesse Éline de Vassart. She had withdrawn entirely from
+society, had founded a non-sectarian free school in Passy, was
+interested in certain charities and refuges for young working-girls,
+when on a visit to England, she met Karl Marx, then a fugitive and
+under sentence of death.
+
+From that moment social questions occupied her, and her doings
+interested the police, especially when she returned to Paris and took
+her place once more in Royalist circles, where every baby was bred
+from the cradle to renounce the Tuileries, the Emperor, and all his
+works.
+
+Serious, tender-hearted, charitable, and intensely interested in all
+social reforms, she shocked the conservative society of the noble
+faubourg, aroused the distrust of the government, offended the
+Tuileries, and finally committed the mistake of receiving at her own
+house that notorious group of malcontents headed by Henri Rochefort,
+whose revolutionary newspaper, _La Marseillaise_, doubtless needed
+pecuniary support.
+
+Her dossier--for, alas! the young girl already had a dossier--was
+interesting, particularly in its summing-up of her personal
+character:
+
+"To the naive ignorance of a convent pensionnaire, she adds an
+innocence of mind, a purity of conduct, and a credulity which render
+her an easy prey to the adroit, who play upon her sympathies. She is
+dangerous only as a source of revenue for dangerous men."
+
+It was from her salon that young Victor Noir went to his death at
+Auteuil on the 10th of January; and possibly the shock of the murder
+and the almost universal conviction that justice under the Empire was
+hopeless drove the young Countess to seek a refuge in the country
+where, at her house of La Trappe, she could quietly devote her life to
+helping the desperately wretched, and where she could, in security,
+hold council with those who also had chosen to give their lives to
+the noblest of all works--charity and the propaganda of universal
+brotherhood.
+
+And here, at La Trappe, the young aristocrat first donned the robe of
+democracy, dedicated her life and fortune to the cause, and worked
+with her own delicate hands for every morsel of bread that passed her
+lips.
+
+Now this was all very well while it lasted, for her father, the
+choleric old Comte de Trécourt, had died rich, and the young girl's
+charities were doubled, and there was nobody to stay her hand or draw
+the generous purse-strings; nobody to advise her or to stop her. On
+the contrary, there were plenty of people standing around with
+outstretched, itching, and sometimes dirty hands, ready to snatch at
+the last centime.
+
+Who was there to administer her affairs, who among the generous,
+impetuous, ill-balanced friends that surrounded her? Not the
+noble-minded geographer, Elisée Réclus; not the fiery citizen-count,
+Rochefort; not the handsome, cultivated Gustave Flourens, already
+"fey" with the doom to which he had been born; not that kindly
+visionary, the Vicomte de Coursay-Delmont, now discarding his ancient
+title to be known only among his grateful, penniless patients as
+Doctor Delmont; and surely not Professor Tavernier, nor yet that
+militant hermit, the young Chevalier de Gray, calling himself plain
+Monsieur Bazard, who chose democracy instead of the brilliant career
+to which Grammont had destined him, and whose sensitive and perhaps
+diseased mind had never recovered from the shock of the murder of his
+comrade, Victor Noir.
+
+But the simple life at La Trappe, the negative protest against the
+Empire and all existing social conditions, the purity of motive, the
+serene and inspired self-abnegation, could not save the colony at La
+Trappe nor the young châtelaine from the claws of those who prey upon
+the innocence of the generous.
+
+And so came to this ideal community one John Buckhurst, a stranger,
+quiet, suave, deadly pale, a finely moulded man, with delicately
+fashioned hands and feet, and two eyes so colorless that in some
+lights they appeared to be almost sightless.
+
+In a month from that time he was the power that moved that community
+even in its most insignificant machinery. With marvellous skill he
+constructed out of that simple republic of protestants an absolute
+despotism. And he was the despot.
+
+The avowed object of the society was the advancement of universal
+brotherhood, of liberty and equality, the annihilation of those
+arbitrary barriers called national frontiers--in short, a society for
+the encouragement of the millennium, which, however, appeared to be
+coy.
+
+And before the eyes of his brother dreamers John Buckhurst quietly
+cancelled the entire programme at one stroke, and nobody understood
+that it was cancelled when, in a community founded upon equality and
+fraternity, he raised another edifice to crown it, a sort of working
+model as an example to the world, but _limited_. And down went
+democracy without a sound.
+
+This working model was a superior community which was established at
+the Breton home of the Countess de Vassart, a large stone house in the
+hamlet of Paradise, in Morbihan.
+
+An intimation from the Tuileries interrupted a meeting of the council
+at the house in Paradise; an arrest was threatened--that of Professor
+Réclus--and the indignant young Countess was requested to retire to
+her château of La Trappe. She obeyed, but invited her guests to
+accompany her. Among those who accepted was Buckhurst.
+
+About this time the government began to take a serious interest in
+John Buckhurst. On the secret staff of the Imperial Military Police
+were always certain foreigners--among others, myself and a young man
+named James Speed; and Colonel Jarras had already decided to employ us
+in watching Buckhurst, when war came on France like a bolt from the
+blue, giving the men of the Secret Service all they could attend to.
+
+In the shameful indecision and confusion attending the first few days
+after the declaration of war against Prussia, Buckhurst slipped
+through our fingers, and I, for one, did not expect to hear of him
+again. But I did not begin to know John Buckhurst, for, within three
+days after he had avoided an encounter with us, Buckhurst was believed
+to have committed one of the most celebrated crimes of the century.
+
+The secret history of that unhappy war will never be fully written.
+Prince Bismarck has let the only remaining cat out of the bag; the
+other cats are dead. Nor will all the strange secrets of the Tuileries
+ever be brought to light, fortunately.
+
+Still, at this time, there is no reason why it should not be generally
+known that the crown jewels of France were menaced from the very first
+by a conspiracy so alarming and apparently so irresistible that the
+Emperor himself believed, even in the beginning of the fatal campaign,
+that it might be necessary to send the crown jewels of France to the
+Bank of England for safety.
+
+On the 19th of July, the day that war was declared, certain of the
+crown jewels, kept temporarily at the palace of the Tuileries, were
+sent under heavy guards to the Bank of France. Every precaution was
+taken; yet the great diamond crucifix of Louis XI. was missing when
+the guard under Captain Siebert turned over the treasures to the
+governor of the Bank of France.
+
+Instantly absolute secrecy was ordered, which I, for one, believed to
+be a great mistake. Yet the Emperor desired it, doubtless for the same
+reasons which always led him to suppress any affair which might give
+the public an idea that the opposition to the government was worthy of
+the government's attention.
+
+So the news of the robbery never became public property, but from one
+end of France to the other the gendarmerie, the police, local,
+municipal, and secret, were stirred up to activity.
+
+Within forty-eight hours, an individual answering Buckhurst's
+description had sold a single enormous diamond for two hundred and
+fifty thousand francs to a dealer in Strasbourg, a Jew named Fishel
+Cohen, who, counting on the excitement produced by the war and the
+topsy-turvy condition of the city, supposed that such a transaction
+would create no interest.
+
+Mr. Cohen was wrong; an hour after he had recorded the transaction at
+the Strasbourg Diamond Exchange he and the diamond were on their way
+to Paris, in charge of a detective. A few hours later the stone was
+identified at the Tuileries as having been taken from the famous
+crucifix of Louis XI.
+
+From Fishel Cohen's agonized description of the man who had sold him
+the diamond, Colonel Jarras believed he recognized John Buckhurst. But
+how on earth Buckhurst had obtained access to the jewels, or how he
+had managed to spirit away the cross from the very centre of the
+Tuileries, could only be explained through the theory of accomplices
+among the trusted intimates of the imperial entourage. And if there
+existed such a conspiracy, who was involved?
+
+It is violating no secret now to admit that every soul in the
+Tuileries, from highest to lowest, was watched. Even the governor of
+the Bank of France did not escape the attentions of the secret police.
+For it was certain that somebody in the imperial confidence had
+betrayed that confidence in a shocking manner, and nobody could know
+how far the conspiracy had spread, or who was involved in the most
+daring and shameless robbery that had been perpetrated in France since
+Cardinal de Rohan and his gang stole the celebrated necklace of Marie
+Antoinette.
+
+Nor was it at all certain that the remaining jewels of the French
+crown were safe in Paris. The precautions taken to insure their
+safety, and the result of those precautions, are matters of history,
+but nobody outside of a small, strangely assorted company of people
+could know what actually happened to the crown jewels of France in
+1870, or what pieces, if any, are still missing.
+
+My chase after Buckhurst began as soon as Colonel Jarras could summon
+me; and as Buckhurst had last been heard of in Strasbourg, I went
+after him on a train loaded with red-legged, uproarious soldiers, who
+sang all day:
+
+ "Have you seen Bismarck
+ Drinking in the gay café,
+ With that other brother spark--
+ Monsieur Badinguet?"
+
+and had drunk themselves into a shameful frenzy long before the train
+thundered into Avricourt.
+
+I tracked Buckhurst to Morsbronn, where I lost all traces of him; and
+now here I was with my orders concerning the unfortunate people at La
+Trappe, staring out at the dismal weather and wondering where my
+wild-goose chase would end.
+
+I went to the door and called for the military telegraph operator,
+whose instrument I had been permitted to monopolize. He came, a
+pleasant, jaunty young fellow, munching a crust of dry bread and
+brushing the crumbs from his scarlet trousers.
+
+"In case I want to communicate with you I'll signal the tower on the
+Col du Pigeonnier," I said. "Come up to the loft overhead."
+
+The loft in the house which had now been turned into a cavalry
+barracks was just above my room, a large attic under the dripping
+gables, black with the stains of centuries, littered with broken
+furniture, discarded clothing, and the odds and ends cherished by the
+thrifty Alsatian peasant, who never throws away anything from the day
+of his birth to the day of his death. And, given a long line of
+forefathers equally thrifty, and an ancient high-gabled house where
+his ancestors first began collecting discarded refuse, the attic of
+necessity was a marvel of litter and decay, among which generations of
+pigeons had built nests and raised countless broods of squealing
+squabs.
+
+Into this attic we climbed, edged our way toward a high window out of
+which the leaded panes had long since tumbled earthward, and finally
+stood together, looking out over the mountains of the Alsatian
+frontier.
+
+The rain had ceased; behind the Col du Pigeonnier sunshine fell
+through a rift in the watery clouds. It touched the rushing river,
+shining on foaming fords where our cavalry pickets were riding in the
+valley mist.
+
+Somewhere up in the vineyards behind us an infantry band was playing;
+away among the wet hills to the left the strumming vibrations of wet
+drums marked the arrival of a regiment from goodness knows where; and
+presently we saw them, their gray overcoats and red trousers soaked
+almost black with rain, rifles en bandoulière, trudging patiently up
+the muddy slope above the town. Something in the plodding steps of
+those wet little soldiers touched me. Bravely their soaked drums
+battered away, bravely they dragged their clumsy feet after them,
+brightly and gayly the breaking sun touched their crimson forage-caps
+and bayonets and the swords of mounted officers; but to me they were
+only a pathetic troop of perplexed peasants, dragged out of the bosom
+of France to be huddled and herded in a strange pasture, where death
+watched them from the forest yonder, marking them for slaughter with
+near-sighted Teutonic eyes.
+
+A column of white cloud suddenly capped the rocks on the vineyard
+above. Bang! and something came whistling with a curious, bird-like
+cry over the village of Morsbronn, flying far out across the valley:
+and among the pines of the Prussian forest a point of flame flashed, a
+distant explosion echoed.
+
+Down in the street below us an old man came tottering from his little
+shop, peering sideways up into the sky.
+
+"Il pleut, berger," called out the operator beside me, in a bantering
+voice.
+
+"It will rain--bullets," said the old man, simply, and returned to
+his shop to drag out a chair on the doorsill and sit and listen to the
+shots which our cavalry outposts were exchanging with the Prussian
+scouts.
+
+"Poor old chap," said the operator; "it will be hard for him. He was
+with the Grand Emperor at Jena."
+
+"You speak as though our army was already on the run," I said.
+
+"Yes," he replied, indifferently, "we'll soon be on the run."
+
+After a moment I said: "I'm going to ride to La Trappe. I wish you
+would send those messages to Paris."
+
+"All right," he said.
+
+Half an hour later I rode out of Morsbronn, clad in the uniform of the
+Third Hussars, a disguise supposed to convey the idea to those at La
+Trappe that the army and not the police were responsible for their
+expulsion.
+
+The warm August sunshine slanted in my face as I galloped away up the
+vineyard road and out on to the long plateau where, on every hillock,
+a hussar picket sat his wiry horse, carbine poised, gazing steadily
+toward the east.
+
+Over the sombre Prussian forests mist hung; away to the north the sun
+glittered on the steel helmets and armor of the heavy cavalry, just
+arriving. And on the Col du Pigeonnier I saw tiny specks move, flags
+signalling the arrival of the Vicomte de Bonnemain with the "grosse
+cavalerie," the splendid cuirassier regiments destined in a few hours
+to join the cuirassiers of Waterloo, riding into that bright Valhalla
+where all good soldiers shall hear the last trumpet call,
+"Dismount!"
+
+With a lingering glance at the rivers which separated us from German
+soil, I turned my horse and galloped away into the hills.
+
+A moist, fern-bordered wood road attracted me; I reasoned that it must
+lead, by a short cut, across the hills to the military highway which
+passed between Trois-Feuilles and La Trappe. So I took it, and
+presently came into four cross-roads unknown to me.
+
+This grassy carrefour was occupied by a flock of turkeys, busily
+engaged in catching grasshoppers; their keeper, a prettily shaped
+peasant girl, looked up at me as I drew bridle, then quietly resumed
+the book she had been reading.
+
+"My child," said I, "if you are as intelligent as you are beautiful,
+you will not be tending other people's turkeys this time next year."
+
+"Merci, beau sabreur!" said the turkey-girl, raising her blue eyes.
+Then the lashes veiled them; she bent her head a little, turning it so
+that the curve of her cheeks gave to her profile that delicate
+contour which is so suggestive of innocence when the ears are small
+and the neck white.
+
+"My child," said I, "will you kindly direct me, with appropriate
+gestures, to the military highway which passes the Château de la
+Trappe?"
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+THE GOVERNMENT INTERFERES
+
+
+"There is a short cut across that meadow," said the young girl,
+raising a rounded, sun-tinted arm, bare to the shoulder.
+
+"You are very kind," said I, looking at her steadily.
+
+"And, after that, you will come to a thicket of white birches."
+
+"Thank you, mademoiselle."
+
+"And after that," she said, idly following with her blue eyes the
+contour of her own lovely arm, "you must turn to the left, and there
+you will cross a hill. You can see it from where we stand--"
+
+She glanced at me over her outstretched arm. "You are not listening,"
+she said.
+
+I shifted a troubled gaze to the meadow which stretched out all
+glittering with moist grasses and tufts of rain-drenched wild
+flowers.
+
+The girl's arm slowly fell to her side, she looked up at me again, I
+felt her eyes on me for a moment, then she turned her head toward the
+meadow.
+
+A deadened report shook the summer air--the sound of a cannon fired
+very far away, perhaps on the citadel of Strasbourg. It was so
+distant, so indistinct, that here in this peaceful country it lingered
+only as a vibration; the humming of the clover bees was louder.
+
+Without turning my head I said: "It is difficult to believe that
+there is war anywhere in the world--is it not, mademoiselle?"
+
+"Not if one knows the world," she said, indifferently.
+
+"Do you know it, my child?"
+
+"Sufficiently," she said.
+
+She had opened again the book which she had been reading when I first
+noticed her. From my saddle I saw that it was Molière. I examined her,
+in detail, from the tips of her small wooden shoes to the scarlet
+velvet-banded skirt, then slowly upward, noting the laced bodice of
+velvet, the bright hair under the butterfly coiffe of Alsace, the
+delicate outline of nose and brow and throat. The ensemble was
+theatrical.
+
+"Why do you tend turkeys?" I asked.
+
+"Because it pleases me," she replied, raising her eyebrows in faint
+displeasure.
+
+"For that same reason you read Monsieur Molière?" I suggested.
+
+"Doubtless, monsieur."
+
+"Who are you?"
+
+"Is a passport required in France?" she replied, languidly.
+
+"Are you what you pretend to be, an Alsatian turkey tender?"
+
+"Parbleu! There are my turkeys, monsieur."
+
+"Of course, and there is your peasant dress and there are your wooden
+shoes, and there also, mademoiselle, are your soft hands and your
+accented speech and your plays of Molière."
+
+"You are very wise for a hussar," she said.
+
+"Perhaps," said I, "but I have asked you a question which remains
+parried."
+
+She balanced the hazel rod across her shoulders with a faintly
+malicious smile.
+
+"One might almost believe that you are not a hussar, but an officer
+of the Imperial Police," she said.
+
+[Illustration: "'ACROSS THAT MEADOW,' SAID THE YOUNG GIRL"]
+
+"If you think that," said I, "you should answer my question the
+sooner--unless you come from La Trappe. Do you?"
+
+"Sometimes."
+
+"Oh! And what do you do at the Château de la Trappe?"
+
+"I tend poultry--sometimes," she replied.
+
+"And at other times?"
+
+"I do other things, monsieur."
+
+"What things?"
+
+"What things? Mon Dieu, I read a little, as you perceive, monsieur."
+
+"Who are you?" I demanded.
+
+"Oh, a mere nobody in such learned company," she said, shaking her
+head with a mock humility that annoyed me intensely.
+
+"Very well," said I, conscious every moment of her pleasure in my
+discomfiture; "under the circumstances I am going to ask you to
+accept my escort to La Trappe; for I think you are Mademoiselle Elven,
+recently of the Odéon theatre."
+
+At this her eyes widened and the smile on her face became less
+genuine. "Indeed, I shall not go with you," she said.
+
+"I'm afraid I'll have to insist," said I.
+
+She still balanced her hazel rod across her shoulders, a smile curving
+her mouth.
+
+"Monsieur," she said, "do you ride through the world pressing every
+peasant girl you meet with such ardent entreaties? Truly, your fashion
+of wooing is not slow, but everybody knows that hussars are headlong
+gentlemen--'Nothing is sacred from a hussar,'" she hummed,
+deliberately, in a parody which made me writhe in my saddle.
+
+"Mademoiselle," said I, taking off my forage-cap, "your ridicule is
+not the most disagreeable incident that I expect to meet with to-day.
+I am attempting to do my duty, and I must ask you to do yours."
+
+"By taking a walk with you, beau monsieur?"
+
+"I'm afraid so."
+
+"And if I refuse?"
+
+"Then," said I, amiably, "I shall be obliged to set you on my
+horse." And I dismounted and went toward her.
+
+"Set me on--on that horse?" she repeated, with a disturbed smile.
+
+"Will you come on foot, then?"
+
+"No, I will not!" she said, with a click of her teeth.
+
+I looked at my watch--it lacked five minutes to one.
+
+"In five minutes we are going to start," said I, cheerfully, and
+stood waiting, twisting the gilt hilt-tassels of my sabre with nervous
+fingers.
+
+After a silence she said, very seriously, "Monsieur, would you dare
+use violence toward me?"
+
+"Oh, I shall not be very violent," I replied, laughing. I held the
+opened watch in my hand so that she could see the dial if she chose.
+
+"It is one o'clock," I said, closing the hunting-case with a snap.
+
+She looked me steadily in the eyes.
+
+"Will you come with me to La Trappe?"
+
+She did not stir.
+
+I stepped toward her; she gave me a breathless, defiant stare; then in
+an instant I caught her up and swung her high into my saddle, before
+either she or I knew exactly what had happened.
+
+Fury flashed up in her eyes and was gone, leaving them almost blank
+blue. As for me, amazed at what I had done, I stood at her stirrup,
+breathing very fast, with jaws set and chin squared.
+
+She was clever enough not to try to dismount, woman enough not to make
+an awkward struggle or do anything ungraceful. In her face I read an
+immense astonishment; fascination seemed to rivet her eyes on me,
+following my every movement as I shortened one stirrup for her,
+tightened the girths, and laid the bridle in her half-opened hand.
+
+Then, in silence, I led the horse forward through the open gate out
+into the wet meadow.
+
+Wading knee-deep through soaking foliage, I piloted my horse with its
+mute burden across the fields; and, after a few minutes a violent
+desire to laugh seized me and persisted, but I bit my lip and called
+up a few remaining sentiments of decency.
+
+As for my turkey-girl, she sat stiffly in the saddle, with a firmness
+and determination that proved her to be a stranger to horses. I
+scarcely dared look at her, so fearful was I of laughing.
+
+As we emerged from the meadow I heard the cannon sounding again at a
+great distance, and this perhaps sobered me, for presently all desire
+of laughter left me, and I turned into the road which led through the
+birch thicket, anxious to accomplish my mission and have done with it
+as soon as might be.
+
+"Are we near La Trappe?" I asked, respectfully.
+
+Had she pouted, or sulked, or burst into reproaches, I should have
+cared little--in fact, an outburst might have relieved me.
+
+But she answered me so sweetly, and, too, with such composure, that my
+heart smote me for what I had done to her and what I was still to do.
+
+"Would you rather walk?" I asked, looking up at her.
+
+"No, thank you," she said, serenely.
+
+So we went on. The spectacle of a cavalryman in full uniform leading a
+cavalry horse on which was seated an Alsatian girl in bright peasant
+costume appeared to astonish the few people we passed. One of these
+foot-farers, a priest who was travelling in our direction, raised his
+pallid visage to meet my eyes. Then he stole a glance at the girl in
+the saddle, and I saw a tint of faded color settle under his
+transparent skin.
+
+The turkey-girl saluted the priest with a bright smile.
+
+"Fortune of war, father," she said, gayly. "Behold! Alsace in
+chains."
+
+"Is she a prisoner?" said the priest, turning directly on me. Of all
+the masks called faces, never had I set eyes on such a deathly one,
+nor on such pale eyes, all silvery surface without depth enough for a
+spark of light to make them seem alive.
+
+"What do you mean by a prisoner, father?" I asked.
+
+"I mean a prisoner," he said, doggedly.
+
+"When the church cross-examines the government, the towers of Notre
+Dame shake," I said, pleasantly. "I mean no discourtesy, father; it
+is a proverb in Paris."
+
+"There is another proverb," observed the turkey-girl, placidly.
+"Once a little inhabitant of hell stole the key to paradise. His
+punishment was dreadful. They locked him in."
+
+I looked up at her, perplexed and irritated, conscious that she was
+ridiculing me, but unable to comprehend just how. And my irritation
+increased when the priest said, calmly, "Can I aid you, my child?"
+
+She shook her head with a cool smile.
+
+"I am quite safe under the escort of an officer of the Imperial--"
+
+"Wait!" I said, hastily, but she continued, "of the Imperial
+Military Police."
+
+Above all things I had not wanted it known that the Imperial Police
+were moving in this affair at La Trappe, and now this little fool had
+babbled to a strange priest--of all people in the world!
+
+"What have the police to do with this harmless child?" demanded the
+priest, turning on me so suddenly that I involuntarily took a step
+backward.
+
+"Is this the confessional, father?" I replied, sharply. "Go your way
+in peace, and leave to the police what alone concerns the police."
+
+"Render unto Cæsar," said the girl, quietly. "Good-bye, father."
+
+Turning to look again at the priest, I was amazed to find him close to
+me, too close for a man with such eyes in his head, for a man who
+moved so swiftly and softly, and, in spite of me, a nervous movement
+of my hand left me with my fingers on the butt of my pistol.
+
+"What the devil is all this?" I blurted out. "Stand aside, father.
+Do you think the Holy Inquisition is back in France? Stand aside then!
+I salute your cloth!"
+
+And I passed on ahead, one hand on the horse's neck, the other
+touching the visor of my scarlet forage-cap. Once I looked back. The
+priest was standing where I had passed him.
+
+We met a dozen people in all, I think, some of them peasants, one or
+two of the better class--a country doctor and a notary among them.
+None appeared to know my turkey-girl, nor did she even glance at them;
+moreover, all answered my inquiries civilly enough, directing me to La
+Trappe, and professing ignorance as to its inhabitants.
+
+"Why do all the people I meet carry bundles?" I demanded of the
+notary.
+
+"Mon Dieu, monsieur, they are too near the frontier to take risks,"
+he replied, blinking through his silver-rimmed spectacles at my
+turkey-girl.
+
+"You mean to say they are running away from their village of
+Trois-Feuilles?" I asked.
+
+"Exactly," he said. "War is a rude guest for poor folk."
+
+Disgusted with the cowardice of the hamlet of Trois-Feuilles, I passed
+on without noticing the man's sneer. In a moment, however, he repassed
+me swiftly, going in the same direction as were we, toward La Trappe.
+
+"Wait a bit!" I called out. "What is your business in that
+direction, monsieur the notary?"
+
+He looked around, muttered indistinctly about having forgotten
+something, and started on ahead of us, but at a sharp "Stop!" from me
+he halted quickly enough.
+
+"Your road lies the other way," I observed, and, as he began to
+protest, I cut him short.
+
+"You change your direction too quickly to suit me," I said. "Come,
+my friend the weather-cock, turn your nose east and follow it or I may
+ask you some questions that might frighten you."
+
+And so I left him also staring after us, and I had half a mind to go
+back and examine his portfolio to see what a snipe-faced notary might
+be carrying about with him.
+
+When I looked up at my turkey-girl, she was sitting more easily in the
+saddle, head bent thoughtfully.
+
+"You see, mademoiselle, I take no chances of not finding my friends
+at home," I said.
+
+"What friends, monsieur?"
+
+"My friends at La Trappe."
+
+"Oh! And ... you think that the notary we passed might have desired
+to prepare them for your visit, monsieur?"
+
+"Possibly. The notary of Trois-Feuilles and the Château de la Trappe
+may not be unknown to each other. Perhaps even mademoiselle the
+turkey-girl may number the learned Trappists among her friends."
+
+"Perhaps," she said.
+
+Walking on along the muddy road beside her, arm resting on my horse's
+neck, I thought over again of the chances of catching Buckhurst, and
+they seemed slim, especially as after my visit the house at La Trappe
+would be vacant and the colony scattered, or at least out of French
+jurisdiction, and probably settled across the Belgian frontier.
+
+Of course, if the government ordered the expulsion of these people,
+the people must go; but I for one found the order a foolish one,
+because it removed a bait that might attract Buckhurst back where we
+stood a chance of trapping him.
+
+But in a foreign country he could visit his friends freely, and
+whatever movement he might ultimately contemplate against the French
+government could easily be directed from that paradise of anarchists,
+Belgium, without the necessity of his exposing himself to any
+considerable danger.
+
+I was sorry that affairs had taken this turn.
+
+A little breeze began blowing; the scarlet skirt of my turkey-girl
+fluttered above her wooden shoes, and on her head the silk bow
+quivered like a butterfly on a golden blossom.
+
+"They say when the Lord fashioned the first maid of Alsace half the
+angels cried themselves ill with jealousy," said I, looking up at
+her.
+
+"And the other half, monsieur?"
+
+"The sterner half started for Alsace in a body. They were controlled
+with difficulty, mademoiselle. That is why St. Peter was given a key
+to lock them in, not to lock us poor devils out."
+
+After a silence she said, musing: "It is a curious thing, but you
+speak as though you had seen better days."
+
+"No," I said, "I have never seen better days. I am slowly rising in
+the world. Last year I was a lieutenant; I am now inspector."
+
+"I meant," she said, scornfully, "that you had been well-born--a
+gentleman."
+
+"Are gentlemen scarce in the Imperial Military Police?"
+
+"It is not a profession that honors a man."
+
+"Of all people in the world," said I, "the police would be the most
+gratified to believe that this violent world needs no police."
+
+"Monsieur, there is another remedy for violence."
+
+"And what may that remedy be, mademoiselle?"
+
+"Non-resistance--absolute non-resistance," said the girl, earnestly,
+bending her pretty head toward me.
+
+"That is not human nature," I said, laughing.
+
+"Is the justification of human nature our aim in this world?"
+
+"Nor is it possible for mankind to submit to violence," I added.
+
+"I believe otherwise," she said, gravely.
+
+As we mounted the hill along a sandy road, bordered with pines and
+with cool, green thickets of broom and gorse, I looked up at her and
+said: "In spite of your theories, mademoiselle, you yourself refused
+to accompany me."
+
+"But I did not resist your violence," she replied, smiling.
+
+After a moment's silence I said: "For a disciple of a stern and
+colorless creed, you are very human. I am sorry that you believe it
+necessary to reform the world."
+
+She said, thoughtfully: "There is nothing joyless in my creed--above
+all, nothing stern. If it be fanaticism to desire for all the world
+that liberty of thought and speech and deed which I, for one, have
+assumed, then I am, perhaps, a fanatic. If it be fanaticism to detest
+violence and to deplore all resistance to violence, I am a very
+guilty woman, monsieur, and deserve ill of the Emperor's Military
+Police."
+
+This she said with that faintly ironical smile hovering sometimes in
+her eyes, sometimes on her lips, so that it was hard to face her and
+feel quite comfortable.
+
+I began, finally, an elaborate and logical argument, forgetting that
+women reason only with their hearts, and she listened courteously. To
+meet her eyes when I was speaking interrupted my train of thought, and
+often I was constrained to look out across the hills at the heavy,
+solid flanks of the mountains, which seemed to steady my logic and
+bring rebellious thought and wandering wisdom to obedience.
+
+I explained my theory of the acceptance of three things--human nature,
+the past, and the present. Given these, the solution of future
+problems must be a different solution from that which she proposed.
+
+At moments the solemn absurdity of it all came over me--the
+turkey-girl, with her golden head bent, her butterfly coiffe
+a-flutter, discussing ethics with an irresponsible fly-by-night, who
+happened at that period of his career to carry a commission in the
+Imperial Police.
+
+The lazy roadside butterflies flew up in clouds before the
+slow-stepping horse; the hill rabbits, rising to their hindquarters,
+wrinkled their whiskered noses at us; from every thicket speckled
+hedge-birds peered at us as we went our way solemnly deciding those
+eternal questions already ancient when the Talmud branded woman with
+the name of Lilith.
+
+At length, as we reached the summit of the sandy hill, "There is La
+Trappe, monsieur," said my turkey-girl, and once more stretched out
+her lovely arm.
+
+There appeared to be nothing mysterious about the house or its
+surroundings; indeed, a sunnier and more peaceful spot would be hard
+to find in that land of hills, ravines, and rocky woodlands, outposts
+of those cloudy summits soaring skyward in the south.
+
+The house itself was visible through gates of wrought iron, swinging
+wide between pillars of stone, where an avenue stretched away under
+trees to a granite terrace, glittering in the sun. And under the
+terrace a quiet pool lay reflecting tier on tier of stone steps which
+mounted to the bright esplanade above.
+
+There was no porter at the gate to welcome me or to warn me back; the
+wet road lay straight in front, barred only by sunbeams.
+
+"May we enter?" I asked, politely.
+
+She did not answer, and I led the horse down that silent avenue of
+trees towards the terrace and the glassy pool which mirrored the steps
+of stone.
+
+Masses of scarlet geraniums, beds of living coals, glowed above the
+terrace. As we drew nearer, the water caught the blaze of color,
+reflecting the splendor in subdued tints of smothered flame. And
+always, in the pool, I saw the terrace steps, reversed, leading down
+into depths of sombre fire.
+
+"And here we dismount," said I, and offered my aid.
+
+She laid her hands on my shoulders; I swung her to the ground, where
+her sabots clicked and her silver neck-chains jingled in the silence.
+
+I looked around. How intensely still was everything--the leaves, the
+water! The silent blue peaks on the horizon seemed to be watching me;
+the trees around me were so motionless that they also appeared to be
+listening with every leaf.
+
+This quarter of the world was too noiseless for me; there might have
+been a bird-note, a breeze to whisper, a minute stirring of unseen
+life--but there was not.
+
+"Is that house empty?" I asked, turning brusquely on my companion.
+
+"The Countess de Vassart will give you your answer," she replied.
+
+"Kindly announce me, then," I said, grimly, and together we mounted
+the broad flight of steps to the esplanade, above which rose the gray
+mansion of La Trappe.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+LA TRAPPE
+
+
+There was a small company of people gathered at a table which stood in
+the cool shadows of the château's eastern wing. Towards these people
+my companion directed her steps; I saw her bend close to the ear of a
+young girl who had already turned to look at me. At the same instant a
+heavily built, handsome man pushed back his chair and stood up,
+regarding me steadily through his spectacles, one hand grasping the
+back of the seat from which he had risen.
+
+Presently the young girl to whom my companion of the morning had
+whispered rose gracefully and came toward me.
+
+Slender, yet with that charming outline of body which youth wears as a
+promise, she moved across the terrace in her flowing robe of crape,
+and welcomed me with a gesture and a pleasant word, which I scarcely
+heard, so stupidly I stood, silenced by the absolute loveliness of the
+girl. Did I say loveliness? No, not that, but something newer,
+something far more fresh, far sweeter, that made mere physical beauty
+a thing less vital than the colorless shadow of a crystal.
+
+She was not only beautiful, she was Beauty itself, incarnate, alive,
+soul and body. Later I noticed that she was badly sun-burned under the
+eyes, that her delicate nose was adorned by an adorable freckle, and
+that she had red hair.... Could this be the Countess de Vassart? What
+a change!
+
+I stepped forward to meet her, and took off my forage-cap.
+
+"Is it true, monsieur, that you have come to arrest us?" she asked,
+in a low voice.
+
+"Yes, madame," I replied, already knowing that she was the Countess.
+She hesitated; then:
+
+"Will you tell me your name? I am Madame de Vassart."
+
+Cap in hand I followed her to the table, where the company had already
+risen. The young Countess presented me with undisturbed simplicity; I
+bowed to my turkey-girl, who proved, after all, to be the actress from
+the Odéon, Sylvia Elven; then I solemnly shook hands with Dr. Leo
+Delmont, Professor Claude Tavernier, and Monsieur Bazard,
+ex-instructor at the Fontainebleau Artillery School, whom I
+immediately recognized as the snipe-faced notary I had met on the
+road.
+
+"Well, sir," exclaimed Dr. Delmont, in his deep, hearty voice, "if
+this peaceful little community is come under your government's
+suspicion, I can only say, Heaven help France!"
+
+"Is not that what we all say in these times, doctor?" I asked.
+
+"When I say 'Heaven help France!' I do not mean Vive l'Empereur!'"
+retorted the big doctor, dryly.
+
+Professor Tavernier, a little, gray-headed savant with used-up eyes,
+asked me mildly if he might know why they all were to be expelled from
+France. I did not reply.
+
+"Is thought no longer free in France?" asked Dr. Delmont, in his
+heavy voice.
+
+"Thought is free in France," I replied, "but its expression is
+sometimes inadvisable, doctor."
+
+"And the Emperor is to be the judge of when it is advisable to
+express one's thoughts?" inquired Professor Tavernier.
+
+"The Emperor," I said, "is generous, broad-minded, and wonderfully
+tolerant. Only those whose attitude incites to disorder are held in
+check."
+
+"According to the holy Code Napoléon," observed Professor Tavernier,
+with a shrug.
+
+"The code kills the body, Napoleon the soul," said Dr. Delmont,
+gravely.
+
+"It was otherwise with Victor Noir," suggested Mademoiselle Elven.
+
+"Yes," added Delmont, "he asked for justice and they gave him ...
+Pierre!"
+
+"I think we are becoming discourteous to our guest, gentlemen," said
+the young Countess, gently.
+
+I bowed to her. After a moment I said: "Doctor, if you do truly
+believe in that universal brotherhood which apparently even tolerates
+within its boundaries a poor devil of the Imperial Police, if your
+creed really means peace and not violence, suffering and patience, not
+provocation and revolt, demonstrate to the government by the example
+of your submission to its decrees that the theories you entertain are
+not the chimeras of generous but unbalanced minds."
+
+"We never had the faintest idea of resisting," said Monsieur Bazard,
+the notary, otherwise the Chevalier de Grey, a lank, hollow-eyed young
+fellow, already marked heavily with the ravages of pulmonary disease.
+But the fierce glitter in his eyes gave the lie to his words.
+
+"Yesterday, Madame la Comtesse," I said, turning to the Countess de
+Vassart, "the Emperor could easily afford to regard with equanimity
+the movement in which you are associated. To-day that is no longer
+possible."
+
+The young Countess gave me a bewildered look.
+
+"Is it true," she asked, "that the Emperor does not know we have
+severed all connection with the Internationale?"
+
+"If that is so," said I, "why does Monsieur Bazard return across the
+fields to warn you of my coming? And why do you harbor John Buckhurst
+at La Trappe? Do you not know he is wanted by the police?"
+
+"But we do not know why," said Dr. Delmont, bending forward and
+pouring himself a glass of red wine. This he drank slowly, eating a
+bit of black bread with it.
+
+"Monsieur Scarlett," said Mademoiselle Elven, suddenly, "why does
+the government want John Buckhurst?"
+
+"That, mademoiselle, is the affair of the government and of John
+Buckhurst," I said.
+
+"Pardon," interrupted Delmont, heavily, "it is the affair of every
+honest man and woman--where a Bonaparte is concerned."
+
+"I do not understand you, doctor," I said.
+
+"Then I will put it brutally," he replied. "We free people fear a
+family a prince of which is a common murderer."
+
+I did not answer; the world has long since judged the slayer of Victor
+Noir.
+
+After a troubled silence the Countess asked me if I would not share
+their repast, and I thanked her and took some bread and grapes and a
+glass of red wine.
+
+The sun had stolen into the corner where we had been sitting, and the
+Countess suggested that we move down to the lawn under the trees; so
+Dr. Delmont and Professor Tavernier lifted the table and bore it down
+the terrace steps, while I carried the chairs to the lawn.
+
+It made me uncomfortable to play the rôle I was playing among these
+misguided but harmless people; that I showed it in my face is certain,
+for the Countess looked up at me and said, smilingly: "You must not
+look at us so sorrowfully, Monsieur Scarlett. It is we who pity you."
+
+And I replied, "Madame, you are generous," and took my place among
+them and ate and drank with them in silence, listening to the breeze
+in the elms.
+
+Mademoiselle Elven, in her peasant's dress, rested her pretty arm
+across her chair and sighed.
+
+"It is all very well not to resist violence," she said, "but it
+seems to me that the world is going to run over us some day. Is there
+any harm in stepping out of the way, Dr. Delmont?"
+
+The Countess laughed outright.
+
+"Not at all," she said. "But we must not attempt to box the world's
+ears as we run. Must we, doctor?"
+
+Turning her lovely, sun-burned face to me, she continued: "Is it not
+charming here? The quiet is absolute. It is always still. We are
+absurdly contented here; we have no servants, you see, and we all
+plough and harrow and sow and reap--not many acres, because we need
+little. It is one kind of life, quite harmless and passionless,
+monsieur. I have been raking hay this morning. It is so strange that
+the Emperor should be troubled by the silence of these quiet
+fields--"
+
+The distress in her eyes lasted only a moment; she turned and looked
+out across the green meadows, smiling to herself.
+
+"At first when I came here from Paris," she said, "I was at a loss
+to know what to do with all this land. I owe much happiness to Dr.
+Delmont, who suggested that the estate, except what we needed, might
+be loaned free to the people around us. It was an admirable thought;
+we have no longer any poor among us--"
+
+She stopped short and gave me a quick glance. "Please understand me,
+Monsieur Scarlett. I make no merit of giving what I cannot use. That
+would be absurd."
+
+"The world knows, madame, that you have given all you have," I said.
+
+"Then why is your miserable government sending her into exile?" broke
+in Monsieur Bazard, harshly.
+
+"I will tell you," I said, surprised at his tone and manner. "The
+colony at La Trappe is the head and centre of a party which abhors
+war, which refuses resistance, which aims, peacefully perhaps, at
+political and social annihilation. In time of peace this colony is not
+a menace; in time of war it is worse than a menace, monsieur."
+
+I turned to Dr. Delmont.
+
+"With the German armies massing behind the forest borders yonder, it
+is unsafe for the government to leave you here at La Trappe, doctor.
+You are _too neutral_."
+
+"You mean that the government fears treason?" demanded the doctor,
+growing red.
+
+"Yes," I said, "if you insist."
+
+The Countess had turned to me in amazement.
+
+"Treason!" she repeated, in an unsteady voice. "Is it treason for a
+small community to live quietly here in the Alsatian hills, harming
+nobody, asking nothing save freedom of thought? Is it treason for a
+woman of the world to renounce the world? Is it treason for her to
+live an unostentatious life and use her fortune to aid others to live?
+Treason! Monsieur, the word has an ugly ring to me. I am a soldier's
+daughter!"
+
+There was something touchingly illogical in the last words--this young
+apostle of peace naïvely displaying her credentials as though the mere
+word "soldier" covered everything.
+
+"Your government insults us all," said Bazard, between his teeth.
+
+Mademoiselle Elven leaned forward, her blue eyes shining angrily.
+
+"Because I have learned that the boundaries of nations are not the
+frontiers of human hearts, am I a traitor? Because I know no country
+but the world, no speech but the universal speech that one reads in a
+brother's eyes, because I know no barriers, no boundaries, no limits
+to human brotherhood, am I a traitor?"
+
+She made an exquisite gesture with half-open arms; all the poetry of
+the Théâtre Français was in it.
+
+"Look at me! I had all that life could give, save freedom, and that I
+have now--freedom in thought, in speech, in action, freedom to love as
+friends love, freedom to love as lovers love. Ah, more! freedom from
+caste, from hate and envy and all suspicion, freedom to give, freedom
+to receive, freedom in life and in death! Am I a traitor? What do I
+betray? Shame on your Emperor!"
+
+The young Countess, too, had risen in her earnestness and had laid one
+slender, sun-tanned hand upon the table.
+
+"War?" she said. "What is this war to us? The Emperor? What is he to
+us? We who have set a watch on the world's outer ramparts, guarding
+the white banner of universal brotherhood! What is this war to us!"
+
+"Are you not a native of France?" I asked, bluntly.
+
+"I am a native of the world, monsieur."
+
+"Do you mean to say that you care nothing for your own birthland?" I
+demanded, sharply.
+
+"I love the world--all of it--every inch--and if France is part of
+the world, so is this Prussia that we are teaching our poor peasants
+to hate."
+
+"Madame," said I, "the women of France to-day think differently. Our
+Creator did not make love of country a trite virtue, but a passion,
+and set it in our bodies along with our other passions. If in you it
+is absent, that concerns pathology, not the police!"
+
+I did not mean to wound her--I was intensely in earnest; I wanted her
+to show just a single glimmer of sympathy for her own country. It
+seemed as though I could not endure to look at such a woman and know
+that the primal passion, born with those who had at least wept for
+their natal Eden, was meaningless to her.
+
+She had turned a trifle pale; now she sank back into her chair,
+looking at me with those troubled gray eyes in which Heaven itself had
+set truth and loyalty.
+
+I said: "I do not believe that you care nothing for France. Train and
+curb and crush your own heart as you will, you cannot drive out that
+splendid earth-born humanity which is part of us--else we had all been
+born in heaven!"
+
+"Come," said Bazard, in a rage-choked voice, "let it end here,
+Monsieur Scarlett. If the government sends you here as a spy and an
+official, pray remember that you are not also sent as a missionary."
+
+My ears began to burn. "That is true," I said, looking at the
+Countess, whose face had become expressionless. "I ask your pardon
+for what I have said and ... for what I am about to do."
+
+There was a silence. Then, in a low voice, I placed them under formal
+arrest, one by one, touching each lightly on the shoulder as
+prescribed by the code. And when I came to the Countess, she rose,
+without embarrassment. I moved my lips and stretched out my arm,
+barely touching her. I heard Bazard draw a deep breath. She was my
+prisoner.
+
+"I must ask you to prepare for a journey," I said. "You have your
+own horses, of course?"
+
+Without answering, Dr. Delmont walked away towards the stables;
+Professor Tavernier followed him, head bent.
+
+"We shall want very little," said the Countess, calmly, to
+Mademoiselle Elven. "Will you pack up what we need? And you, Monsieur
+Bazard, will you be good enough to go to Trois-Feuilles and hire old
+Brauer's carriage?" Turning to me she said: "I must ask for a little
+delay; I have no longer a carriage of my own. We keep two horses to
+plough and draw grain; they can be harnessed to the farm-wagon for our
+effects."
+
+Monsieur Bazard's hectic visage flushed, he gave me a crazy stare,
+and, for a moment, I fancied there was murder in his bright eyes.
+Doubtless, however, devotion to his creed of non-resistance conquered
+the impulse, and he walked quickly away across the meadows, his
+skeleton hands clinched under his loose sleeves.
+
+Mademoiselle Elven also departed tip-tap! up the terrace in her
+coquettish wooden shoes, leaving me alone with the Countess under the
+trees.
+
+"Madame," said I, "before I affix the government seals to the doors
+of your house I must ask you to conduct me to the roof of the east
+wing."
+
+She bent her head in acquiescence; I followed her up the terrace into
+a stone hall where the dark Flemish pictures stared back at me and my
+spurred heels jingled in the silence. Up, up, and still up, winding
+around a Gothic spiral, then through a passage under the battlements
+and out across the slates, with wind and setting sun in my face and
+the sighing tree-tops far below.
+
+Without glancing at me the Countess walked to the edge of the leads
+and looked down along the sheer declivity of the stone facade.
+Slender, exquisite, she stood there, a lonely shape against the sky,
+and I saw the sun glowing on her burnished red-gold hair, and her
+sun-burned hands, half unclosed, hanging at her side.
+
+South, north, and west the mountains towered, purple as the bloom on
+October grapes; the white arm of the semaphore on the Pigeonnier was
+tinted with rose color; green velvet clothed the world, under a silver
+veil.
+
+In the north a spark of white fire began to flicker on the crest of
+Mount Tonnerre. It was the mirror of a heliograph flashing out across
+leagues of gray-green hills to the rocky pulpit of the Pigeonnier.
+
+I unslung my glasses and levelled them. The shining arm of the
+semaphore fell to a horizontal position and remained rigid; down came
+the signal flags, up went a red globe and two cones. Another string of
+flags blossomed along the bellying halliards; the white star flashed
+twice on Mount Tonnerre and went out.
+
+Instantly I drew a flag from my pouch, tied it to the point of my
+sabre, and stepped out along the projecting snout of a gargoyle.
+Below, under my feet, the tree-tops rustled in the wind.
+
+I had been flagging the Pigeonnier vigorously for ten minutes without
+result, when suddenly a dark dot appeared on the tower beneath the
+semaphore, then another. My glasses brought out two officers, one with
+a flag; and, still watching them through the binoculars, I signalled
+slowly, using my free hand: "This is La Trappe. Telegraph to
+Morsbronn that the inspector of Imperial Police requires a peloton of
+mounted gendarmes at once."
+
+Then I sat down on the sun-warmed slates and waited, amusing myself by
+watching the ever-changing display of signal flags on the distant
+observatory.
+
+It may have been half a minute before I saw two officers advance to
+the railing of the tower and signal: "Attention, La Trappe!"
+
+Pencil and pad on my knee, I managed to use my field-glasses and jot
+down the message:
+
+"Peloton of mounted gendarmes goes to you as soon as possible.
+Repeat."
+
+I repeated, then raised my glasses. Another message came by flag:
+"Attention, La Trappe. Uhlans reported near the village of
+Trois-Feuilles; have you seen them?"
+
+Prussian Uhlans! Here in the rear of our entire army! Nonsense! And I
+signalled a vigorous:
+
+"No. Have you?"
+
+To which came the disturbing reply: "Be on your guard. We are ordered
+to display the semaphore at danger. Report is credited at
+headquarters. Repeat."
+
+I repeated. Raising my glasses again, I could plainly see a young
+officer, an unlighted cigar between his teeth, jotting down our
+correspondence, while the other officer who had flagged me furled up
+his flags and laid them aside, yawning and stretching himself to his
+full height.
+
+So distinctly did my powerful binoculars bring the station into range
+that I could even see the younger officer light a match, which the
+wind extinguished, light another, and presently blow a tiny cloud of
+smoke from his cigar.
+
+The Countess de Vassart had come up to where I was standing on the
+gargoyle, balanced over the gulf below. Very cautiously I began to
+step backward, for there was not room to turn around.
+
+"Would you care to look at the Pigeonnier, madame?" I asked, glancing
+at her over my shoulder.
+
+"I beg you will be careful," she said. "It is a useless risk to
+stand out there."
+
+I had never known the dread of great heights which many people feel,
+and I laughed and stepped backward, expecting to land on the parapet
+behind me. But the point of my scabbard struck against the
+battlements, forcing me outward; I stumbled, staggered, and swayed a
+moment, striving desperately to recover my balance; I felt my gloved
+fingers slipping along the smooth face of the parapet, my knees gave
+way with horror; then my fingers clutched something--an arm--and I
+swung back, slap against the parapet, hanging to that arm with all my
+weight. A terrible effort and I planted my boots on the leads and
+looked up with sick eyes into the eyes of the Countess.
+
+"Can you stand it?" I groaned, clutching her arm with my other hand.
+
+"Yes--don't be afraid," she said, calmly. "Draw me toward you; I
+cannot draw you over."
+
+"Press your knees against the battlements," I gasped.
+
+She bent one knee and wedged it into a niche.
+
+"Don't be afraid; you are not hurting me," she said, with a ghastly
+smile.
+
+I raised one hand and caught her shoulder, then, drawn forward, I
+seized the parapet in both arms, and vaulted to the slate roof.
+
+A fog seemed to blot my eyes; I shook from hair to heel and laid my
+head against the solid stone, while the blank, throbbing seconds past.
+The Countess stood there, shocked and breathless. I saw her sleeve in
+rags, and the snowy skin all bruised beneath.
+
+I tried to thank her; we both were badly shaken, and I do not know
+that she even heard me. Her burnished hair had sagged to her white
+neck; she twisted it up with unsteady fingers and turned away. I
+followed slowly, back through the dim galleries, and presently she
+seemed to remember my presence and waited for me as I felt my way
+along the passage.
+
+"Every little shadow is a yawning gulf," I said. "My nerve is gone,
+madame. The banging of my own sabre scares me."
+
+I strove to speak lightly, but my voice trembled, and so did hers when
+she said: "High places always terrify me; something below seems to
+draw me. Did you ever have that dreadful impulse to sway forward into
+a precipice?"
+
+There was a subtle change in her voice and manner, something almost
+friendly in her gray eyes as she looked curiously at me when we came
+into the half-light of an inner gallery.
+
+What irony lurks in blind chance that I should owe this woman my
+life--this woman whose home I had come to confiscate, whose friends I
+had arrested, who herself was now my prisoner, destined to the shame
+of exile!
+
+Perhaps she divined my thoughts--I do not know--but she turned her
+troubled eyes to the arched window, where a painted saint imbedded in
+golden glass knelt and beat his breast with two heavy stones.
+
+"Madame," I said, slowly, "your courage and your goodness to me have
+made my task a heavy one. Can I lighten it for you in any manner?"
+
+She turned towards me, almost timidly. "Could I go to Morsbronn
+before--before I cross the frontier? I have a house there; there are a
+few things I would like to take--"
+
+She stopped short, seeing, doubtless, the pain of refusal in my face.
+"But, after all, it does not matter. I suppose your orders are
+formal?"
+
+"Yes, madame."
+
+"Then it is a matter of honor?"
+
+"A soldier is always on his honor; a soldier's daughter will
+understand that."
+
+"I understand," she said.
+
+After a moment she smiled and moved forward, saying:
+
+"How the world tosses us--flinging strangers into each other's arms,
+parting brothers, leading enemies across each other's paths! One has a
+glimpse of kindly eyes--and never meets them again. Often and often I
+have seen a good face in the lamp-lit street that I could call out to,
+'Be friends with me!' Then it is gone--and I am gone--Oh, it is
+curiously sad, Monsieur Scarlett!"
+
+"Does your creed teach you to care for everybody, madame?"
+
+"Yes--I try to. Some attract me so strongly--some I pity so. I think
+that if people only knew that there was no such thing as a stranger in
+the world, the world might be a paradise in time."
+
+"It might be, some day, if all the world were as good as you,
+madame."
+
+"Oh, I am only a perplexed woman," she said, laughing. "I do so long
+for the freedom of all the world, absolute individual liberty and no
+law but that best of all laws--the law of the unselfish."
+
+We had stopped, by a mutual impulse, at the head of the stone
+stairway.
+
+"Why do you shelter such a man as John Buckhurst?" I asked,
+abruptly.
+
+She raised her eyes to me with perfect composure.
+
+"Why do you ask?"
+
+"Because I have come here from Paris to arrest him."
+
+She bent her head thoughtfully and laid the tips of her fingers on the
+sculptured balustrade.
+
+"To me," she said, "there's no such thing as a political crime."
+
+"It is not for a political crime that we want John Buckhurst," I
+said, watching her. "It is for a civil outrage."
+
+Her face was like marble; her hands tightened on the fretted
+carving.
+
+"What crime is he charged with?" she asked, without moving.
+
+"He is charged with being a common thief," I said.
+
+Now there was color enough in her face, and to spare, for the
+blood-stained neck and cheek, and even the bare shoulder under the
+torn crape burned pink.
+
+"It is brutal to make such a charge!" she said. "It is shameful!--"
+her voice quivered. "It is not true! Monsieur, give me your word of
+honor that the government means what it says and nothing more!"
+
+"Madame," I said, "I give my word of honor that no political crime
+is charged against that man."
+
+"Will you pledge me your honor that if he answers satisfactorily to
+that false charge of theft, the government will let him go free?"
+
+"I will take it upon myself to do so," said I. "But what in Heaven's
+name is this man to you, madame? He is a militant anarchist, whose
+creed is not yours, whose propaganda teaches merciless violence, whose
+programme is terror. He is well known in the faubourgs; Belleville is
+his, and in the Château Rouge he has pointed across the river to the
+rich quarters, calling it the promised land! Yet here, at La Trappe,
+where your creed is peace and non-resistance, he is welcomed and
+harbored, he is deferred to, he is made executive head of a free
+commune which he has turned into a despotism ... for his own ends!"
+
+She was gazing at me with dilated eyes, hands holding tight to the
+balustrade.
+
+"Did you not know that?" I asked, astonished.
+
+"No," she said.
+
+"You are not aware that John Buckhurst is the soul and centre of the
+Belleville Reds?"
+
+"It is--it is false!" she stammered.
+
+"No, madame, it is true. He wears a smug mask here; he has deceived
+you all."
+
+She stood there, breathing rapidly, her head high.
+
+"John Buckhurst will answer for himself," she said, steadily.
+
+"When, madame?"
+
+For answer she stepped across the hall and laid one hand against the
+blank stone wall. Then, reaching upward, she drew from between the
+ponderous blocks little strips of steel, colored like mortar, dropping
+them to the stone floor, where they rang out. When she had flung away
+the last one, she stepped back and set her frail shoulder to the wall;
+instantly a mass of stone swung silently on an unseen pivot, a yellow
+light streamed out, and there was a tiny chamber, illuminated by a
+lamp, and a man just rising from his chair.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+PRISONERS
+
+
+Instantly I recognized in him the insolent priest who had confronted
+me on my way to La Trappe that morning. I knew him, although now he
+was wearing neither robe nor shovel-hat, nor those square shoes too
+large to buckle closely over his flat insteps.
+
+And he knew me.
+
+He appeared admirably cool and composed, glancing at the Countess for
+an instant with an interrogative expression; then he acknowledged my
+presence by bowing almost humorously.
+
+"This is Monsieur Scarlett, of the Imperial Military Police," said
+the Countess, in a clear voice, ending with that slightly rising
+inflection which demands an answer.
+
+"Mr. Buckhurst," I said, "I am an Inspector of Military Police, and
+I cannot begin to tell you what a pleasure this meeting is to me."
+
+"I have no doubt of that, monsieur," said Buckhurst, in his smooth,
+almost caressing tones. "It, however, inconveniences me a great deal
+to cross the frontier to-day, even in your company, otherwise I should
+have surrendered with my confrères."
+
+"But there is no question of _your_ crossing the frontier, Mr.
+Buckhurst," I said.
+
+His colorless eyes sought mine, then dropped. They were almost stone
+white in the lamp-light--white as his delicately chiselled face and
+hands.
+
+"Are we not to be exiled?" he asked.
+
+"_You_ are not," I said.
+
+"Am I not under arrest?"
+
+I stepped forward and placed him formally under arrest, touching him
+slightly on the shoulder. He did not move a muscle, yet, beneath the
+thin cloth of his coat I could divine a frame of iron.
+
+"Your creed is one of non-resistance to violence," I said--"is it
+not?"
+
+"Yes," he replied. I saw that gray ring around the pale pupil of his
+eyes contracting, little by little.
+
+"You have not asked me why I arrest you," I suggested, "and,
+monsieur, I must ask you to step back from that table--quick!--don't
+move!--not one finger!"
+
+For a second he looked into the barrel of my pistol with concentrated
+composure, then glanced at the table-drawer which he had jerked open.
+A revolver lay shining among the litter of glass tubes and papers in
+the drawer.
+
+The Countess, too, saw the revolver and turned an astonished face to
+my prisoner.
+
+"Who brought you here?" asked Buckhurst, quietly of me.
+
+"I did," said the Countess, her voice almost breaking. "Tell this
+man and his government that you are ready to face every charge against
+your honor! There is a dreadful mistake; they--they think you are--"
+
+"A thief," I interposed, with a smile. "The government only asks you
+to prove that you are not."
+
+Slowly Buckhurst turned his eyes on the Countess; the faintest glimmer
+of white teeth showed for an instant between the gray lines that were
+his lips.
+
+"So _you_ brought this man here?" he said. "Oh, I am glad to know
+it."
+
+"Then you cannot be that same John Buckhurst who stands in the
+tribune of the Château Rouge and promises all Paris to his chosen
+people," I remarked, smiling.
+
+"No," he said, slowly, "I cannot be that man, nor can I--"
+
+"Stop! Stand back from that table!" I cried.
+
+"I beg your pardon," he said, coolly.
+
+"Madame," said I, without taking my eyes from him, "in a community
+dedicated to peace, a revolver is an anachronism. So I think--if you
+move I will shoot you, Mr. Buckhurst!--so I think I had better take
+it, table-drawer and all--"
+
+"Stop!" said Buckhurst.
+
+"Oh no, I can't stop now," said I, cheerfully, "and if you attempt
+to upset that lamp you will make a sad mistake. Now walk to the door!
+Turn your back! Go slowly!--halt!"
+
+With the table-drawer under one arm and my pistol-hand swinging, I
+followed Buckhurst out into the hall.
+
+Daylight dazzled me; it must have affected Buckhurst, too, for he
+reached out to the stone balustrade and guided himself down the steps,
+five paces in front of me.
+
+Under the trees on the lawn, beside the driveway, I saw Dr. Delmont
+standing, big, bushy head bent thoughtfully, hands clasped behind his
+back.
+
+Near him, Tavernier and Bazard were lifting a few boxes into a
+farm-wagon. The carriage from Trois-Feuilles was also there, a stumpy
+Alsatian peasant on the box. But there were yet no signs of the escort
+of gendarmes which had been promised me.
+
+As Buckhurst appeared, walking all alone ahead of me, Dr. Delmont
+looked up with a bitter laugh. "So they found you, too? Well,
+Buckhurst, this is too bad. They might have given you one more day on
+your experiments."
+
+"What experiments?" I asked, glancing at the bottles and retorts in
+the table-drawer.
+
+"Nitrogen for exhausted soil," said the Countess, quietly.
+
+I set the table-drawer on the grass, rested my pistol on my hip, and
+looked around at my prisoners, who now were looking intently at me.
+
+"Gentlemen," said I, "let me warn you not to claim comradeship with
+Mr. Buckhurst. And I will show you one reason why."
+
+I picked up from the table-drawer a little stick about five inches
+long and held it up.
+
+"What is that, doctor? You don't know? Oh, you think it might be some
+sample of fertilizer containing concentrated nitrogen? You are
+mistaken, it is not nitrogen, but nitro-glycerine."
+
+Buckhurst's face changed slightly.
+
+"Is it not, Mr. Buckhurst?" I asked.
+
+He was silent.
+
+"Would you permit me to throw this bit of stuff at your feet?" And I
+made a gesture.
+
+The superb nerve of the man was something to remember. He did not
+move, but over his face there crept a dreadful pallor, which even the
+others noticed, and they shrank away from him, shocked and amazed.
+
+"Here, gentlemen," I continued, "is a box with a German
+label--'Oberlohe, Hanover.' The silicious earth with which
+nitro-glycerine is mixed to make dynamite comes from Oberlohe, in
+Hanover."
+
+I laid my pistol on the table, struck a match, and deliberately
+lighted my stick of dynamite. It burned quietly with a brilliant
+flame, and I laid it on the grass and let it burn out like a lump of
+Greek fire.
+
+"Messieurs," I said, cocking and uncocking my pistol, "it is not
+because this man is a dangerous, political criminal and a maker of
+explosives that the government has sent me here to arrest him ... or
+kill him. It is because he is a common thief,... a thief who steals
+crucifixes,... like this one--"
+
+I brushed aside a pile of papers in the drawer and drew out a big gold
+crucifix, marvellously chiselled from a lump of the solid metal....
+"A thief," I continued, "who strips the diamonds from crucifixes,...
+as this has been stripped,... and who sells a single stone to a Jew in
+Strasbourg, named Fishel Cohen,... now in prison to confront our
+friend Buckhurst."
+
+In the dead silence I heard Dr. Delmont's heavy breathing. Tavernier
+gave a dry sob and covered his face with his thin hands. The young
+Countess stood motionless, frightfully white, staring at Buckhurst,
+who had folded his arms.
+
+Sylvia Elven touched her, but the Countess shook her off and walked
+straight to Buckhurst.
+
+"Look at me," she said. "I have promised you my friendship, my faith
+and trust and support. And now I say to you, I believe in you. Tell
+them where that crucifix came from."
+
+Buckhurst looked at me, long enough to see that the end of his rope
+had come. Then he slowly turned his deadly eyes on the girl before
+him.
+
+Scarlet to the roots of her hair, she stood there, utterly stunned.
+The white edges of Buckhurst's teeth began to show again; for an
+instant I thought he meant to strike her. Then the sudden double beat
+of horses' hoofs broke out along the avenue below, and, through the
+red sunset I saw a dozen horsemen come scampering up the drive toward
+us.
+
+"They've sent me lancers instead of gendarmes for your escort," I
+remarked to Dr. Delmont; at the same moment I stepped out into the
+driveway to signal the riders, raising my hand.
+
+Instantly a pistol flashed--then another and another, and a dozen
+harsh voices shouted: "Hourra! Hourra! Preussen!"
+
+"Mille tonnerre!" roared Delmont; "the Prussians are here!"
+
+"Look out! Stand back there! Get the women back!" I cried, as an
+Uhlan wheeled his horse straight through a bed of geraniums and fired
+his horse-pistol at me.
+
+Delmont dragged the young Countess to the shelter of an elm; Sylvia
+Elven and Tavernier followed; Buckhurst ran to the carriage and leaped
+in.
+
+"No resistance!" bellowed Delmont, as Bazard snatched up the pistol I
+had taken from Buckhurst. But the invalid had already fired at a
+horseman, and had gone down under the merciless hoofs with a lance
+through his face.
+
+My first impulse was to shoot Buckhurst, and I started for him.
+
+Then, in front of me, a horse galloped into the table and fell with a
+crash, hurling his rider at my feet. I can see him yet sprawling there
+on the lawn, a lank, red-faced fellow, his helmet smashed in, and his
+spurred boots sticking fast in the sod.
+
+Helter-skelter through the trees came the rest of the Uhlans, shouting
+their hoarse "Hourra! Hourra! Preussen!"--white-and-black pennons
+streaming from their lance-heads, pistols flashing in the early dusk.
+
+I ran past Bazard's trampled body and fired at an Uhlan who had seized
+the horses which were attached to the carriage where Buckhurst sat.
+The Uhlan's horse reared and plunged, carrying him away at a frightful
+pace, and I do not know whether I hit him or not, but he dropped his
+pistol, and I picked it up and fired at another cavalryman who shouted
+and put his horse straight at me.
+
+Again I ran around the wagon, through a clump of syringa bushes, and
+up the stone steps to the terrace, and after me galloped one of those
+incomparable cossack riders--an Uhlan, lance in rest, setting his wiry
+little horse to the stone steps with a loud "Hourra!"
+
+It was too steep a grade for the gallant horse. I flung my pistol in
+the animal's face and the poor brute reared straight up and fell
+backward, rolling over and over with his unfortunate rider, and
+falling with a tremendous splash into the pool below.
+
+"In God's name stop that!" roared Delmont, from below. "Give up,
+Scarlett! They mean us no harm!"
+
+I could see the good doctor on the lawn, waving his handkerchief
+frantically at me; in a group behind stood the Countess and Sylvia;
+Tavernier was kneeling beside Bazard's body; two Uhlans were raising
+their stunned comrade from the wreck of the table; other Uhlans
+cantered toward the foot of the terrace above which I stood.
+
+"Come down, hussar!" called an officer. "We respect your uniform."
+
+"Will you parley?" I asked, listening intently for the gallop of my
+promised gendarmes. If I could only gain time and save Buckhurst. He
+was there in the carriage; I had seen him spring into it when the
+Germans burst in among the trees.
+
+"Foulez-fous fous rendre? Oui ou non?" shouted the officer, in his
+terrible French.
+
+"Eh bien,... non!" I cried, and ran for the château.
+
+I heard the Uhlans dismount and run clattering and jingling up the
+stone steps. As I gained the doorway they shot at me, but I only fled
+the faster, springing up the stairway. Here I stood, sabre in hand,
+ready to stop the first man.
+
+Up the stairs rushed three Uhlans, sabres shining in the dim light
+from the window behind me; I laid my forefinger flat on the blade of
+my sabre and shortened my arm for a thrust--then there came a blinding
+flash, a roar, and I was down, trying to rise, until a clinched fist
+struck me in the face and I fell flat on my back.
+
+Without any emotion whatever I saw an Uhlan raise his sabre to finish
+me; also I saw a yellow-and-black sleeve interposed between death and
+myself.
+
+"No butchery!" growled the big officer who had summoned me from the
+lawn. "Cursed pig, you'd sabre your own grandmother! Lift him, Sepp!
+You, there, Loisel!--lift him up. Is he gone?"
+
+"He is alive, Herr Rittmeister," said a soldier, "but his back is
+broken."
+
+"It isn't," I said.
+
+"Herr Je!" muttered the Rittmeister; "an eel, and a Frenchman, and
+nine long lives! Here, you hussar, what's the matter with you?"
+
+"One of them shot me; I thought it was to be sabres," said I,
+weakly.
+
+"And why the devil wasn't it sabres!" roared the officer, turning on
+his men. "One to three--and six more below! Sepp, you disgust me.
+Carry him out!"
+
+I groaned as they lifted me. "Easy there!" growled the officer,
+"don't pull him that way. Now, young hell-cat, set your teeth; you
+have eight more lives yet."
+
+They got me out to the terrace, and carried me to the lawn. One of the
+men brought a cup of water from the pool.
+
+"Herr Rittmeister," I said, faintly, "I had a prisoner here; he
+should be in the carriage. Is he?"
+
+The officer walked briskly over to the carriage. "Nobody here but two
+women and a scared peasant!" he called out.
+
+As I lay still staring up into the sky, I heard the Rittmeister
+addressing Dr. Delmont in angry tones. "By every law of civilized war
+I ought to hang you and your friend there! Civilians who fire on
+troops are treated that way. But I won't. Your foolish companion lies
+yonder with a lance through his mouth. He's dead; I say nothing. For
+you, I have no respect. But I have for that hell-cat who did his duty.
+You civilians--you go to the devil!"
+
+"Are not your prisoners sacred from insult?" asked the doctor,
+angrily.
+
+"Prisoners! _My_ prisoners! You compliment yourself! Loisel! Send
+those impudent civilians into the house! I won't look at them! They
+make me sick!"
+
+The astonished doctor attempted to take his stand by me, offering his
+services, but the troopers hustled him and poor Tavernier off up the
+terrace steps.
+
+"The two ladies in the carriage, Herr Rittmeister?" said a
+cavalryman, coming up at salute.
+
+"What? Ladies? Oh yes." Then he muttered in his mustache: "Always
+around--always everywhere. They can't stay there. I want that
+carriage. Sepp!"
+
+"At orders, Herr Rittmeister!"
+
+"Carry that gentleman to the carriage. Place Schwartz and Ruppert in
+the wagon yonder. Get straw--you, Brauer, bring straw--and toss in
+those boxes, if there is room. Where's Hofman?"
+
+"In the pool, Herr Rittmeister."
+
+"Take him out," said the officer, soberly. "Uhlans don't abandon
+their dead."
+
+Two soldiers lifted me again and bore me away in the darkness. I was
+perfectly conscious.
+
+And all the while I was listening for the gallop of my gendarmes, not
+that I cared very much, now that Buckhurst was gone.
+
+"Herr Rittmeister," I said, as they laid me in the carriage, "ask
+the Countess de Vassart if she will let me say good-bye to her."
+
+"With pleasure," said the officer, promptly. "Madame, here is a
+polite young gentleman who desires to make his adieux. Permit me,
+madame--he is here in the dark. Sepp! fall back! Loisel, advance ten
+paces! Halt!"
+
+"Is it you, Monsieur Scarlett?" came an unsteady voice, from the
+darkness.
+
+"Yes, madame. Can you forgive me?"
+
+"Forgive you? My poor friend, I have nothing to forgive. Are you
+badly hurt, Monsieur Scarlett?"
+
+"I don't know," I muttered.
+
+Suddenly the chapel bell of La Trappe rang out a startling peal; the
+Prussian captain shouted: "Stop that bell! Shoot every civilian in
+the house!" But the Uhlans, who rushed up the terrace, found the great
+doors bolted and the lower windows screened with steel shutters.
+
+On the battlements of the south wing a red radiance grew brighter;
+somebody had thrown wood into the iron basket of the ancient beacon,
+and set fire to it.
+
+"That teaches me a lesson!" bawled the enraged Rittmeister, shaking
+his fist up at the brightening alarm signal.
+
+He vaulted into his saddle, wheeled his horse and rode up to the
+peasant, Brauer, who, frightened to the verge of stupidity, sat on the
+carriage-box.
+
+"Do you know the wood-road that leads to Gunstett through the
+foot-hills?" he demanded, controlling his fury with a strong effort.
+
+The blank face of the peasant was answer enough; the Rittmeister
+glared around; his eyes fell on the Countess.
+
+"You know this country, madame?"
+
+"Yes, monsieur."
+
+"Will you set us on our way through the Gunstett hill-road?"
+
+"No."
+
+The chapel bell was clanging wildly; the beacon shot up in a whirling
+column of sparks and red smoke.
+
+"Put that woman into the carriage!" bellowed the officer. "I'm
+cursed if I leave her to set the whole country yapping at our heels!
+Loisel, put her in beside the prisoner! Madame, it is useless to
+resist. Hark! What's that sound of galloping?"
+
+I listened. I heard nothing save the clamor of the chapel bell.
+
+An Uhlan laid a heavy hand on the shoulder of the listening Countess;
+she tried to draw back, but he pushed her brutally into the carriage,
+and she stumbled and fell into the cushions beside me.
+
+"Uhlans, into your saddles!" cried the Rittmeister, sharply. "Two
+men to the wagon!--a man on the box there! Here you, Jacques Bonhomme,
+drive carefully or I'll hang you higher than the Strasbourg clock. Are
+the wounded in the straw? Sepp, take the riderless horses. Peloton,
+attention! Draw sabres! March! Trot!"
+
+Fever had already begun to turn my head; the jolting of the carriage
+brought me to my senses at times; at times, too, I could hear the two
+wounded Uhlans groaning in the wagon behind me, the tramping of the
+cavalry ahead, the dull rattle of lance butts in the leather
+stirrup-boots.
+
+If I could only have fainted, but I could not, and the agony grew so
+intense that I bit my lip through to choke the scream that strained my
+throat.
+
+Once the carriage stopped; in the darkness I heard somebody whisper:
+"There go the French riders!" And I fancied I heard a far echo of
+hoof-strokes along the road to La Trappe. It might have been the
+fancy of an intermittent delirium; it may have been my delayed
+gendarmes--I never knew. And the carriage presently moved on more
+smoothly, as though we were now on one of those even military
+high-roads which traverse France from Luxembourg to the sea.
+
+Which way we were going I did not know, I did not care. Absurdly
+mingled with sick fancies came flashes of reason, when I could see the
+sky frosted with silver, and little, bluish stars peeping down. At
+times I recognized the mounted men around me as Prussian Uhlans, and
+weakly wondered by what deviltry they had got into France, and what
+malignant spell they cast over the land that the very stones did not
+rise up and smite them from their yellow-and-black saddles.
+
+Once--it was, I think, very near daybreak--I came out of a dream in
+which I was swimming through oceans of water, drinking as I swam. The
+carriage had stopped; I could not see the lancers, but presently I
+heard them all talking in loud, angry voices. There appeared to be
+some houses near by; I heard a dog barking, a great outcry of pigs and
+feathered fowls, the noise of a scuffle, a trampling of heavy boots, a
+shot!
+
+Then the terrible voice of the Rittmeister: "Hang that man to his
+barn gate! Pig of an assassin, I'll teach you to murder German
+soldiers!"
+
+A woman began to scream without ceasing.
+
+"Burn that house!" bellowed the Rittmeister.
+
+Through the prolonged screaming I heard the crash of window-glass;
+presently a dull red light grew out of the gloom, brighter and
+brighter. The screaming never ceased.
+
+"Uhlans! Mount!" came the steady voice of the Rittmeister; the
+carriage started. Almost at the word the darkness turned to flame;
+against the raging furnace of a house on fire I saw the figure of a
+man, inky black, hanging from the high cross-bar of the cow-yard gate,
+and past him filed the shadowy horsemen, lances slanting backward from
+their stirrups.
+
+The last I remember was seeing the dead man's naked feet--for they
+hanged him in his night-shirt--and the last I heard was that awful
+screaming from the red shadows that flickered across the fields of
+uncut wheat.
+
+For presently my madness began again, and again I was bathed to the
+mouth in cold, sweet waters, and I drank as I swam lazily in the
+sunshine.
+
+My next lucid interval came from pain almost unendurable. We were
+fording a river in bright starlight; the carriage bumped across the
+stones, water washed and slopped over the carriage floor. To right and
+left, Prussian lancers were riding, and I saw the water boiling under
+their horses and their long lances aslant the stars.
+
+But there were more horsemen now, scores and scores of them, trampling
+through the shallow river. And beyond I could see a line of cannon,
+wallowing through the water, shadowy artillerymen clinging to forge
+and caisson, mounted men astride straining teams, tall officers on
+either flank, sitting their horses motionless in mid-stream.
+
+The carriage stopped.
+
+"Are you suffering?" came a low voice, close to my ear.
+
+"Madame, could I have a little of that water?" I muttered.
+
+Very gently she laid me back. I was entirely without power to move
+below my waist, or to support my body.
+
+She filled my cap with river water and held it while I drank. After I
+had my fill she bathed my face, passing her wet hands through my hair
+and over my eyes. The carriage moved on.
+
+[Illustration: "TO RIGHT AND LEFT, PRUSSIAN LANCERS WERE RIDING"]
+
+After a while she whispered.
+
+"Are you awake?"
+
+"Yes, madame."
+
+"See the dawn--how red it is on the hills! There are vineyards there
+on the heights,... and a castle,... and soldiers moving out across the
+river meadows."
+
+The rising sun was shining in my eyes as we came to a halt before
+a small stone bridge over which a column of cavalry was
+passing--Prussian hussars, by their crimson dolmans and little, flat
+busbies.
+
+Our Uhlan escort grouped themselves about us to watch the hussars
+defile at a trot, and I saw the Rittmeister rigidly saluting their
+standards as they bobbed past above a thicket of sabres.
+
+"What are these Uhlans doing?" broke in a nasal voice behind us; an
+officer, followed by two orderlies and a trumpeter, came galloping up
+through the mud.
+
+"Who's that--a dead Frenchman?" demanded the officer, leaning over
+the edge of the carriage to give me a near-sighted stare. Then he saw
+the Countess, stared at her, and touched the golden peak of his
+helmet.
+
+"At your service, madame," he said. "Is this officer dead?"
+
+"Dying, general," said the Rittmeister, at salute.
+
+"Then he will not require these men. Herr Rittmeister, I take your
+Uhlans for my escort. Madame, you have my sympathy; can I be of
+service?"
+
+He spoke perfect French. The Countess looked up at him in a bewildered
+way. "You cannot mean to abandon this dying man here?" she asked.
+
+There was a silence, broken brusquely by the Rittmeister. "That
+Frenchman did his duty!"
+
+"Did he?" said the general, staring at the Countess.
+
+"Very well; I want that carriage, but I won't take it. Give the
+driver a white flag, and have him drive into the French lines. Herr
+Rittmeister, give your orders! Madame, your most devoted!" And he
+wheeled his beautiful horse and trotted off down the road, while the
+Rittmeister hastily tied a handkerchief to a stick and tossed it up to
+the speechless peasant on the box.
+
+"Morsbronn is the nearest French post!" he said, in French. Then he
+bent from his horse and looked down at me.
+
+"You did your duty!" he snapped, and, barely saluting the Countess,
+touched spurs to his mount and disappeared, followed at a gallop by
+his mud-splashed Uhlans.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+THE IMMORTALS
+
+
+When I became conscious again I was lying on a table. Two men were
+leaning over me; a third came up, holding a basin. There was an odor
+of carbolic in the air.
+
+The man with the basin made a horrid grimace when he caught my eye;
+his face was a curious golden yellow, his eyes jet black, and at first
+I took him for a fever phantom.
+
+Then my bewildered eyes fastened on his scarlet fez, pulled down over
+his left ear, the sky-blue Zouave jacket, with its bright-yellow
+arabesques, the canvas breeches, leggings laced close over the thin
+shins and ankles of an Arab. And I knew him for a soldier of African
+riflemen, one of those brave children of the desert whom we called
+"Turcos," and whose faith in the greatness of France has never
+faltered since the first blue battalion of Africa was formed under the
+eagles of the First Empire.
+
+"Hallo, Mustapha!" I said, faintly; "what are they doing to me
+now?"
+
+The Turco's golden-bronze visage relaxed; he saluted me.
+
+"Macache sabir," he said; "they picked a bullet from your spine, my
+inspector."
+
+An officer in the uniform of a staff-surgeon came around the table
+where I was lying.
+
+"Bon!" he exclaimed, eying me sharply through his gold-rimmed
+glasses. "Can you feel your hind-legs now, young man?"
+
+I could feel them all too intensely, and I said so.
+
+The surgeon began to turn down his shirt-sleeves and button his cuffs,
+saying, "You're lucky to have a pain in your legs." Turning to the
+Turco, he added, "Lift him!" And the giant rifleman picked me up and
+laid me in a long chair by the window.
+
+"Your case is one of those amusing cases," continued the surgeon,
+buckling on his sword and revolver; "very amusing, I assure you. As
+for the bullet, I could have turned it out with a straw, only it
+rested there _exactly_ where it stopped the use of those long legs of
+yours!--a fine example of temporary reflex paralysis, and no
+hemorrhage to speak of--nothing to swear about, young man. By-the-way,
+you ought to go to bed for a few days."
+
+He clasped his short baldric over his smartly buttoned tunic. The room
+was shaking with the discharges of cannon.
+
+"A millimetre farther and that bullet would have cracked your spine.
+Remember that and keep off your feet. Ouf! The cannon are tuning up!"
+as a terrible discharge shattered the glass in the window-panes beside
+me.
+
+"Where am I, doctor?" I asked.
+
+"Parbleu, in Morsbronn! Can't you hear the orchestra, zim-bam-zim!
+The Prussians are playing their Wagner music for us. Here, swallow
+this. How do you feel now?"
+
+"Sleepy. Did you say a day or two, doctor?"
+
+"I said a week or two--perhaps longer. I'll look in this evening if
+I'm not up to my chin in amputations. Take these every hour if in
+pain. Go to sleep, my son."
+
+With a paternal tap on my head, he drew on his scarlet, gold-banded
+cap, tightened the check strap, and walked out of the room.
+Down-stairs I heard him cursing because his horse had been shot. I
+never saw him again.
+
+Dozing feverishly, hearing the cannon through troubled slumber, I
+awoke toward noon quite free from any considerable pain, but thirsty
+and restless, and numbed to the hips. Alarmed, I strove to move my
+feet, and succeeded. Then, freed from the haunting terror of
+paralysis, I fell to pinching my legs with satisfaction, my eyes
+roving about in search of water.
+
+The room where I lay was in disorder; it appeared to be completely
+furnished with well-made old pieces, long out of date, but not old
+enough to be desirable. Chairs, sofas, tables were all fashioned in
+that poor design which marked the early period of the Consulate; the
+mirror was a fine sheet of glass imbedded in Pompeian and Egyptian
+designs; the clock, which had stopped, was a meaningless lump of gilt
+and marble, supported on gilt sphinxes. Over the bed hung a tarnished
+canopy broidered with a coronet, which, from the strawberry leaves and
+the pearls raised above them, I took to be the coronet of a count of
+English origin.
+
+The room appeared to be very old, and I knew the house must have stood
+for centuries somewhere along the single street of Morsbronn, though I
+could not remember seeing any building in the village which, judging
+from the exterior, seemed likely to contain such a room as this.
+
+The nearer and heavier cannon-shots had ceased, but the window-sashes
+hummed with the steady thunder of a battle going on somewhere among
+the mountains. Knowing the Alsatian frontier fairly well, I understood
+that a battle among the mountains must mean that our First Corps had
+been attacked, and that we were on the defensive on French soil.
+
+The booming of the guns was unbroken, as steady and sustained as the
+eternal roar of a cataract. At moments I believed that I could
+distinguish the staccato crashes of platoon firing, but could not be
+certain in the swelling din.
+
+As I lay there on my long, cushioned chair, burning with that
+insatiable thirst which, to thoroughly appreciate, one must be
+wounded, the door opened and a Turco soldier came into the room and
+advanced toward me on tip-toe.
+
+He wore full uniform, was fully equipped, crimson chechia, snowy
+gaiters, and terrible sabre-bayonet.
+
+I beckoned him, and the tall, bronzed fellow came up, smiling, showing
+his snowy, pointed teeth under a crisp beard.
+
+"Water, Mustapha," I motioned with stiffened lips, and the good
+fellow unslung his blue water-bottle and set it to my burning mouth.
+
+"Merci, mon brave!" I said. "May you dwell in Paradise with Ali, the
+fourth Caliph, the Lion of God!"
+
+The Turco stared, muttered the Tekbir in a low voice, bent and kissed
+my hands.
+
+"Were you once an officer of our African battalions?" he asked, in
+the Arab tongue.
+
+"Sous-officier of spahi cavalry," I said, smiling. "And you are a
+Kabyle mountaineer from Constantine, I see."
+
+"It is true as I recite the fatha," cried the great fellow, beaming
+on me. "We Kabyles love our officers and bear witness to the unity of
+God, too. I am a marabout, my inspector, Third Turcos, and I am
+anxious to have a Prussian ask me who were my seven ancestors."
+
+The music of his long-forgotten tongue refreshed me; old scenes and
+memories of the camp at Oran, the never-to-be-forgotten cavalry with
+the scarlet cloaks, rushed on me thick and fast; incidents, trivial
+matters of the bazaars, faces of comrades dead, came to me in
+flashes. My eyes grew moist, my throat swelled, I whimpered:
+
+"It is all very well, mon enfant, but I'm here with a hole in me
+stuffed full of lint, and you have your two good arms and as many legs
+with which to explain to the Prussians who your seven ancestors may
+be. Give me a drink, in God's name!"
+
+Again he held up the blue water-bottle, saying, gravely: "We both
+worship the same God, my inspector, call Him what we will."
+
+After a moment I said: "Is it a battle or a bousculade? But I need
+not ask; the cannon tell me enough. Are they storming the heights,
+Mustapha?"
+
+"Macache comprendir," said the soldier, dropping into patois. "There
+is much noise, but we Turcos are here in Morsbronn, and we have seen
+nothing but sparrows."
+
+I listened for a moment; the sound of the cannonade appeared to be
+steadily receding westward.
+
+"It seems to me like retreat!" I said, sharply.
+
+"Ritrite? Quis qui ci, ritrite?"
+
+I looked at the simple fellow with tears in my eyes.
+
+"You would not understand if I told you," said I. "Are you detailed
+to look after me?"
+
+He said he was, and I informed him that I needed nobody; that it was
+much more important for everybody that he should rejoin his battalion
+in the street below, where even now I could hear the Algerian bugles
+blowing a silvery sonnerie--"Garde à vous!"
+
+"I am Salah Ben-Ahmed, a marabout of the Third Turcos," he said,
+proudly, "and I have yet to explain to these Prussians who my seven
+ancestors were. Have I my inspector's permission to go?"
+
+He was fairly trembling as the imperative clangor of the bugles rang
+through the street; his fine nostrils quivered, his eyes glittered
+like a cobra's.
+
+"Go, Salah Ben-Ahmed, the marabout," said I, laughing.
+
+The soldier stiffened to attention; his bronzed hand flew to his
+scarlet fez, and, "Salute! O my inspector!" he cried, sonorously, and
+was gone at a bound.
+
+That breathless unrest which always seizes me when men are at one
+another's throats set me wriggling and twitching, and peering from the
+window, through which I could not see because of the blinds. Command
+after command was ringing out in the street below. "Forward!" shouted
+a resonant voice, and "Forward! forward! forward!" echoed the voices
+of the captains, distant and more distant, then drowned in the rolling
+of kettle-drums and the silvery clang of Moorish cymbals.
+
+The band music of the Algerian infantry died away in the distant
+tumult of the guns; faintly, at moments, I could still hear the shrill
+whistle of their flutes, the tinkle of the silver chimes on their
+_toug_; then a blank, filled with the hollow roar of battle, then a
+clear note from their reeds, a tinkle, an echoing chime--and nothing,
+save the immense monotone of the cannonade.
+
+I had been lying there motionless for an hour, my head on my hand,
+snivelling, when there came a knock at the door, and I hastily
+buttoned my blood-stained shirt to the throat, threw a tunic over my
+shoulders, and cried, "Come in!"
+
+A trick of memory and perhaps of physical weakness had driven from my
+mind all recollection of the Countess de Vassart since I had come to
+my senses under the surgeon's probe. But at the touch of her fingers
+on the door outside, I knew her--I was certain that it could be nobody
+but my Countess, who had turned aside in her gentle pilgrimage to lift
+this Lazarus from the waysides of a hostile world.
+
+She entered noiselessly, bearing a bowl of broth and some bread; but
+when she saw me sitting there with eyes and nose all red and swollen
+from snivelling she set the bowl on a table and hurried to my side.
+
+"What is it? Is the pain so dreadful?" she whispered.
+
+"No--oh no. I'm only a fool, and quite hungry, madame."
+
+She brought the broth and bread and a glass of the most exquisite wine
+I ever tasted--a wine that seemed to brighten the whole room with its
+liquid sunshine.
+
+"Do you know where you are?" she asked, gravely.
+
+"Oh yes--in Morsbronn."
+
+"And in whose house, monsieur?"
+
+"I don't know--" I glanced instinctively at the tarnished coronet on
+the canopy above the bed. "Do you know, Madame la Comtesse?"
+
+"I ought to," she said, faintly amused. "I was born in this room. It
+was to this house that I desired to come before--my exile."
+
+Her eyes softened as they rested first on one familiar object, then on
+another.
+
+"The house has always been in our family," she said. "It was once
+one of those fortified farms in the times when every hamlet was a
+petty kingdom--like the King of Yvetôt's domain. Doubtless the ancient
+Trécourts also wore cotton night-caps for their coronets."
+
+"I remember now," said I, "a stone turret wedged in between two
+houses. Is this it?"
+
+"Yes, it is all that is left of the farm. My ancestors built this
+crazy old row of houses for their tenants."
+
+After a silence I said, "I wish I could look out of the window."
+
+She hesitated. "I don't suppose it could harm you?"
+
+"It will harm me if I don't," said I.
+
+She went to the window and folded up the varnished blinds.
+
+"How dreadful the cannonade is growing," she said. "Wait! don't
+think of moving! I will push you close to the window, where you can
+see."
+
+The tower in which my room was built projected from the rambling row
+of houses, so that my narrow window commanded a view of almost the
+entire length of the street. This street comprised all there was of
+Morsbronn; it lay between a double rank of houses constructed of
+plaster and beams, and surmounted by high-pointed gables and slated or
+tiled roofs, so fantastic that they resembled steeples.
+
+Down the street I could see the house that I had left twenty-four
+hours before, never dreaming what my journey to La Trappe held in
+store for me. One or two dismounted soldiers of the Third Hussars sat
+in the doorway, listening to the cannon; but, except for these
+listless troopers, a few nervous sparrows, and here and there a
+skulking peasant, slinking off with a load of household furniture on
+his back, the street was deserted.
+
+Everywhere shutters had been put up, blinds closed, curtains drawn.
+Not a shred of smoke curled from the chimneys of these deserted
+houses; the heavy gables cast sinister shadows over closed doors and
+gates barred and locked, and it made me think of an unseaworthy ship,
+prepared for a storm, so bare and battened down was this long, dreary
+commune, lying there in the August sun.
+
+Beside the window, close to my face, was a small, square loop-hole,
+doubtless once used for arquebus fire. It tired me to lean on the
+window, so I contented myself with lying back and turning my head, and
+I could see quite as well through the loop-hole as from the window.
+
+Lying there, watching the slow shadows crawling out over the sidewalk,
+I had been for some minutes thinking of my friend Mr. Buckhurst, when
+I heard the young Countess stirring in the room behind me.
+
+"You are not going to be a cripple?" she said, as I turned my head.
+
+"Oh no, indeed!" said I.
+
+"Nor die?" she added, seriously.
+
+"How could a man die with an angel straight from heaven to guard him!
+Pardon, I am only grateful, not impertinent." I looked at her humbly,
+and she looked at me without the slightest expression. Oh, it was all
+very well for the Countess de Vassart to tuck up her skirts and rake
+hay, and live with a lot of half-crazy apostles, and throw her fortune
+to the proletariat and her reputation to the dogs. She could do it;
+she was Éline Cyprienne de Trécourt, Countess de Vassart; and if her
+relatives didn't like her views, that was their affair; and if the
+Faubourg Saint-Germain emitted moans, that concerned the noble
+faubourg and not James Scarlett, a policeman attached to a division of
+paid mercenaries.
+
+Oh yes, it was all very well for the Countess de Vassart to play at
+democracy with her unbalanced friends, but it was also well for
+Americans to remember that she was French, and that this was France,
+and that in France a countess was a countess until she was buried in
+the family vault, whether she had chosen to live as a countess or as
+Doll Dairymaid.
+
+The young girl looked at me curiously, studying me with those
+exquisite gray eyes of hers. Pensive, distraite, she sat there, the
+delicate contour of her head outlined against the sunny window, which
+quivered with the slow boom! boom! of the cannonade.
+
+"Are you English, Monsieur Scarlett?" she asked, quietly.
+
+"American, madame."
+
+"And yet you take service under an emperor."
+
+"I have taken harder service than that."
+
+"Of necessity?"
+
+"Yes, madame."
+
+She was silent.
+
+"Would it amuse you to hear what I have been?" I said, smiling.
+
+"That is not the word," she said, quietly. "To hear of hardship
+helps one to understand the world."
+
+The cannonade had been growing so loud again that it was with
+difficulty that we could make ourselves audible to each other. The jar
+of the discharges began to dislodge bits of glass and little
+triangular pieces of plaster, and the solid walls of the tower shook
+till even the mirror began to sway and the tarnished gilt sconces to
+quiver in their sockets.
+
+"I wish you were not in Morsbronn," I said.
+
+"I feel safer here in my own house than I should at La Trappe," she
+replied.
+
+She was probably thinking of the dead Uhlan and of poor Bazard;
+perhaps of the wretched exposure of Buckhurst--the man she had trusted
+and who had proved to be a swindler, and a murderous one at that.
+
+Suddenly a shell fell into the court-yard opposite, bursting
+immediately in a cloud of gravel which rained against our turret like
+hail.
+
+Stunned for an instant, the Countess stood there motionless, her face
+turned towards the window. I struggled to sit upright.
+
+She looked calmly at me; the color came back into her face, and in
+spite of my remonstrance she walked to the window, closed the heavy
+outside shutters and the blinds. As she was fastening them I heard the
+whizzing quaver of another shell, the racket of its explosion, the
+crash of plaster.
+
+[Illustration: "A COMPANY OF TURCOS CAME UP"]
+
+"Where is the safest place for us to stay?" she asked. Her voice was
+perfectly steady.
+
+"In the cellar. I beg you to go at once."
+
+Bang! a shell blew up in a shower of slates and knocked a chimney into
+a heap of bricks.
+
+"Do you insist on staying by that loop-hole?" she asked, without a
+quiver in her voice.
+
+"Yes, I do," said I. "Will you go to the cellar?"
+
+"No," she said, shortly.
+
+I saw her walk toward the rear of the room, hesitate, sink down by the
+edge of the bed and lay her face in the pillow.
+
+Two shells burst with deafening reports in the street; the young
+Countess covered her face with both hands. Shell after shell came
+howling, whistling, whizzing into the village; the two hussars had
+disappeared, but a company of Turcos came up on a run and began to dig
+a trench across the street a hundred yards west of our turret.
+
+How they made the picks and shovels fly! Shells tore through the air
+over them, bursting on impact with roof and chimney; the Turcos tucked
+up their blue sleeves, spat on their hands, and dug away like
+terriers, while their officers, smoking the eternal cigarette, coolly
+examined the distant landscape through their field-glasses.
+
+Shells rained fast on Morsbronn; nearer and nearer bellowed the guns;
+the plaster ceiling above my head cracked and fell in thin flakes,
+filling the room with an acrid, smarting dust. Again and again metal
+fragments from shells rang out on the heavy walls of our turret; a
+roof opposite sank in; flames flickered up through clouds of dust; a
+heavy yellow smoke, swarming with sparks, rolled past my window.
+
+Down the street a dull sound grew into a steady roar; the Turcos
+dropped pick and shovel and seized their rifles.
+
+"Garde! Garde à vous!" rang their startled bugles; the tumult
+increased to a swelling uproar, shouting, cheering, the crash of
+shutters and of glass, and--
+
+"The Prussians!" bellowed the captain. "Turcos--charge!"
+
+His voice was lost; a yelling mass of soldiery burst into view; spiked
+helmets and bayonets glittering through the smoke, the Turcos were
+whirled about like brilliant butterflies in a tornado; the fusillade
+swelled to a stupefying din, exploding in one terrible crash; and,
+wrapped in lightning, the Prussian onset passed.
+
+From the stairs below came the sound of a voiceless struggle, the
+trample and panting and clicking of steel, till of a sudden a voice
+burst out into a dreadful screaming. A shot followed--silence--another
+shot--then the stairs outside shook under the rush of mounting men.
+
+As the door burst open I felt a touch on my arm; the Countess de
+Vassart stood erect and pale, one slender, protecting hand resting
+lightly on my shoulder; a lieutenant of Prussian infantry confronted
+us; straight, heavy sword drawn, rigid, uncompromising, in his
+faultless gray-and-black uniform, with its tight, silver waist-sash.
+
+"I do not have you thrown into the street," he said to me, in
+excellent French, "because there has been no firing from the windows
+in this village. Otherwise--other measures. Be at ease, madame, I
+shall not harm your invalid."
+
+He glanced at me out of his near-sighted eyes, dropped the point of
+his sword to the stone floor, and slowly caressed his small, blond
+mustache.
+
+"How many troops passed through here yesterday morning?" he asked.
+
+I was silent.
+
+"There was artillery, was there not?"
+
+I only looked at him.
+
+"Do you hear?" he repeated, sharply. "You are a prisoner, and I am
+questioning you."
+
+"You have that useless privilege," I observed.
+
+"If you are insolent I will have you shot!" he retorted, staring
+haughtily at me.
+
+I glanced out of the window.
+
+There was a pause; the hand of the Countess de Vassart trembled on my
+shoulder.
+
+Under the window strident Prussian bugles were blowing a harsh
+summons; the young officer stepped to the loop-hole and looked out,
+then hastily removed his helmet and thrust his blond head through the
+smoky aperture. "March those prisoners in below!" he shouted down.
+
+Then he withdrew his head, put on his polished helmet of black
+leather, faced with the glittering Prussian eagle, and tightened the
+gold-scaled cheek-guard.
+
+A moment later came a trample of feet on the landing outside, the door
+was flung open, and three prisoners were brutally pushed into the
+room.
+
+I tried to turn and look at them; they stood in the dusk near the bed,
+but I could only make out that one was a Turco, his jacket in rags,
+his canvas breeches covered with mud.
+
+Again the lieutenant came to the loop-hole and glanced out, then shook
+his head, motioning the soldiers back.
+
+"It is too high and the arc of fire too limited," he said, shortly.
+"Detail four men to hold the stairs, ten men and a sergeant in the
+room below, and you'd better take your prisoners down there. Bayonet
+that Turco tiger if he shows his teeth again. March!"
+
+As the prisoners filed out I turned once more and thought I recognized
+Salah Ben-Ahmed in the dishevelled Turco, but could not be certain,
+so disfigured and tattered the soldier appeared.
+
+"Here, you hussar prisoner!" cried the lieutenant, pointing at me
+with his white-gloved finger, "turn your head and busy yourself with
+what concerns you. And you, madame," he added, pompously, "see that
+you give us no trouble and stay in this room until you have permission
+to leave."
+
+"Are--are you speaking to me, monsieur?" asked the Countess, amazed.
+Then she rose, exasperated.
+
+"Your insolence disgraces your uniform," she said. "Go to your
+French prisoners and learn the rudiments of courtesy!"
+
+The officer reddened to his colorless eyebrows; his little,
+near-sighted eyes became stupid and fixed; he smoothed the blond down
+on his upper lip with hesitating fingers.
+
+Suddenly he turned and marched out, slamming the door violently behind
+him.
+
+At this impudence the eyes of the Countess began to sparkle, and an
+angry flush mounted to her cheeks.
+
+"Madame," said I, "he is only a German boy, unbalanced by his own
+importance and his first battle. But he will never forget this lesson;
+let him digest it in his own manner."
+
+And he did, for presently there came a polite knock at the door, and
+the lieutenant reappeared, bowing rigidly, one hand on his sword-hilt,
+the other holding his helmet by the gilt spike.
+
+"Lieutenant von Eberbach present to apologize," he said, jerkily, red
+as a beet. "Begs permission to take a half-dozen of wine; men very
+thirsty."
+
+"Lieutenant von Eberbach may take the wine," said the Countess,
+calmly.
+
+"Rudeness without excuse!" muttered the boy; "beg the graciously
+well-born lady not to judge my regiment or my country by it. Can
+Lieutenant von Eberbach make amends?"
+
+"The Lieutenant has made them," said the Countess. "The merciful
+treatment of French prisoners will prove his sincerity."
+
+The lad made another rigid bow and got himself out of the door with
+more or less dignity, and the Countess drew a chair beside my
+sofa-chair and sat down, eyes still bright with the cinders of a wrath
+I had never suspected in her.
+
+Together we looked down into the street.
+
+Under the window the flat, high-pitched drums began to rattle; deep
+voices shouted; the whole street undulated with masses of
+gray-and-black uniforms, moving forward through the smoke. A superb
+regimental band began to play; the troops broke out into heavy
+cheering.
+
+"Vorwärts! Vorwärts!" came the steady commands. The band passed with
+a dull flash of instruments; a thousand brass helmet-spikes pricked
+the smoke; the tread of the Prussian infantry shook the earth.
+
+"The invasion has begun," I said.
+
+Her face was expressionless, save for the brightness of her eyes.
+
+And now another band sounded, playing "I Had a Comrade!" and the
+whole street began to ring with the noble marching-song of the coming
+regiment.
+
+"Bavarian infantry," I whispered, as the light-blue columns wheeled
+around the curve and came swinging up the street; for I could see the
+yellow crown on the collars of their tunics, and the heavy leather
+helmets, surmounted by chenille rolls.
+
+Behind them trotted a squadron of Uhlans on their dainty horses, under
+a canopy of little black-and-white flags fluttering from the points of
+their lances.
+
+"Uhlans," I murmured. I heard the faint click of her teeth closing
+tightly.
+
+Hussars in crimson tunics, armed with curious weapons, half carbine,
+half pistol, followed the Uhlans, filling the smoky street with a
+flood of gorgeous color.
+
+Suddenly a company of Saxon pioneers arrived on the double-quick,
+halted, fell out, and began to break down the locked doors of the
+houses on either side of the street. At the same time Prussian
+infantry came hurrying past, dragging behind them dozens of vehicles,
+long hay-wagons, gardeners' carts, heavy wheelbarrows, even a dingy
+private carriage, with tarnished lamps, rocking crazily on rusty
+springs.
+
+The soldiers wheeled these wagons into a double line, forming a
+complete chain across the street, where the Turcos had commenced to
+dig their ditch and breastworks--a barricade high enough to check a
+charge, and cunningly arranged, too, for the wooden abatis could not
+be seen from the eastern end of the street, where a charge of French
+infantry or cavalry must enter Morsbronn if it entered at all.
+
+We watched the building of the barricade, fascinated. Soldiers entered
+the houses on either side of the street, only to reappear at the
+windows and thrust out helmeted heads. More soldiers came, running
+heavily--the road swarmed with them; some threw themselves flat under
+the wagons, some knelt, thrusting their needle-guns through the
+wheel-spokes; others remained standing, rifles resting over the rails
+of the long, skeleton hay-wagons.
+
+"Something is going to happen," I said, as a group of smartly
+uniformed officers appeared on the roof of the opposite house and
+hastily scrambled to the ridge-pole.
+
+Something was surely going to happen; the officers were using their
+field-glasses and pointing excitedly across the roof-tops; the windows
+of every house as far as I could see were black with helmets; a
+regiment in column came up on the double, halted, disintegrated,
+melting away behind walls, into yards, doorways, gardens.
+
+A colonel of infantry, splendidly mounted, drew bridle under our
+loop-hole and looked up at the officers on the roof across the way.
+
+"Attention, you up there!" he shouted. "Is it infantry?"
+
+"No!" bawled an officer, hollowed hand to his cheek. "It's their
+brigade of heavy cavalry coming like an earthquake!"
+
+"The cuirassiers!" I cried, electrified. "It's Michel's cuirassiers,
+madame! And--oh, the barricade!" I groaned, twisting my fingers in
+helpless rage. "They'll be caught in a trap; they'll die like flies
+in that street."
+
+"This is horrible!" muttered the girl. "Don't they know the street
+is blocked? Can't they find out before they ride into this ravine
+below us? Will they all be killed here under our windows?"
+
+She sprang to her feet, stood a moment, then stepped swiftly forward
+into the angle of the tower.
+
+"Look there!" she cried, in terror.
+
+"Push my chair--quick!" I said. She dragged it forward.
+
+An old house across the street, which had been on fire, had collapsed
+into a mere mound of slate, charred beams, and plaster. Through the
+brown heat which quivered above the ruins I could see out into the
+country. And what I saw was a line of hills, crowned with smoke, a
+rolling stretch of meadow below, set here and there with shot-torn
+trees and hop-poles; and over this uneven ground two regiments of
+French cuirassiers and two squadrons of lancers moving slowly forward
+as though on parade.
+
+Above them, around them, clouds of smoke puffed up suddenly and
+floated away--the shells from Prussian batteries on the heights. Long,
+rippling crashes broke out, belting the fields with smoky breastworks,
+where a Prussian infantry regiment, knee-deep in smoke, was firing on
+the advancing cavalry.
+
+The cuirassiers moved on slowly, the sun a blinding sheet of fire on
+their armor; now and then a horse tossed his beautiful head, now and
+then a steel helmet turned, flashing.
+
+Grief-stricken, I groaned aloud: "Madame, there rides the finest
+cavalry in the world!--to annihilation."
+
+How could I know that they were coming deliberately to sacrifice
+themselves?--that they rode with death heavy on their souls, knowing
+well there was no hope, understanding that they were to die to save
+the fragments of a beaten army?
+
+Yet something of this I suspected, for already I saw the long, dark
+Prussian lines overlapping the French flank; I heard the French
+mitrailleuses rattling through the cannon's thunder, and I saw an
+entire French division, which I did not then know to be Lartigue's,
+falling back across the hills.
+
+And straight into the entire Prussian army rode the "grosse
+cavallerie" and the lancers.
+
+"They are doomed, like their fathers," I muttered--"sons of the
+cuirassiers of Waterloo. See what men can do for France!"
+
+The young Countess started and stood up very straight.
+
+"Look, madame!" I said, harshly--"look on the men of France! You say
+you do not understand the narrow love of country! Look!"
+
+"It is too pitiful, too horrible," she said, hoarsely. "How the
+horses fall in that meadow!"
+
+"They will fall thicker than that in this street!"
+
+"See!" she cried; "they have begun to gallop! They are coming! Oh, I
+cannot look!--I--I cannot!"
+
+Far away, a thin cry sounded above the cannon din; the doomed
+cuirassiers were cheering. It was the first charge they had ever made;
+nobody had ever seen cavalry of their arm on any battle-field of
+Europe since Waterloo.
+
+Suddenly their long, straight blades shot into the air, the
+cuirassiers broke into a furious gallop, and that mass of steel-clad
+men burst straight down the first slope of the plateau, through the
+Prussian infantry, then wheeled and descended like a torrent on
+Morsbronn.
+
+In the first ranks galloped the giants of the Eighth Cuirassiers,
+Colonel Guiot de la Rochere at their head; the Ninth Cuirassiers
+thundered behind them; then came the lancers under a torrent of
+red-and-white pennons. Nothing stopped them, neither hedges nor
+ditches nor fallen trees.
+
+Their huge horses bounded forward, manes in the wind, tails streaming,
+iron hoofs battering the shaking earth; the steel-clad riders, sabres
+pointed to the front, leaned forward in their saddles.
+
+Now among the thicket of hop-vines long lines of black arose; there
+was a flash, a belt of smoke, another flash--then the metallic rattle
+of bullets on steel breastplates. Entire ranks of cuirassiers went
+down in the smoke of the Prussian rifles, the sinister clash and crash
+of falling armor filled the air. Sheets of lead poured into them; the
+rattle of empty scabbards on stirrups, the metallic ringing of bullets
+on helmet and cuirass, the rifle-shots, the roar of the shells
+exploding swelled into a very hell of sound. And, above the infernal
+fracas rose the heavy cheering of the doomed riders.
+
+Into the deep, narrow street wheeled the horsemen, choking road and
+sidewalk with their galloping squadrons, a solid cataract of impetuous
+horses, a flashing torrent of armored men--and then! Crash! the first
+squadron dashed headlong against the barricade of wagons and went
+down.
+
+Into them tore the squadron behind, unable to stop their maddened
+horses, and into these thundered squadron after squadron, unconscious
+of the dead wall ahead.
+
+In the terrible tumult and confusion, screaming horses and shrieking
+men were piled in heaps, a human whirlpool formed at the barricade,
+hurling bodily from its centre horses and riders. Men galloped
+headlong into each other, riders struggled knee to knee, pushing,
+shouting, colliding.
+
+Posted behind the upper and lower windows of the houses, the Prussians
+shot into them, so close that the flames from the rifles set the
+jackets of the cuirassiers on fire: a German captain opened the
+shutters of a window and fired his pistol at a cuirassier, who replied
+with a sabre thrust through the window, transfixing the German's
+throat.
+
+Then a horrible butchery of men and horses began; the fusillade became
+so violent and the scene so sickening that a Prussian lieutenant went
+crazy in the house opposite, and flung himself from the window into
+the mass of writhing horsemen. Tall cuirassiers, in impotent fury,
+began slashing at the walls of the houses, breaking their heavy sabres
+to splinters against the stones; their powerful horses, white with
+foam, reared, fell back, crushing their riders beneath them.
+
+In front of the barricade a huge fellow reined in his horse and
+turned, white-gloved hand raised, red epaulets tossing.
+
+[Illustration: "'HALT! HALT!' HE SHOUTED"]
+
+"Halt! Halt!" he shouted. "Stop the lancers!" And a trumpeter,
+disengaging himself from the frantic chaos, set his long, silver
+trumpet to his lips and blew the "Halt!"
+
+A bullet rolled the trumpeter under his horse's feet; a volley riddled
+the other's horse, and the agonized animal reared and cleared the
+bristling abatis with a single bound, his rider dropping dead among
+the hay-wagons.
+
+Then into this awful struggle galloped the two squadrons of the lancers.
+For a moment the street swam under their fluttering red-and-white
+lance-pennons, then a volley swept them--another--another--and down
+they went.
+
+Herds of riderless horses tore through the street; the road undulated
+with crushed, quivering creatures crawling about. Against the doorway
+of a house opposite a noble horse in agony leaned with shaking knees,
+head raised, lips shrinking back over his teeth.
+
+Bewildered, stupefied, exhausted, the cuirassiers sat in their
+saddles, staring up at the windows where the Prussians stood and
+fired. Now and then one would start as from a nightmare, turn his
+jaded horse, and go limping away down the street. The road was filled
+with horsemen, wandering helplessly about under the rain of bullets.
+One, a mere boy, rode up to a door, leaned from his horse and began to
+knock for admittance; another dismounted and sat down on a doorstep,
+head buried in his hands, regardless of the bullets which tore the
+woodwork around him.
+
+The street was still crowded with entrapped cuirassiers, huddled in
+groups or riding up and down the walls mechanically seeking shelter. A
+few of these, dismounted, were wearily attempting to drag a heavy cart
+away from the barricade; the Prussians shot them, one at a time, but
+others came to help, and a few lancers aided them, and at length they
+managed to drag a hay-wagon aside, giving a narrow passage to the open
+country beyond. Instantly the Prussian infantry swarmed out of the
+houses and into the street, shouting, "Prisoners!" pushing, striking,
+and dragging the exhausted cuirassiers from their saddles. But contact
+with the enemy, hand to hand, seemed to revive the fury of the armored
+riders. The débris of the regiments closed up, long, straight sabres
+glittered, trembling horses plunged forward, broke into a stiff
+gallop, and passed through the infantry, through the rent in the
+barricade, and staggered away across the fields, buried in the smoke
+of a thousand rifles.
+
+So rode the "Cuirassiers of Morsbronn," the flower of an empire's
+chivalry, the elect of France. So rode the gentlemen of the Sixth
+Lancers to shiver their slender spears against stone walls--for the
+honor of France.
+
+Death led them. Death rode with them knee to knee. Death alone halted
+them. But their shining souls galloped on into that vast Valhalla
+where their ancestors of Waterloo stood waiting, and the celestial
+trumpets pealed a last "Dismount!"
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+THE GAME BEGINS
+
+
+The room in the turret was now swimming in smoke and lime dust; I
+could scarcely see the gray figure of the Countess through the
+powder-mist which drifted in through shutters and loop-hole, dimming
+the fading daylight.
+
+In the street a dense pall of pungent vapor hung over roof and
+pavement, motionless in the calm August air; two houses were burning
+slowly, smothered in smoke; through a ruddy fog I saw the dead lying
+in mounds, the wounded moving feebly, the Prussian soldiery tossing
+straw into the hay-carts that had served their deadly purpose.
+
+But oh, the dreadful murmur that filled the heavy air, the tremulous,
+ceaseless plaint which comes from strong, muscular creatures,
+tenacious of life, who are dying and who die hard.
+
+Helmeted figures swarmed through the smoke; wagon after wagon, loaded
+deep with dead cavalrymen, was drawn away by heavy teams of horses now
+arriving from the regimental transport train, which had come up and
+halted just at the entrance to the village.
+
+And now wagon-loads of French wounded began to pass, jolting over
+crushed helmets, rifles, cuirasses, and the carcasses of dead horses.
+
+A covey of Uhlans entered the shambles, picking their way across the
+wreckage of the battle, a slim, wiry, fastidious company, dainty as
+spurred gamecocks, with their helmet-cords swinging like wattles and
+their schapskas tilted rakishly.
+
+Then the sad cortège of prisoners formed in the smoke, the wounded
+leaning on their silent comrades, bandaged heads hanging, the others
+erect, defiant, supporting the crippled or standing with arms folded
+and helmeted heads held high.
+
+And at last they started, between two files of mounted Uhlans--Turcos,
+line infantrymen, gendarmes, lancers, and, towering head and shoulders
+above the others, the superb cuirassiers.
+
+A German general and his smartly uniformed staff came clattering up
+the slippery street and halted to watch the prisoners defile. And, as
+the first of the captive cuirassiers came abreast of the staff, the
+general stiffened in his saddle and raised his hand to his helmet,
+saying to his officers, loud enough for me to hear:
+
+"Salute the brave, gentlemen!"
+
+And the silent, calm-eyed cuirassiers passed on, heads erect, uniforms
+in shreds, their battered armor foul with smoke and mud, spurs broken,
+scabbards empty.
+
+Troops of captured horses, conducted by Uhlans, followed the
+prisoners, then wagons piled high with rifles, sabres, and saddles,
+then a company of Uhlans cantering away with the shot-torn guidons of
+the cuirassiers.
+
+Last of all came the wounded in their straw-wadded wagons, escorted by
+infantry; I heard them coming before I saw them, and, sickened, I
+closed my ears with my hands; yet even then the deep, monotonous
+groaning seemed to fill the room and vibrate through the falling
+shadows long after the last cart had creaked out of sight and hearing
+into the gathering haze of evening.
+
+The deadened booming of cannon still came steadily from the west, and
+it needed no messenger to tell me that the First Corps had been hurled
+back into Alsace, and that MacMahon's army was in full retreat; that
+now the Rhine was open and the passage of the Vosges was clear, and
+Strasbourg must stand siege and Belfort and Toul must man their
+battlements for a struggle that meant victory, or an Alsace doomed and
+a Lorraine lost to France forever.
+
+The room had grown very dark, the loop-hole admitting but little of
+the smoky evening sunset. Some soldiers in the hallway outside finally
+lighted torches; red reflections danced over the torn ceiling and
+plaster-covered floor, illuminating a corner where the Countess was
+sitting by the bedside, her head lying on the covers. How long she had
+been there I did not know, but when I spoke she raised her head and
+answered quietly.
+
+In the torch-light her face was ghastly, her eyes red and dim as she
+came over to me and looked out into the darkness.
+
+The woman was shaken terribly, shaken to the very soul. She had not
+seen all that I had seen; she had flinched before the spectacle of a
+butchery too awful to look upon, but she had seen enough, and she had
+heard enough to support or to confound theories formed through a young
+girl's brief, passionless, eventless life.
+
+Under the window soldiers began shooting the crippled horses; the
+heavy flash and bang of rifles set her trembling again.
+
+Until the firing ceased she stood as though stupefied, scarcely
+breathing, her splendid hair glistening like molten copper in the red
+torches' glare.
+
+A soldier came into the room and dragged the bedclothes from the bed,
+trailing them across the floor behind him as he departed. An officer
+holding a lantern peered through the door, his eye-glasses shining,
+his boots in his hand.
+
+He evidently had intended to get into the bed, but when his gaze fell
+upon us he withdrew in his stockinged feet.
+
+On the stairs soldiers were eating hunches of stale bread and knocking
+the necks from wine bottles with their bayonets. One lumpish fellow
+came to the door and offered me part of a sausage which he was
+devouring, a kindly act that touched me, and I wondered whether the
+other prisoners might find among their Uhlan guards the same humanity
+that moved this half-famished yokel to offer me the food he was
+gnawing.
+
+Soldiers began to come and go in the room; some carried off chairs for
+officers below some took the pillows from the bed, one bore away a
+desk on his broad shoulders.
+
+The Countess never moved or spoke.
+
+The evening had grown chilly; I was cold to my knees.
+
+A soldier offered to build me a fire in the great stone fireplace
+behind me, and when I assented he calmly smashed a chair to
+kindling-wood, wrenched off the heavy posts of the bed, and started a
+fire which lit up the wrecked room with its crimson glare.
+
+The Countess rose and looked around. The soldier pushed my long chair
+to the blaze, tore down the canopy over the bed and flung it over me,
+stolidly ignoring my protests. Then he clumped out with his muddy
+boots and shut the door behind him.
+
+For a long while I lay there, full in the heat of the fire, half
+dozing, then sleeping, then suddenly alert, only to look about me to
+see the Countess with eyes closed, motionless in her arm-chair, only
+to hear the muffled thunder of the guns in the dark.
+
+Once again, having slept, I roused, listening. The crackle of the
+flames was all I heard; the cannon were silent. A few moments later a
+clock in the hallway struck nine times. At the same instant a deadened
+cannon-shot echoed the clamor of the clock. It was the last shot of
+the battle. And when the dull reverberations had died away Alsace was
+a lost province, MacMahon's army was in full retreat, leaving on the
+three battle-fields of Wörth, Reichshoffen, and Fröschweiler sixteen
+thousand dead, wounded, and missing soldiers of France.
+
+All night long I heard cavalry traversing Morsbronn in an unbroken
+column, the steady trample of their horses never ceasing for an
+instant. At moments, from the outskirts of the village, the sinister
+sound of cheering came from the vanguard of the German Sixth Corps,
+just arriving to learn of the awful disaster to France. Too late to
+take any part in the battle, these tired soldiers stood cheering by
+regiments as the cavalry rode past in pursuit of the shattered army,
+and their cheering swelled to a terrific roar toward morning, when the
+Prince Royal of Prussia appeared with his staff, and the soldiers in
+Morsbronn rushed out into the street bellowing, "Hoch soll er leben!
+Er soll leben--Hoch!"
+
+About seven o'clock that morning a gaunt, leather-faced Prussian
+officer, immaculate in his sombre uniform, entered the room without
+knocking. The young Countess turned in the depths of her chair; he
+bowed to her slightly, unfolded a printed sheet of paper which bore
+the arms of Prussia, hesitated, then said, looking directly at me:
+
+"Morsbronn is now German territory and will continue to be governed
+by military law, proclaimed under the state of siege, until the
+country is properly pacified.
+
+"Honest inhabitants will not be disturbed. Citizens are invited to
+return to their homes and peacefully continue their legitimate
+avocations, subject to and under the guarantee of the Prussian
+military government.
+
+"Monsieur, I have the honor to hand you a copy of regulations. I am
+the provost marshal; all complaints should be brought to me."
+
+I took the printed sheet and looked at the Prussian coat of arms.
+
+"A list of the inhabitants of Morsbronn will be made to-day. You will
+have the goodness to declare yourself--and you also, madame. There
+being other buildings better fitted, no soldiers will be quartered in
+this house."
+
+The officer evidently mistook me for the owner of the house and not a
+prisoner. A blanket hid my hussar trousers and boots; he could only
+see my ragged shirt.
+
+"And now, madame," he continued, "as monsieur appears to need the
+services of a physician, I shall send him a French doctor, brought in
+this morning from the Château de la Trappe. I wish him to get well; I
+wish the inhabitants of my district to return to their homes and
+resume the interrupted régimes which have made this province of Alsace
+so valuable to France. I wish Morsbronn to prosper; I wish it well.
+This is the German policy.
+
+"But, monsieur, let me speak plainly. I tolerate no treachery. The
+law is iron and will be applied with rigor. An inhabitant of my
+district who deceives me, or who commits an offence against the troops
+under my command, or who in any manner holds, or attempts to hold,
+communication with the enemy, will be shot without court-martial."
+
+He turned his grim, inflexible face to the Countess and bowed, then he
+bowed to me, swung squarely on his heel, and walked to the door.
+
+"Admit the French doctor," he said to the soldier on guard, and
+marched out, his curved sabre banging behind his spurred heels.
+
+"It must be Dr. Delmont!" I said, looking at the Countess as there
+came a low knock at the door.
+
+"I am very thankful!" she said, her voice almost breaking. She rose
+unsteadily from her chair; somebody entered the room behind me and I
+turned, calling out, "Welcome, doctor!"
+
+"Thank you," replied the calm voice of John Buckhurst at my elbow.
+
+The Countess shrank aside as Buckhurst coolly passed before her,
+turned his slim back to the embers of the fire, and fixed his eyes on
+me--those pale, slow eyes, passionless as death.
+
+Here was a type of criminal I had never until recently known. Small of
+hand and foot--too small even for such a slender man--clean shaven,
+colorless in hair, skin, lips, he challenged instant attention by the
+very monotony of his bloodless symmetry. There was nothing of positive
+evil in his face, nothing of impulse, good or bad, nothing even
+superficially human. His spotless linen, his neat sack-coat and
+trousers of gray seemed part of him--like a loose outer skin. There
+was in his ensemble nothing to disturb the negative harmony, save
+perhaps an abnormal flatness of the instep and hands.
+
+"My friend," he observed, in English, "do you think you will know me
+again when you have finished your scrutiny?"
+
+The Countess, face averted, passed behind my chair.
+
+"Wait," said Buckhurst; and turning directly to me, he added: "You
+were mistaken for a hussar at La Trappe; you were mistaken here for a
+hussar as long as the squad holding this house remained in Morsbronn.
+A few moments ago the provost mistook you for a civilian." He looked
+across at the Countess, who already stood with her hand on the
+door-knob.
+
+"If you disturb me," he said, "I have only to tell the provost the
+truth. Members of the Imperial Police caught without proper uniform
+inside German lines are shot, séance tenante."
+
+The Countess stood perfectly still a moment, then came straight to
+me.
+
+"Is that true?" she asked.
+
+"Yes," I said.
+
+She still leaned forward, looking down into my face. Then she turned
+to Buckhurst.
+
+"Do you want money?" she asked.
+
+"I want a chair--and your attention for the present," he replied, and
+seated himself.
+
+The printed copy of the rules handed me by the provost marshal lay on
+the floor. Buckhurst picked up the sheet, glanced at the Prussian
+eagle, and thoughtfully began rolling the paper into a grotesque
+shape.
+
+"Sit down, madame," he said, without raising his eyes from the bit of
+paper which he had now fashioned into a cocked hat.
+
+After a moment's silent hesitation the Countess drew a small gilt
+chair beside my sofa-chair and sat down, and again that brave,
+unconscious gesture of protection left her steady hand lying lightly
+on my arm.
+
+Buckhurst noted the gesture. And all at once I divined that whatever
+plan he had come to execute had been suddenly changed. He looked down
+at the paper in his hands, gave it a thoughtful twist, and, drawing
+the ends out, produced a miniature paper boat.
+
+"We are all in one like that," he observed, holding it up without
+apparent interest. He glanced at the young Countess; her face was
+expressionless.
+
+"Madame," said Buckhurst, in his peculiarly soft and persuasive
+voice, "I am not here to betray this gentleman; I am not here even to
+justify myself. I came here to make reparation, to ask your
+forgiveness, madame, for the wrong I have done you, and to deliver
+myself, if necessary, into the hands of the proper French authorities
+in expiation of my misguided zeal."
+
+The Countess was looking at him now; he fumbled with the paper boat,
+gave it an unconscious twist, and produced a tiny paper box.
+
+"The cause," he said, gently, "to which I have devoted my life must
+not suffer through the mistake of a fanatic; for in the cause of
+universal brotherhood I am, perhaps, a fanatic, and to aid that cause
+I have gravely compromised myself. I came here to expiate that folly
+and to throw myself upon your mercy, madame."
+
+"I do not exactly understand," said I, "how you can expiate a crime
+here."
+
+"I can at least make restitution," he said, turning the paper box
+over and over between his flat fingers.
+
+"Have you brought me the diamonds which belong to the state?" I
+inquired, amused.
+
+"Yes," he said, and to my astonishment he drew a small leather pouch
+from his pocket and laid it on my blanket-covered knees. "How many
+diamonds were there?" he asked.
+
+"One hundred and three," I replied, incredulously, and opened the
+leather pouch. Inside was a bag of chamois-skin. This I stretched wide
+and emptied.
+
+Scores of little balls of tissue-paper rolled out on the blanket over
+my knees; I opened one; it contained a diamond; I opened another,
+another, and another; diamonds lay blazing on my blanket, a whole
+handful, glittering in undimmed splendor.
+
+"Count them," murmured Buckhurst, fashioning the paper box into a
+fly-trap with a lid.
+
+With a quick movement I swept them into my hands, then one by one
+dropped the stones while I counted aloud one hundred and two diamonds.
+The one hundred and third jewel was, of course, safely in Paris.
+
+When I had a second time finished the enumeration I leaned back in my
+chair, utterly at a loss to account for this man or for what he had
+done. As far as I could see there was no logic in it, nothing
+demonstrated, nothing proven. To me--and I am not either suspicious or
+obstinate by nature--Buckhurst was still an unrepentant thief and a
+dangerous one.
+
+I could see in him absolutely nothing of the fanatic, of the generous,
+feather-headed devotee, nothing of the hasty disciple or the impulsive
+martyr. In my eyes he continued to be the passionless master-criminal,
+the cold, slow-eyed source of hidden evil, the designer of an
+intricate and viewless intrigue against the state.
+
+His head remained bent over the paper toy in his hands. Was his hair
+gray with age or excesses, or was it only colorless like the rest of
+his exterior?
+
+"Restitution is not expiation," he said, sadly, without looking up.
+"I loved the cause; I love it still; I practised deception, and I am
+here to ask this gentle lady to forgive me for an unworthy yet
+unselfish use of her money and her hospitality. If she can pardon me I
+welcome whatever punishment may be meted out."
+
+The Countess dropped her elbow on the arm of my chair and rested her
+face in her hand.
+
+"Swept away by my passion for the cause of universal brotherhood,"
+said Buckhurst, in his low, caressing voice, "I ventured to spend
+this generous lady's money to carry the propaganda into the more
+violent centres of socialism--into the clubs in Montmartre and
+Belleville. There I urged non-resistance; I pleaded moderation and
+patience. What I said helped a little, I think--"
+
+He hesitated, twisting his fly-box into a paper creature with four
+legs.
+
+"I was eager; people listened. I thought that if I had a little more
+money I might carry on this work.... I could not come to you,
+madame--"
+
+"Why not?" said the Countess, looking at him quickly. "I have never
+refused you money!"
+
+"No," he said, "you never refused me. But I knew that La Trappe was
+mortgaged, that even this house in Morsbronn was loaded with debt. I
+knew, madame, that in all the world you had left but one small roof to
+cover you--the house in Morbihan, on Point Paradise. I knew that if I
+asked for money you would sell Paradise,... and I could not ask so
+much,... I could not bring myself to ask that sacrifice."
+
+"And so you stole the crucifix of Louis XI.," I suggested,
+pleasantly.
+
+He did not look at me, but the Countess did.
+
+"Bon," I thought, watching Buckhurst's deft fingers; "he means to be
+taken back into grace. I wonder exactly why? And ... is it worth this
+fortune in diamonds to him to be pardoned by a penniless girl whom he
+and his gang have already stripped?"
+
+"Could you forgive me, madame?" murmured Buckhurst.
+
+"Would you explain that stick of dynamite first?" I interposed.
+
+The Countess turned and looked directly at Buckhurst. He sat with
+humble head bowed, nimbly constructing a paper bird.
+
+"That was not dynamite; it was concentrated phosphorus," he said,
+without resentment. "Naturally it burned when you lighted it, but if
+you had not burned it I could easily have shown Madame la Comtesse
+what it really was."
+
+"I also," said I, "if I had thrown it at your feet, Mr. Buckhurst."
+
+"Do you not believe me?" he asked, meekly, looking up at the
+Countess.
+
+"Mr. Buckhurst," said the young Countess, turning to me, "has aided
+me for a long time in experiments. We hoped to find some cheap method
+of restoring nitrogen and phosphorus to the worn-out soil which our
+poor peasants till. Why should you doubt that he speaks the truth? At
+least he is guiltless of any connection with the party which advocated
+violence."
+
+I looked at Buckhurst. He was engaged in constructing a multi-pointed
+paper star. What else was he busy with? Perhaps I might learn if I
+ceased to manifest distrust.
+
+"Does concentrated phosphorus burn like dynamite?" I asked, as if
+with newly aroused interest.
+
+"Did you not know it?" he said, warily.
+
+But was he deceived by my manner? Was that the way for me to learn
+anything?
+
+There was perhaps another way. Clearly this extraordinary man depended
+upon his persuasive eloquence for his living, for the very shoes on
+his little, flat feet, as do all such chevaliers of industry. If he
+would only begin to argue, if I could only induce him to try his
+eloquence on me, and if I could convince him that I myself was but an
+ignorant, self-centred, bullet-headed gendarme, doing my duty only
+because of perspective advancement, ready perhaps to take
+bribes--perhaps even weakly, covetously, credulous--well, perhaps I
+might possibly learn why he desired to cling to this poor young lady,
+whose life had evidently gone dreadfully to smash, to land her among
+such a coterie of thieves and lunatics.
+
+"Mr. Buckhurst," I said, pompously, "in bringing these diamonds to
+me you have certainly done all in your power to repair an injury which
+concerned all France.
+
+"As I am situated, of course I cannot now ask you to accompany me to
+Paris, where doubtless the proper authorities would gladly admit
+extenuating circumstances, and credit you with a sincere repentance.
+But I put you on your honor to surrender at the first opportunity."
+
+It was as stupidly trite a speech as I could think of.
+
+Buckhurst glanced up at me. Was he taking my measure anew, judging me
+from my bray?
+
+"I could easily aid you to leave Morsbronn," he said, stealthily.
+
+"O-ho," thought I, "so you're a German agent, too, as I suspected."
+But I said, aloud, simulating astonishment: "Do you mean to say, Mr.
+Buckhurst, that you would deliberately risk death to aid a police
+officer to bring you before a military tribunal in Paris?"
+
+"I do not desire to pose as a hero or a martyr," he said, quietly,
+"but I regret what I have done, and I will do what an honest man can
+do to make the fullest reparation--even if it means my death."
+
+I gazed at him in admiration--real admiration--because the gross
+bathos he had just uttered betrayed a weakness--vanity. Now I began to
+understand him; vanity must also lead him to undervalue men. True,
+with the faintest approach to eloquence he could no doubt hold the
+"Clubs" of Belleville spellbound; with self-effacing adroitness to
+cover stealthy persuasion, he had probably found little difficulty in
+dominating this inexperienced girl, who, touched to the soul with
+pity for human woe, had flung herself and her fortune to the howling
+proletariat.
+
+But that he should so serenely undervalue me at my first bray was more
+than I hoped for. So I brayed again, the good, old, sentimental bray,
+for which all Gallic lungs are so marvellously fashioned:
+
+"Monsieur, such sentiments honor you. I am only a rough soldier of
+the Imperial Police, but I am profoundly moved to find among the
+leaders of the proletariat such delicate and chivalrous emotions--" I
+hesitated. Was I buttering the sop too thickly?
+
+Buckhurst, eyes bent on the floor, began picking to pieces his paper
+toy. Presently he looked up, not at me, but at the Countess, who sat
+with hands clasped earnestly watching him.
+
+"If--if the state pardons me, can ... you?" he murmured.
+
+She looked at him with intense earnestness. I saw he was sailing on
+the wrong tack.
+
+"I have nothing to pardon," she said, gravely. "But I must tell
+you the truth, Mr. Buckhurst, I cannot forget what you have done. It
+was something--the one thing that I cannot understand--that I can
+never understand--something so absolutely alien to me that
+it--somehow--leaves me stunned. Don't ask me to forget it.... I
+cannot. I do not mean to be harsh and cruel, or to condemn you.
+Even if you had taken the jewels from me, and had asked my
+forgiveness, I would have given it freely. But I could not be as I
+was, a comrade to you."
+
+There was a silence. The Countess, looking perfectly miserable, still
+gazed at Buckhurst. He dropped his gray, symmetrical head, yet I felt
+that he was listening to every minute sound in the room.
+
+"You must not care what I say," she said. "I am only an unhappy
+woman, unused to the liberty I have given myself, not yet habituated
+to the charity of those blameless hearts which forgive everything! I
+am a novice, groping my way into a new and vast world, a limitless,
+generous, forgiving commune, where love alone dominates.... And if I
+had lived among my brothers long enough to be purged of those
+traditions which I have drawn from generations, I might now be noble
+enough and wise enough to say I do forgive and forget that you--"
+
+"That you were once a thief," I ended, with the genial officiousness
+of the hopelessly fat-minded.
+
+In the stillness I heard Buckhurst draw in his breath--once. Some day
+he would try to kill me for that; in the mean time my crass stupidity
+was no longer a question in his mind. I had hurt the Countess, too,
+with what she must have believed a fool's needless brutality. But it
+had to be so if I played at Jaques Bonhomme.
+
+So I put the finishing whine to it--"Our Lord died between two
+thieves"--and relapsed into virtuous contemplation of my finger-tips.
+
+"Madame," said Buckhurst, in a low voice, "your contempt of me is
+part of my penalty. I must endure it. I shall not complain. But I
+shall try to live a life that will at least show you my deep
+sincerity."
+
+"I do not doubt it," said the Countess, earnestly. "Don't think that
+I mean to turn away from you or to push you away. There is nothing of
+the Pharisee in me. I would gladly trust you with what I have. I will
+consult you and advise with you, Mr. Buckhurst--"
+
+"And ... despise me."
+
+The unhappy Countess looked at me. It goes hard with a woman when her
+guide and mentor falls.
+
+"If you return to Paradise, in Morbihan,... as we had planned, may I
+go," he asked, humbly, "only as an obscure worker in the cause? I
+beg, madame, that you will not cast me off."
+
+So he wanted to go to Morbihan--to the village of Paradise? Why?
+
+The Countess said: "I welcome all who care for the cause. You will
+never hear an unkind word from me if you desire to resume the work in
+Paradise. Dr. Delmont will be there; Monsieur Tavernier also, I hope;
+and they are older and wiser than I, and they have reached that lofty
+serenity which is far above my troubled mind. Ask them what you have
+asked of me; they are equipped to answer you."
+
+It was time for another discord from me, so I said: "Madame, you have
+seen a thousand men lay down their lives for France. Has it not shaken
+your allegiance to that ghost of patriotism which you call the
+'Internationale'?"
+
+Here was food for thought, or rather fodder for asses--the Police
+Oracle turned missionary under the nose of the most cunning criminal
+in France and the vainest. Of course Buckhurst's contempt for me at
+once passed all bounds, and, secure in that contempt, he felt it
+scarcely worth while to use his favorite weapon--persuasion. Still, if
+the occasion should require it, he was quite ready, I knew, to loose
+his eloquence on the Countess, and on me too.
+
+The Countess turned her troubled eyes to me.
+
+"What I have seen, what I have thought since yesterday has distressed
+me dreadfully," she said. "I have tried to include all the world in a
+broader pity, a broader, higher, and less selfish love than the
+jealous, single-minded love for one country--"
+
+"The mother-land," I said, and Buckhurst looked up, adding, "The
+world is the true mother-land."
+
+Whereupon I appeared profoundly impressed at such a novel and
+epigrammatic view.
+
+"There is much to be argued on both sides," said the young Countess,
+"but I am utterly unfitted to struggle with this new code of ethics.
+If it had been different--if I had been born among the poor, in
+misery!--But you see I come a pilgrim among the proletariat, clothed
+in conservatism, cloaked with tradition, and if at heart I burn with
+sorrow for the miserable, and if I gladly give what I have to help, I
+cannot with a single gesture throw off those inherited garments,
+though they tortured my body like the garment of Nessus."
+
+I did not smile or respect her less for the stilted phrases, the
+pathetic poverty of metaphor. Profoundly troubled, struggling with a
+reserve the borders of which she strove so bravely to cross, her
+distress touched me the more because I knew it aroused the uneasy
+contempt of Buckhurst. Yet I could not spare her.
+
+"You saw the cuirassiers die in the street below," I repeated, with
+the obstinacy of a limited intellect.
+
+"Yes--and my heart went out to them," she replied, with an emphasis
+that pleased me and startled Buckhurst.
+
+Buckhurst began to speak, but I cut him short.
+
+"Then, madame, if your heart went out to the soldiers of France, it
+went out to France, too!"
+
+"Yes--to France," she repeated, and I saw her lip begin to quiver.
+
+"Wherein does love for France conflict with our creed, madame?" asked
+Buckhurst, gently. "It is only hate that we abjure."
+
+She turned her gray eyes on him. "I will tell you: in that dreadful
+moment when the cavalry of France cheered Death in his own awful
+presence, I loved them and their country--_my_ country!--as I had
+never loved in all my life.... And I hated, too! I hated the men who
+butchered them--more!--I hated the country where the men came from; I
+hated race and country and the blows they dealt, and the evil they
+wrought on France--_my France_! That is the truth; and I realize it!"
+
+There was a silence; Buckhurst slowly unrolled the wrinkled paper he
+had been fingering.
+
+"And now?" he asked, simply.
+
+"Now?" she repeated. "I don't know--truly, I do not know." She
+turned to me sorrowfully. "I had long since thought that my heart was
+clean of hate, and now I don't know." And, to Buckhurst, again: "Our
+creed teaches us that war is vile--a savage betrayal of humanity by a
+few dominant minds; a dishonorable ingratitude to God and country. But
+from that window I saw men die for honor of France with God's name on
+their lips. I saw one superb cuirassier, trapped down there in the
+street, sit still on his horse, while they shot at him from every
+window, and I heard him call up to a Prussian officer who had just
+fired at him: 'My friend, you waste powder; the heart of France is
+cuirassed by a million more like me!'" A rich flush touched her face;
+her gray eyes grew brighter.
+
+"Is there a Frenchwoman alive whose blood would not stir at such a
+scene?" she said. "They shot him through his armor, his breastplate
+was riddled, he clung to his horse, always looking up at the riflemen,
+and I heard the bullets drumming on his helmet and his cuirass like
+hailstones on a tin roof, and I could not look away. And all the while
+he was saying, quietly: 'It is quite useless, friends; France lives!
+You waste your powder!' and I could not look away or close my eyes--"
+
+She bent her head, shivering, and her interlocked fingers whitened.
+
+"I only know this," she said: "I will give all I have--I will give
+my poor self to help the advent of that world-wide brotherhood which
+must efface national frontiers and end all war in this sad world. But
+if you ask me, in the presence of war, to look on with impartiality,
+to watch my own country battling for breath, to stop my ears when a
+wounded mother-land is calling, to answer the supreme cry of France
+with a passionless cry, 'Repent!' I cannot do it--I will not! I was
+not born to!"
+
+Deeply moved, she had risen, confronting Buckhurst, whose stone-cold
+eyes were fixed on her.
+
+"You say I hold you unworthy," she said. "Others may hold me, too,
+unworthy because I have not reached that impartial equipoise whence,
+impassive, I can balance my native land against its sins and watch
+blind justice deal with it all unconcerned.
+
+"In theory I have done it--oh, it is simple to teach one's soul in
+theory! But when my eyes saw my own land blacken and shrivel like a
+green leaf in the fire, and when with my own eyes I saw the best, the
+noblest, the crown of my country's chivalry fall rolling in the mud of
+Morsbronn under the feet of Prussia, every drop of blood in my body
+was French--hot and red and French! And it is now; and it will always
+be--as it has always been, though I did not understand."
+
+After a silence Buckhurst said: "All that may be, madame, yet not
+impair your creed."
+
+"What!" she said, "does not hatred of the stranger impair my
+creed?"
+
+"It will die out and give place to reason."
+
+"When? When I attain the lofty, dispassionate level I have never
+attained? That will not be while this war endures."
+
+"Who knows?" said Buckhurst, gently.
+
+"I know!" replied the Countess, the pale flames in her cheeks
+deepening again.
+
+"And yet," observed Buckhurst, patiently, "you are going to Paradise
+to work for the Internationale."
+
+"I shall try to do my work and love France," she said, steadily. "I
+cannot believe that one renders the other impossible."
+
+"Yet," said I, "if you teach the nation non-resistance, what would
+become of the armies of France?"
+
+"I shall not teach non-resistance until we are at peace," she
+said--"until there is not a German soldier left in France. After that
+I shall teach acquiescence and personal liberty."
+
+I looked at her very seriously; logic had no dwelling-place within her
+tender and unhappy heart.
+
+And what a hunting-ground was that heart for men like Buckhurst! I
+could begin to read that mouse-colored gentleman now, to follow, after
+a fashion, the intricate policy which his insolent mind was
+shaping--shaping in stealthy contempt for me and for this young girl.
+Thus far I could divine the thoughts of Mr. Buckhurst, but there were
+other matters to account for. Why did he choose to spare my life when
+a word would have sent me before the peloton of execution? Why had he
+brought to me the fortune in diamonds which he had stolen? Why did he
+eat humble-pie before a young girl from whom he and his companions had
+wrung the last penny? Why did he desire to go to Morbihan and be
+received among the elect in the Breton village of Paradise?
+
+I said, abruptly: "So you are not going to denounce me to the
+Prussian provost?"
+
+He lifted his well-shaped head and gazed at the Countess with an
+admirable pathos which seemed a mute appeal for protection from
+brutality.
+
+"That question is a needless one," said the Countess, quietly. "It
+was a cruel one, also, Monsieur Scarlett."
+
+"I did not mean it as an offensive question," said I. "I was merely
+reciting a fact, most creditable to Mr. Buckhurst. Mon Dieu, madame, I
+am an officer of Imperial Police, and I have lived to hear blunt
+questions and blunter answers. And if it be true that Monsieur
+Buckhurst desires to atone for--for what has happened, then it is
+perfectly proper for me, even as a prisoner myself, to speak
+plainly."
+
+I meant this time to thoroughly convince Buckhurst of my ability to
+gabble platitude. My desire that he should view me as a typical
+gendarme was intense.
+
+So I coughed solemnly behind my hand, knit my eyebrows, and laid one
+finger alongside of my nose.
+
+"Is it not my duty, as a guardian of national interests, to point out
+to Mr. Buckhurst his honest errors? Certainly it is, madame, and this
+is the proper time."
+
+Turning pompously to Buckhurst, I fancied I could almost detect a
+sneer on that inexpressive mask he wore--at least I hoped I could, and
+I said, heavily:
+
+"Monsieur, for a number of years there has passed under our eyes here
+in France certain strange phenomena. Thousands of Frenchmen have, so
+to speak, separated themselves from the rest of the nation.
+
+"All the sentiments that the nation honors itself by professing these
+other Frenchmen rebuke--the love of country, public spirit, accord
+between citizens, social repose, and respect for communal law and
+order--these other Frenchmen regard as the hallucinations of a nation
+of dupes.
+
+"Separated by such unfortunate ideas from the nation within whose
+boundaries they live, they continue to abuse, even to threaten, the
+society and the country which gives them shelter.
+
+"France is only a name to them; they were born there, they live
+there, they derive their nourishment from her without gratitude.
+But France is nothing to them; _their mother-land is the
+Internationale_!"
+
+I was certain now that the shadow of a sneer had settled in the
+corners of Buckhurst's thin lips.
+
+"I do not speak of anarchists or of terrorists," I continued, nodding
+as though profoundly impressed by my own sagacity. "I speak of
+socialists--that dangerous society to which the cry of Karl Marx was
+addressed with the warning, 'Socialists! Unite!'
+
+"The government has reason to fear socialism, not anarchy, for it
+will never happen in France, where the passion for individual property
+is so general, that a doctrine of brutal destruction could have the
+slightest chance of success.
+
+"But wait, here is the point, Monsieur Buckhurst. Formerly the name
+of 'terrorist' was a shock to the entire civilized world; it evoked
+the spectres of a year that the world can never forget. And so our
+modern reformers, modestly desiring to evade the inconveniences of
+such memories among the people, call themselves the 'Internationale.'
+Listen to them; they are adroit, they blame and rebuke violence, they
+condemn anarchy, they would not lay their hands on public or
+individual property--no, indeed!
+
+"Ah, madame, but you should hear them in their own clubs, where the
+ladies and gentlemen of the gutters, the barriers, and the abattoirs
+discuss 'individual property,' 'the tyranny of capital,' and similar
+subjects which no doubt they are peculiarly fitted to discuss.
+
+"Believe me, madame, the little coterie which you represent is
+already the dupe and victim of this terrible Internationale. Their
+leaders work their will through you; a vast conspiracy against all
+social peace is spread through your honest works of mercy. The time
+is coming when the whole world will rise to combat this
+Internationale; and when the mask is dragged from its benignant
+visage, there, grinning behind, will appear the same old 'Spectre
+Rouge,' torch in one hand, gun in the other, squatting behind a
+barricade of paving-blocks."
+
+I wagged my head dolefully.
+
+"I could not have rested had I not warned Mr. Buckhurst of this," I
+said, sentimentally.
+
+Which was fairly well done, considering that I was figuratively
+lamenting over the innocence of the most accomplished scoundrel that
+ever sat in the supreme council of the Internationale.
+
+Buckhurst looked thoughtfully at the floor.
+
+"If I thought," he murmured--"if I believed for one instant--"
+
+"Believe me, my dear sir," I said, "that you are playing into the
+hands of the wickedest villains on earth!"
+
+"Your earnestness almost converts me," he said, lifting his stealthy
+eyes.
+
+The Countess appeared weary and perplexed.
+
+"At all events," she said, "we must do nothing to embarrass France
+now; we must do nothing until this frightful war is ended."
+
+After a silence Buckhurst said, "But you will go to Paradise,
+madame?"
+
+"Yes," replied the Countess, listlessly.
+
+Now, what in Heaven's name attracted that rogue to Paradise?
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+A STRUGGLE FORESHADOWED
+
+
+I took my breakfast by the window, watching the German soldiery
+cleaning up Morsbronn. For that wonderful Teutonic administrative
+mania was already manifesting itself while ruined houses still smoked;
+method replaced chaos, order marched on the heels of the Prussian
+rear-guard, which enveloped Morsbronn in a whirlwind of Uhlans, and
+left it a silent, blackened landmark in the August sunshine.
+
+Soldiers in canvas fatigue-dress, wearing soft, round, visorless caps,
+were removing the débris of the fatal barricade; soldiers with shovel
+and hoe filled in the trenches and raked the long, winding street
+clean of all litter; soldiers with trowel and mortar were perched on
+shot-torn houses, mending chimneys and slated roofs so that their
+officers might enjoy immunity from rain and wind and defective flues.
+
+In the court-yards and stables I could see cavalrymen in
+stable-jackets, whitewashing walls and out-buildings and ill-smelling
+stalls, while others dug shovelfuls of slaked lime from wheelbarrows
+and spread it through stable-yards and dirty alleys. Everywhere quiet,
+method, order, prompt precision reigned; I even noticed a big,
+red-fisted artilleryman tying up tall, blue larkspurs, dahlias, and
+phlox in a trampled garden, and he touched the ragged masses of bloom
+with a tenderness peculiar to a flower-loving and sentimental people,
+whose ultimate ambition is a quart of beer, a radish, and a green leaf
+overhead.
+
+At the corners of the walls and blind alleys, placards in French and
+German were posted, embodying regulations governing the village under
+Prussian military rule. The few inhabitants of Morsbronn who had
+remained in cellars during the bombardment shuffled up to read these
+notices, or to loiter stupidly, gaping at the Prussian eagles
+surmounting the posters.
+
+A soldier came in and started the fire in my fireplace. When he went
+out I drew my code-book from my breeches-pocket and tossed it into the
+fire. After it followed my commission, my memoranda, and every scrap
+of writing. The diamonds I placed in the bosom of my flannel shirt.
+
+Toward one o'clock I heard the shrill piping of a goat-herd, and I saw
+him, a pallid boy, clumping along in his wooden shoes behind his two
+nanny-goats, while the German soldiers, peasants themselves, looked
+after him with curious sympathy.
+
+A little later a small herd of cattle passed, driven to pasture by a
+stolid Alsatian, who replied to the soldiers' questions in German
+patois and shrugged his heavy shoulders like a Frenchman.
+
+A cock crowed occasionally from some near dunghill; once I saw a cat
+serenely following the course of a stucco wall, calm, perfectly
+self-composed, ignoring the blandishments of the German soldiers, who
+called, "Komm mitz! mitz!" and held out bits of sausage and black
+bread.
+
+A German ambulance surgeon arrived to see me in the afternoon. The
+Countess was busy somewhere with Buckhurst, who had come with news for
+her, and the German surgeon's sharp double rap at the door did not
+bring her, so I called out, "Entrez donc!" and he stalked in,
+removing his fatigue-cap, which action distinguished him from his
+brother officers.
+
+He was a tall, well-built man, perfectly uniformed in his
+double-breasted frocked tunic, blue-eyed, blond-bearded, and
+immaculate of hand and face, a fine type of man and a credit to any
+army.
+
+After a brief examination he sat down and resumed a very bad cigar,
+which had been smouldering between his carefully kept fingers.
+
+"Do you know," he said, admiringly, "that I have never before seen
+just such a wound. The spinal column is not even grazed, and if, as I
+understand from you, you suffered temporarily from complete paralysis
+of the body below your waist, the case is not only interesting but
+even remarkable."
+
+"Is the superficial lesion at all serious?" I asked.
+
+"Not at all. As far as I can see the blow from the bullet temporarily
+paralyzed the spinal cord. There is no fracture, no depression. I do
+not see why you should not walk if you desire to."
+
+"When? Now?"
+
+"Try it," he said, briefly.
+
+I tried. Apart from a certain muscular weakness and a great fatigue, I
+found it quite possible to stand, even to move a few steps. Then I sat
+down again, and was glad to do so.
+
+The doctor was looking at my legs rather grimly, and it suddenly
+flashed on me that I had dropped my blanket and he had noticed my
+hussar's trousers.
+
+"So," he said, "you are a military prisoner? I understood from the
+provost marshal that you were a civilian."
+
+As he spoke Buckhurst appeared at the door, and then sauntered in,
+quietly greeting the surgeon, who looked around at the sound of his
+footsteps on the stone floor. There was no longer a vestige of doubt
+in my mind that Buckhurst was a German agent, or at least that the
+Germans _believed_ him to be in their pay. And doubtless he was in
+their pay, but to whom he was faithful nobody could know with any
+certainty.
+
+"How is our patient, doctor?" he asked.
+
+"Convalescent," replied the doctor, shortly, as though not exactly
+relishing the easy familiarity of this pale-eyed gentleman in gray.
+
+"Can he travel to-day?" inquired Buckhurst, without apparent
+interest.
+
+"Before he travels," said the officer, "it might be well to find out
+why he wears part of a hussar uniform."
+
+"I've explained that to the provost," observed Buckhurst, examining
+his well-kept finger-nails. "And I have a pass for him also--if he is
+in a fit condition to travel."
+
+The officer gave him a glance full of frank dislike, adjusted his
+sabre, pulled on his white gloves, and, bowing very slightly to me,
+marched straight out of the room and down the stairs without taking
+any notice of Buckhurst. The latter looked after the officer, then his
+indifferent eyes returned to me. Presently he sat down and produced a
+small slip of paper, which he very carefully twisted into a cocked
+hat.
+
+"I suppose you doubt my loyalty to France," he said, intent on his
+bit of paper.
+
+Then, logically continuing my rôle of the morning, I began to upbraid
+him for a traitor and swear that I would not owe my salvation to him,
+and all the while he was calmly transforming his paper from one toy
+into another between deft, flat fingers.
+
+"You are unjust and a trifle stupid," he said. "I am paid by Prussia
+for information which I never give. But I have the entre of their
+lines. I do it for the sake of the Internationale. The Internationale
+has a few people in its service ... _And it pays them well_."
+
+He looked squarely at me as he said this. I almost trembled with
+delight: the man undervalued me, he had taken me at my own figure, and
+now, holding me in absolute contempt, he was going to begin on me.
+
+"Scarlett," he said, "what does the government pay you?"
+
+I began to protest in a torrent of patriotism and sentimentality. He
+watched me impassively while I called Heaven to witness and proclaimed
+my loyalty to France, ending through sheer breathlessness in a
+maundering, tearful apotheosis where mixed metaphors jostled each
+other--the government, the Emperor, and the French flag, consecrated
+in blood--and finally, calling his attention to the fact that twenty
+centuries had once looked down on this same banner, I collapsed in my
+chair and gave him his chance.
+
+He took it. With subtle flattery he recognized in me a powerful arm of
+a corrupt Empire, which Empire he likened to the old man who rode
+Sindbad the Sailor. He admitted my noble loyalty to France, pointing
+out, however, that devotion to the Empire was not devotion to France,
+but the contrary. Skilfully he pictured the unprepared armies of the
+Empire, huddled along the frontier, seized and rent to fragments, one
+by one; adroitly he painted the inevitable ending, the armies that
+remained cut off and beaten in detail.
+
+And as I listened I freely admitted to myself that I had undervalued
+him; that he was no crude Belleville orator, no sentimental
+bathos-peddling reformer, no sansculotte with brains ablaze, squalling
+for indiscriminate slaughter and pillage; he was a cool student in
+crime, taking no chances that he was not forced to take, a calm,
+adroit, methodical observer, who had established a theory and was
+carefully engaged in proving it.
+
+"Scarlett," he said, in English, "let us come to the point. I am a
+mercenary American; you are an American mercenary, paid by the French
+government. You care nothing for that government or for the country;
+you would drop both to-day if your pay ceased. You and I are
+outsiders; we are in the world to watch our chances. And our chance is
+here."
+
+He unfolded the creased bit of paper and spread it out on his knees,
+smoothing it thoughtfully.
+
+"What do I care for the Internationale?" he asked, blandly. "I am
+high in its councils; Karl Marx knows less about the Internationale
+than do I. As for Prussia and France--bah!--it's a dog-fight to me,
+and I lack even the interest to bet on the German bull-dog.
+
+"You will know me better some day, and when you do you will know that
+I am a man who has determined to get rich if I have to set half of
+France against the other half and sack every bank in the Empire.
+
+"And now the time is coming when the richest city in Europe will be
+put to the sack. You don't believe it? Yet you shall live to see Paris
+besieged, and you shall live to see Paris surrender, and you shall
+live to see the Internationale rise up from nowhere, seize the
+government by the throat, and choke it to death under the red flag of
+universal--ahem!... license"--the faintest sneer came into his pallid
+face--"and every city of France shall be a commune, and we shall pass
+from city to city, leisurely, under the law--_our_ laws, which we will
+make--and I pity the man among us who cannot place his millions in the
+banks of England and America!"
+
+He began to worry the creased bit of paper again, stealthy eyes on the
+floor.
+
+"The revolt is as certain as death itself," he said. "The Society of
+the Internationale honeycombs Europe--your police archives show you
+that--and I tell you that, of the two hundred thousand soldiers of
+the national guard in Paris to-day, ninety per cent. are
+ours--_ours_, soul and body. You don't believe it? Wait!
+
+"Yet, for a moment, suppose I am right? Where are the government
+forces? Who can stop us from working our will? Not the fragments of
+beaten and exhausted armies! Not the thousands of prisoners which you
+will see sent into captivity across the Rhine! What has the government
+to lean on--a government discredited, impotent, beaten! What in the
+world can prevent a change, an uprising, a revolution? Why, even if
+there were no such thing as the Internationale and its secret Central
+Committee--to which I have the honor to belong"--and here his sneer
+was frightful--"I tell you that before a conquering German army had
+recrossed the Rhine this land of chattering apes would be tearing one
+another for very want of a universal scape-goat.
+
+"But that is exactly where we come into the affair. We find the
+popular scape-goat and point him out--the government, my friend. And
+all we have to do is to let the mob loose, stand back, and count
+profits."
+
+He leaned forward in his chair, idly twisting his crumpled bit of
+paper in one hand.
+
+"I am not fool enough to believe that our reign will last," he said.
+"It may last a month, two months, perhaps three. Then we leaders will
+be at one another's throats--and the game is up! It's always so--mob
+rule can't last--it never has lasted and never will. But the prudent
+man will make hay before the brief sunshine is ended; I expect to
+economize a little, and set aside enough--well, enough to make it pay,
+you see."
+
+He looked up at me quietly.
+
+"I am perfectly willing to tell you this, even if you used your
+approaching liberty to alarm the entire country, from the Emperor to
+the most obscure scullion in the Tuileries. Nothing can stop us now,
+nothing in the world can prevent our brief reign. Because these
+things are certain, the armies of France will be beaten--they are
+already beaten. Paris will hold out; Paris will fall; and with Paris
+down goes France! And as sure as the sun shall rise on a conquered
+people, so sure shall rise that red spectre we call the
+Internationale."
+
+The man astonished me. He put into words a prophecy which had haunted
+me from the day that war was declared--a prophetic fear which had
+haunted men higher up in the service of the Empire--thinking men who
+knew what war meant to a country whose government was as rotten as its
+army was unprepared, whose political chiefs were as vain, incompetent,
+ignorant, and weak as were the chiefs of its brave army--an army
+riddled with politics, weakened by intrigue and neglect--an army used
+ignobly, perverted, cheated, lied to, betrayed, abandoned.
+
+That, for once, Buckhurst spoke the truth as he foresaw it, I did not
+question. That he was right in his infernal calculations, I was
+fearsomely persuaded. And now the game had advanced, and I must
+display what cards I had, or pretended to have.
+
+"Are you trying to bribe me?" I blurted out, weakly.
+
+"Bribe you," he repeated, in contempt. "No. If the prospect does not
+please you, I have only to say a word to the provost marshal."
+
+"Wouldn't that injure your prospects with the Countess?" I said, with
+fat-brained cunning. "You cannot betray me and hope for her
+friendship."
+
+He glanced up at me, measured my mental capacity, then nodded.
+
+"I can't force you that way," he admitted.
+
+"He's bound to get to Paradise. Why?" I wondered, and said, aloud:
+
+"What do you want of me?"
+
+"I want immunity from the secret police, Mr. Scarlett."
+
+"Where?"
+
+"Wherever I may be."
+
+"In Morbihan?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"In Paradise?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+I was silent for a moment, then, looking him in the eye, "What do I
+gain?"
+
+Ah, the cat was out now. Buckhurst did not move, but I saw the muscles
+of his face relax, and he drew a deep, noiseless breath.
+
+"Well," he said, coolly, "you may keep those diamonds, for one
+thing."
+
+Presently I said, "And for the next thing?"
+
+"You are high-priced, Mr. Scarlett," he observed.
+
+"Oh, very," I said, with that offensive, swaggering menace in my
+voice which is peculiar to the weak criminal the world over.
+
+So I asserted myself and scowled at him and told him I was no fool and
+taunted him with my importance to his schemes and said I was not born
+yesterday, and that if Paris was to be divided I knew what part I
+wanted and meant to stand no nonsense from him or anybody.
+
+All of which justified the opinion he had already formed of me, and
+justified something else, too--his faith in his own eloquence, logic,
+and powers of persuasion. Not that I meant to make his mistake and
+undervalue him; he was an intelligent, capable, remarkable
+criminal--with the one failing--an overconfident contempt of _all_
+men.
+
+"There is one thing I want to ask you," said I. "Why do you desire
+to go to Paradise?"
+
+He did not answer me at once, and I studied his passionless profile as
+he gazed out of the window.
+
+"Well," he said, slowly, "I shall not tell you."
+
+"Why not?" I demanded.
+
+"--But I'll say this," he continued. "I want you to come to Paradise
+with me and that fool of a woman. I want you to report to your
+government that you are watching the house in Paradise, and that you
+are hoping to catch me there."
+
+"How can I do that?" I asked. "As soon as the government catches the
+Countess de Vassart she will be sent across the frontier."
+
+"Not if you inform your government that you desire to use her and the
+others as a bait to draw me to Paradise."
+
+"Oh, that's it, is it?" I asked, thoughtfully.
+
+"Yes," said Buckhurst, "that's it."
+
+"And you do not desire to inform me why you are going to stay in
+Paradise?"
+
+"Don't you think you'll be clever enough to find out?" he asked, with
+a sneer.
+
+I did think so; more than that, I let him see that I thought so, and
+he was contented with my conceit.
+
+"One thing more," I said, blustering a little, "I want to know
+whether you mean any harm to that innocent girl?"
+
+"Who? The Countess? What do you mean? Harm her? Do you think I waste
+my thoughts on that little fool? She is not a factor in
+anything--except that just now I'm using her and mean to use her house
+in Paradise."
+
+"Haven't you stripped her of every cent she has?" I asked. "What do
+you want of her now?" And I added something about respect due to
+women.
+
+"Oh yes, of course," he said, with a vague glance at the street
+below. "You need not worry; nobody's going to hurt her--" He suddenly
+shifted his eyes to me. "You haven't taken a fancy to her, have
+you?" he asked, in faint disgust.
+
+I saw that he thought me weak enough for any sentiment, even a noble
+one.
+
+"If you think it pays," he muttered, "marry her and beat her, for
+all I care; but don't play loose with me, my friend; as a plain matter
+of business it won't pay you."
+
+"Is that a threat?" I asked, in the bullying tone of a born coward.
+
+"No, not a threat, a plain matter of profit and loss, a simple
+business proposition. For, suppose you betray me--and, by a miracle,
+live to boast of it? What is your reward? A colonelcy in the Military
+Police with a few thousand francs salary, and, in your old age, a
+pension which might permit you to eat meat twice a week. Against that,
+balance what I offer--free play in a helpless city, and no one to
+hinder you from salting away as many millions as you can carry off!"
+
+Presently I said, weakly, "And what, once more, is the service you
+ask of me?"
+
+"I ask you to notify the government that you are watching Paradise,
+that you do not arrest the Countess and Dr. Delmont because you desire
+to use them as a bait to catch me."
+
+"Is that all?"
+
+"That is all. We will start for Paris together; I shall leave you
+before we get there. But I'll see you later in Paradise."
+
+"You refuse to tell me why you wish to stay at the house in
+Paradise?"
+
+"Yes,... I refuse. And, by-the-way, the Countess is to think that I
+have presented myself in Paris and that the government has pardoned
+me."
+
+"You are willing to believe that I will not have you arrested?"
+
+"I don't ask you to promise. If you are fool enough to try it--try
+it! But I'm not going to give you the chance in Paris--only in
+Paradise."
+
+"You don't require my word of honor?"
+
+"Word of--what? Well--no;... it's a form I can dispense with."
+
+"But how can you protect yourself?"
+
+"If all the protection I had was a 'word of honor,' I'd be in a
+different business, my friend."
+
+"And you are willing to risk me, and you are perfectly capable of
+taking care of yourself?"
+
+"I think so," he said, quietly.
+
+"Trusting to my common-sense as a business man not to be fool enough
+to cut my own throat by cutting yours?" I persisted.
+
+"Exactly, and trusting to a few other circumstances, the details of
+which I beg permission to keep to myself," he said, with a faint
+sneer.
+
+He rose and walked to the window; at the same moment I heard the sound
+of wheels below.
+
+"I believe that is our carriage," he said. "Are you ready to start,
+Mr. Scarlett?"
+
+"Now?" I exclaimed.
+
+"Why not? I'm not in the habit of dawdling over anything. Come, sir,
+there is nothing very serious the matter with you, is there?"
+
+I said nothing; he knew, of course, the exact state of the wound I had
+received, that the superficial injury was of no account, that the
+shock had left me sound as a silver franc though a trifle weak in the
+hips and knees.
+
+"Is the Countess de Vassart to go with us?" I asked, trying to find a
+reason for these events which were succeeding one another too quickly
+to suit me.
+
+He gave me an absent-minded nod; a moment later the Countess entered.
+She had mended her black crêpe gown where I tore it when I hung in
+the shadow of death under the battlements of La Trappe. She wore black
+gloves, a trifle shabby, and carried a worn satchel in her hands.
+
+Buckhurst aided me to rise, the Countess threw my hussar jacket over
+my shoulders and buttoned it; I felt the touch of her cool, little
+fingers on my hot, unshaved throat.
+
+"I congratulate you on your convalescence," she said, in a low voice.
+"Lean on me, monsieur."
+
+My head swam; hips and knees were without strength; she aided me down
+the stairway and out into the pale sunshine, where stood the same
+mud-splashed, rusty vehicle which had brought us hither from La
+Trappe.
+
+The Countess had only a satchel and a valise; Buckhurst's luggage
+comprised a long, flat, steel-bound box, a satchel, and a parcel. I
+had nothing. My baggage, which I had left in Morsbronn, had without
+doubt been confiscated long since; my field-glasses, sabre, and
+revolver were gone; I had only what clothes I was wearing--a dirty,
+ragged, gray-blue flannel shirt, my muddy jacket, scarlet
+riding-breeches, and officer's boots. But in one of the hip-pockets of
+my breeches I carried a fortune in diamonds.
+
+As I stood beside the carriage, wondering how I was going to get in, I
+felt an arm slip under my neck and another slide gently under my
+knees, and Buckhurst lifted me. Beneath the loose, gray coat-sleeves
+his bent arms were rigid as steel; his supple frame straightened; he
+moved a step forward and laid me on the shabby cushions.
+
+The Countess looked at me, turned and glanced up at her
+smoke-blackened house, where a dozen Prussian soldiers leaned from the
+lower windows smoking their long porcelain pipes and the provost
+marshal stood in the doorway, helmeted, spurred, immaculate from
+golden cheek-guard to the glittering tip of his silver scabbard. An
+Uhlan, dismounted, stood on guard below the steps, his lance at a
+"present," the black-and-white swallow-tailed pennon drooping from
+the steel point.
+
+The Countess bent her pretty head under its small black hat; the
+provost's white-gloved hand flew to his helmet peak.
+
+"Fear nothing, madame," he said, pompously. "Your house and its
+contents are safe until you return. This village is now German soil."
+
+The Countess looked at him steadily, gravely.
+
+"I thank you, monsieur, but frontiers are not changed in a day."
+
+But she was mistaken. Alsace henceforth must be written Elsass, and
+the devastated province called Lothringen was never again to be
+written Lorraine.
+
+The Countess stepped into the carriage and took her place beside me;
+Buckhurst followed, seating himself opposite us, and the Alsatian
+driver mounted to the box.
+
+"Your safe-conduct carries you to the French outposts at Saverne,"
+said the provost, dryly. "If there are no longer French outposts at
+Saverne, you may demand a visé for your pass and continue south to
+Strasbourg."
+
+Buckhurst half turned towards the driver. "Allez," he said, quietly,
+and the two gaunt horses moved on.
+
+There was a chill in the white sunshine--the first touch of autumn.
+Not a trace of the summer's balm remained in the air; every tree on
+the mountain outlines stood out sharp-cut in the crystalline light;
+the swift little streams that followed the road ran clear above
+autumn-brown pebbles and golden sands.
+
+Distant beachwoods were turning yellow; yellow gorse lay like patches
+of sunshine on the foot-hills; oceans of yellow grain belted the
+terraced vineyards. Here and there long, velvety, black strips cut the
+green and gold, the trail of fire which had scarred the grain belts;
+here and there pillars of smoke floated, dominating blue woodlands,
+where the flames of exploding shells had set the forest afire.
+
+Already from the plateau I could see a streak of silver reflecting the
+intense blue sky--the Rhine, upon whose westward cliffs France had
+mounted guard but yesterday.
+
+And now the Rhine was lost, and the vast granite bastions of the
+Vosges looked out upon a sea of German forests. Above the Col du
+Pigeonnier the semaphore still glistened, but its signals now
+travelled eastward, and strange flags fluttered on its invisible
+halliards. And every bridge was guarded by helmeted men who halted us,
+and every tunnel was barred by mounted Uhlans who crossed their lances
+to the ominous shout: "Wer da? On ne basse bas!" The Vosges were
+literally crawling with armed men!
+
+Driving slowly along the base of the hills, I had glimpses of rocky
+defiles which pierced the mountain wall; and through every defile
+poured infantry and artillery in unbroken columns, and over every
+mountain pass streamed endless files of horsemen. Railroad tunnels
+were choked with slowly moving trains piled high with artillery;
+viaducts glistened with helmets all moving westward; every hillock,
+every crag, every height had its group of tiny dark dots or its
+solitary Uhlan.
+
+Very far away I heard cannon--so far away that the hum of the
+cannonade was no louder than the panting of our horses on the white
+hill-road, and I could hear it only when the carriage stopped at
+intervals.
+
+"Do we take the railroad at Saverne?" I asked at last. "Is there a
+railroad there?"
+
+[Illustration: "EVERY BRIDGE WAS GUARDED"]
+
+Buckhurst looked up at me. "It is rather strange that a French
+officer should not know the railroads in his own country," he said.
+
+I was silent. I was not the only officer whose shame was his
+ignorance of the country he had sworn to defend. Long before the
+war broke out, every German regimental officer, commissioned and
+non-commissioned, carried a better map of France than could be
+found in France itself. And the French government had issued to us
+a few wretched charts of Germany, badly printed, full of gross
+errors, one or two maps to a regiment, and a few scattered about
+among the corps headquarters--among officers who did not even know the
+general topography of their own side of the Rhine.
+
+"Is there a railroad at Saverne?" I repeated, sullenly.
+
+"You will take a train at Strasbourg," replied Buckhurst.
+
+"And then?"
+
+"And then you go to Avricourt," he said. "I suppose at least you
+know where that is?"
+
+"It is on the route to Paris," said I, keeping my temper. "Are we
+going direct to Paris?"
+
+"Madame de Vassart desires to go there," he said, glancing at her
+with a sort of sneaking deference which he now assumed in her
+presence.
+
+"It is true," said the Countess, turning to me. "I wish to rest for
+a little while before I go to Point Paradise. I am curiously tired of
+poverty, Monsieur Scarlett," she added, and held out her shabby gloves
+with a gesture of despair; "I am reduced to very little--I have
+scarcely anything left,... and I am weak enough to long for the scent
+of the winter violets on the boulevards."
+
+With a faint smile she touched the bright hair above her brow, where
+the wind had flung a gleaming tendril over her black veil.
+
+As I looked at her, I marvelled that she had found it possible to
+forsake all that was fair and lovely in life, to dare ignore caste, to
+deliberately face ridicule and insult and the scornful anger of her
+own kind, for the sake of the filthy scum festering in the sinkholes
+of the world.
+
+There are brave priests who go among lepers, there are brave
+missionaries who dispute with the devil over the souls of half-apes in
+the Dark Continent. Under the Cross they do the duty they were bred
+to.
+
+But she was bred to other things. Her lungs were never made to breathe
+the polluted atmosphere of the proletariat, yelping and slavering in
+their kennels; her strait young soul was never born for communion with
+the crooked souls of social pariahs, with the stunted and warped
+intelligence of fanatics, with the crippled but fierce minds which
+dominated the Internationale.
+
+Not that such contact could ever taint her; but it might break her
+heart one day.
+
+"You will think me very weak and cowardly to seek shelter and comfort
+at such a time," she said, raising her gray eyes to me. "But I feel
+as though all my strength had slipped away from me. I mean to go back
+to my work; I only need a few days of quiet among familiar
+scenes--pleasant scenes that I knew when I was young. I think that if
+I could only see a single care-free face--only one among all those
+who--who once seemed to love me--"
+
+She turned her head quickly and stared out at the tall pines which
+fringed the dusty road.
+
+Buckhurst blinked at her.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was late in the afternoon when the last Prussian outpost hailed us.
+I had been asleep for hours, but was awakened by the clatter of
+horses, and I opened my eyes to see a dozen Uhlans come cantering up
+and surround our carriage.
+
+After a long discussion with Buckhurst and a rigid scrutiny of our
+permit to pass the lines, the slim officer in command viséd the order.
+One of the troopers tied a white handkerchief to his lance-tip,
+wheeled his wiry horse, and, followed by a trumpeter, trotted off
+ahead of us. Our carriage creaked after them, slowly moving to the
+summit of a hill over which the road rose.
+
+Presently, very far away on the gray-green hill-side, I saw a bit of
+white move. The Uhlan flourished his lance from which the handkerchief
+fluttered; the trumpeter set his trumpet to his lips and blew the
+parley.
+
+One minute, two, three, ten passed. Then, distant galloping sounded
+along the road, nearer, nearer; three horsemen suddenly wheeled into
+view ahead--French dragoons, advancing at a solid gallop. The Uhlan
+with the flag spurred forward to meet them, saluted, wheeled his
+horse, and came back.
+
+Paid mercenary that I was, my heart began to beat very fast at sight
+of those French troopers with their steel helmets bound with
+leopard-hide and their horsehair plumes whipping the breeze, and their
+sun-bronzed, alert faces and pleasant eyes. I had had enough of the
+supercilious, near-sighted eyes of the Teuton.
+
+As for the young Countess, she sat there smiling, while the clumsy
+dragoons came rattling up, beaming at my red riding-breeches, and all
+saluting the Countess with a cheerful yet respectful swagger that
+touched me deeply as I noted the lines of hunger in their lean jaws.
+
+And now the brief ceremony was over and our rusty vehicle moved off
+down the hill, while the Uhlans turned bridle and clattered off,
+scattering showers of muddy gravel in the rising wind.
+
+The remains of our luncheon lay in a basket under our seat--plenty of
+bread and beef, and nearly a quart of red wine.
+
+"Call the escort--they are starving," I said to Buckhurst.
+
+"I think not," he said, coolly. "I may eat again."
+
+"Call the escort!" I repeated, sharply.
+
+Buckhurst looked up at me in silence, then glanced warily at the
+Countess.
+
+A few moments later the gaunt dragoons were munching dry bread as they
+rode, passing the bottle from saddle to saddle.
+
+We were ascending another hill; the Countess, anxious to stretch her
+limbs, had descended to the road, and now walked ahead, one hand
+holding her hat, which the ever-freshening wind threatened.
+
+Buckhurst bent towards me and said: "My friend, your suggestion that
+we deprive ourselves to feed those cavalrymen was a trifle peremptory
+in tone. I am wondering how much your tone will change when we reach
+Paris."
+
+"You will see," said I.
+
+"Oh, of course I'll see," he said,... "and so will you."
+
+"I thought you had means to protect yourself," I observed.
+
+"I have. Besides, I think you would rather keep those diamonds than
+give them up for the pleasure of playing me false."
+
+I laughed in a mean manner, which reassured him. "Look here," said I,
+"if I were to make trouble for you in Paris I'd be the most besotted
+fool in France, and you know it."
+
+He nodded.
+
+And so I should have been. For there was something vastly more
+important to do than to arrest John Buckhurst for theft; and before I
+suffered a hair of his sleek, gray head to come to harm I'd have hung
+myself for a hopeless idiot. Oh no; my friend John Buckhurst had such
+colossal irons in the fire that I knew it would take many more men as
+strong as he to lift them out again. And I meant to know what those
+irons were for, and who were the gentlemen to aid him lift them. So
+not only must Buckhurst remain free as a lively black cricket in a
+bog, but he must not be frightened if I could help it.
+
+And to that end I leered at him knowingly, and presently bestowed a
+fatuous wink upon him.
+
+It was unpleasant for me to do this, for it implied that I was his
+creature; and, in spite of the remorseless requirements of my
+profession, I have an inborn hatred of falsehood in any shape. To lie
+in the line of duty is one of the disagreeable necessities of certain
+professions; and mine is not the only one nor the least respectable.
+The art of war is to deceive; strategy is the art of demonstrating
+falsehood plausibly; there is nothing respectable in the military
+profession except the manual--which is now losing importance in the
+eyes of advanced theorists. All men are liars--a few are unselfish
+ones.
+
+"You have given me your word of honor," said Buckhurst.
+
+"Have I?" I had not, and he knew it. I hoped I might not be forced
+to.
+
+"Haven't you?" asked Buckhurst.
+
+"You sneered at my word of honor," I said, with all the spite of a
+coward; "now you don't get it."
+
+He no longer wanted it, but all he said was: "Don't take unnecessary
+offence; you're smart enough to know when you're well off."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I dozed towards sunset, waking when the Countess stepped back into the
+carriage and seated herself by my side. Then, after a little, I slept
+again. And it was nearly dark when I was awakened by the startling
+whistle of a locomotive. The carriage appeared to be moving slowly
+between tall rows of poplars and telegraph-poles; a battery of
+artillery was clanking along just ahead. In the dark southern sky a
+luminous haze hung.
+
+"The lights of Strasbourg," whispered the Countess, as I sat up,
+rubbing my hot eyes.
+
+I looked for Buckhurst; his place was empty.
+
+"Mr. Buckhurst left us at the railroad crossing," she said.
+
+"Left us!"
+
+"Yes! He boarded a train loaded with wounded.... He had business to
+transact in Colmar before he presented himself to the authorities in
+Paris.... And we are to go by way of Avricourt."
+
+So Buckhurst had already begun to execute his programme. But the
+abrupt, infernal precision of the man jarred me unpleasantly.
+
+In the dark I felt cautiously for my diamonds; they were safe in my
+left hip-pocket.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The wind had died out, and a fine rain began to filter down through a
+mist which lay over the flat plain as we entered the suburbs of
+Strasbourg.
+
+Again and again we were halted by sentinels, then permitted to proceed
+in the darkness, along deserted avenues lighted by gas-jets burning in
+tall bronze lamp-posts through a halo of iridescent fog.
+
+We passed deserted suburban villas, blank stretches of stucco walls
+enclosing gardens, patches of cabbages, thickets of hop-poles to which
+the drenched vines clung fantastically, and scores of abandoned
+houses, shutters locked, blinds drawn.
+
+High to the east the ramparts of the city loomed, set at regular
+distances with electric lights; from the invisible citadel rockets
+were rising, spraying the fog with jewelled flakes, crumbling to
+golden powder in the starless void above.
+
+Presently our carriage stopped before a tremendous mass of masonry
+pierced by an iron, arched gate, through which double files of
+farm-wagons were rolling, escorted by customs guards and marines.
+
+"No room! no room!" shouted the soldiers. "This is the Porte de
+Pierre. Go to the Porte de Saverne!"
+
+So we passed on beneath the bastions, skirting the ramparts to the
+Porte de Saverne, where, after a harangue, the gate guards admitted
+us, and we entered Strasbourg in the midst of a crush of vehicles. At
+the railroad station hundreds of cars choked the tracks; loaded
+freight trains stalled in the confusion, trains piled with ammunition
+and provisions, trains crowded with horses and cattle and sheep,
+filling the air with melancholy plaints; locomotives backing and
+whistling, locomotives blowing off deafening blasts of steam; gongs
+sounding, bells ringing, station-masters' trumpets blowing; and, above
+all, the immense clamor of human voices.
+
+The Countess and our Alsatian driver helped me to the platform, I
+looked around with dread at the throng, being too weak to battle for a
+foothold; but the brave Alsatian elbowed a path for me, and the
+Countess warded off the plunging human cattle, and at length I found
+myself beside the cars where line-soldiers stood guard at every ten
+paces and gendarmes stalked about, shoving the frantic people into
+double files.
+
+"Last train for Paris!" bawled an official in gilt and blue; and to
+the anxious question of the Countess he shook his head, saying,
+"There is no room, madame; it is utterly impossible--pardon, I cannot
+discuss anything now; the Prussians are signalled at Ostwald, and
+their shells may fall here at any moment."
+
+"If that is so," I said, "this lady cannot stay here!"
+
+"I can't help that!" he shouted, starting off down the platform.
+
+I caught the sleeve of a captain of gendarmerie who was running to
+enter a first-class compartment.
+
+"Eh--what do you want, monsieur?" he snapped, in surprise. Then, as I
+made him a sign, he regarded me with amazement. I had given the
+distress signal of the secret police.
+
+"Try to make room for this lady in your compartment," I said.
+
+"Willingly, monsieur. Hasten, madame; the train is already moving!"
+and he tore open the compartment door and swung the Countess to the
+car platform.
+
+I suppose she thought I was to follow, for when the officer slammed
+the compartment door she stepped to the window and tried to open it.
+
+"Quick!" she cried to the guard, who had just locked the door; "help
+that officer in! He is wounded--can't you see he is wounded?"
+
+The train was gliding along the asphalt platform; I hobbled beside the
+locked compartment, where she stood at the window.
+
+"Will you unlock that door?" said the Countess to the guard. "I wish
+to leave the train!"
+
+The cars were rolling a little faster than I could move along.
+
+The Countess leaned from the open window; through the driving rain her
+face in the lamp-light was pitifully white. I made a last effort and
+caught up with her car.
+
+"A safe journey, madame," I stammered, catching at the hand she held
+out and brushing the shabby-gloved fingers with my lips.
+
+[Illustration: "SISTERS OF CHARITY WERE GIVING FIRST AID"]
+
+"I shall never forgive this wanton self-sacrifice," she said,
+unsteadily. Then the car rolled silently past me, swifter, swifter,
+and her white face faded from my sight. Yet still I stood there,
+bareheaded, in the rain, while the twin red lamps on the rear car grew
+smaller and smaller, until they, too, were shut out in the closing
+curtains of the fog.
+
+As I turned away into the lighted station a hospital train from the
+north glided into the yard and stopped. Soldiers immediately started
+carrying out the wounded and placing them in rows on mattresses ranged
+along the walls of the passenger depot; sisters of charity, hovering
+over the mutilated creatures, were already giving first aid to the
+injured; policemen kept the crowd from trampling the dead and dying;
+gendarmes began to clear the platforms, calling out sharply, "No more
+trains to-night! Move on! This platform is for government officials
+only!"
+
+Through the scrambling mob a file of wounded tottered, escorted by
+police; women were forced back and pushed out into the street, only to
+be again menaced by galloping military ambulances arriving,
+accompanied by hussars. The confusion grew into a tumult; men
+struggled and elbowed for a passage to the platforms, women sobbed and
+cried; through the uproar the treble wail of terrified children broke
+out.
+
+Jostled, shoved, pulled this way and that, I felt that I was destined
+to go down under the people's feet, and I don't know what would have
+become of me had not a violent push sent me against the door of the
+telegraph office. The door gave way, and I fell on my knees, staggered
+to my feet, and crept out once more to the platform.
+
+The station-master passed, a haggard gentleman in rumpled uniform and
+gilt cap; and as he left the office by the outer door the heavy
+explosion of a rampart cannon shook the station.
+
+"Can you get me to Paris?" I asked.
+
+"Quick, then," he muttered; "this way--lean on me, monsieur! I am
+trying to send another train out--but Heaven alone knows! Quick, this
+way!"
+
+The glare of a locomotive's headlight dazzled me; I made towards it,
+clinging to the arm of the station-master; the ground under my feet
+rocked with the shock of the siege-guns. Suddenly a shell fell and
+burst in the yard outside; there was a cry, a rush of trainmen, a
+gendarme shouting; then the piercing alarm notes of locomotives,
+squealing like terrified leviathans.
+
+The train drawn up along the platform gave a jerk and immediately
+moved out towards the open country, compartment doors swinging wide,
+trainmen and guards running alongside, followed by a mob of frenzied
+passengers, who leaped into empty compartments, flinging satchels and
+rugs to the four winds. Crash! A shell fell through the sloping roof
+of the platform and blew up. Through the white cloud and brilliant
+glare I saw a porter, wheeling boxes and trunks, fall, buried under an
+avalanche of baggage, and a sister of charity throw up her arms as
+though to shield her face from the fragments.
+
+A car, doors swinging wide, glided past me; I caught the rail and fell
+forward into a compartment. The cushions of the seats were afire, and
+a policeman was hammering out the sparks with naked fists.
+
+I was too weak to aid him. Presently he hurled the last burning
+cushion from the open door and leaped out into the train-yard, where
+red and green lamps glowed and the brilliant flare of bursting shells
+lighted the fog. By this time the train was moving swiftly; the car
+windows shook with the thunder from the ramparts under which we were
+passing; then came inky darkness--a tunnel--then a rush of mist and
+wind from the open door as we swept out into the country.
+
+Passengers clinging to the platforms now made their way into the
+compartment where I lay almost senseless, and soon the little place
+was crowded, and somebody slammed the door.
+
+Then the flying locomotive, far ahead, shrieked, and the train leaped,
+rushing forward into the unknown. Blackness, stupefying blackness,
+outside; inside, unseen, the huddled passengers, breathing heavily
+with sudden stifled sobs, or the choked, indrawn breath of terror; but
+not a word, not a quaver of human voices; peril strangled speech as
+our black train flew onward through the night.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+A MAN TO LET
+
+
+The train which bore me out of the arc of the Prussian fire at
+Strasbourg passed in between the fortifications of Paris the next
+morning about eleven o'clock. Ten minutes later I was in a closed cab
+on my way to the headquarters of the Imperial Military Police,
+temporarily housed in the Luxembourg Palace.
+
+The day was magnificent; sunshine flooded the boulevards, and a few
+chestnut-trees in the squares had already begun to blossom for the
+second time in the season; there seemed to be no prophecy of autumn in
+sky or sunlight.
+
+The city, as I saw it from the open window of my cab, appeared to be
+in a perfectly normal condition. There were, perhaps, a few more
+national-guard soldiers on the streets, a few more brightly colored
+posters, notices, and placards on the dead walls, but the life of the
+city itself had not changed at all; the usual crowds filled the
+boulevards, the usual street cries sounded, the same middle-aged
+gentlemen sat in front of the cafés reading the same daily papers, the
+same waiters served them the same drinks; rows of cabs were drawn up
+where cabs are always to be found, and the same policemen dawdled in
+gossip with the same flower-girls. I caught the scent of early winter
+violets in the fresh Parisian breeze.
+
+Was this the city that Buckhurst looked upon as already doomed?
+
+On the marble bridge gardeners were closing up the morning
+flower-market; blue-bloused men with jointed hose sprinkled the
+asphalt in front of the Palais de Justice; students strolled under the
+trees from the School of Medicine to the Sorbonne; the Luxembourg
+fountain tossed its sparkling sheets of spray among the lotus.
+
+All this I saw, yet a sinister foreboding oppressed me, and I could
+not shake it off even in this bright city where September was
+promising only a new lease of summer and the white spikes of chestnut
+blossoms hummed with eager bees.
+
+Physically I felt well enough; the cramped sleep in the dark
+compartment, far from exhausting me, had not only rested me, but had
+also brought me an appetite which I meant to satisfy as soon as might
+be. As for my back, it was simply uncomfortable, but all effects of
+the shock had disappeared--unless this heavy mental depression was due
+to it.
+
+My cab was now entering the Palace of the Luxembourg by the great arch
+facing the Rue de Tournon; the line sentinels halted us; I left the
+cab, crossed the parade in front of the guard-house, turned to the
+right, and climbed the stairs straight to my own quarters, which were
+in the west wing of the palace, and consisted of a bedroom, a working
+cabinet, and a dressing-room.
+
+But I did not enter my door or even glance at it; I continued straight
+on, down the corridor to a door, on the ground-glass panes of which
+was printed in red lettering:
+
+ HEADQUARTERS
+ IMPERIAL MILITARY POLICE
+ SAFE DEPOSIT
+
+The sentinel interrogated me for form's sake, although he knew me; I
+entered, passed rapidly along the face of the steel cage behind which
+some officers sat on high stools, writing, and presented myself at the
+guichet marked, "Foreign Division."
+
+There was no military clerk in attendance there, and, to my surprise,
+the guichet was closed.
+
+However, a very elegant officer strolled up to the guichet as I laid
+my bag of diamonds on the glass shelf, languidly unlocked the steel
+window-gate, and picked up the bag of jewels.
+
+The officer was Mornac, the Emperor's alter ego, or âme damnée, who
+had taken over the entire department the very day I left Paris for the
+frontier. Officially, I could not recognize him until I presented
+myself to Colonel Jarras with my report; so I saluted his uniform,
+standing at attention in my filthy clothes, awaiting the usual
+question and receipt.
+
+"Name and number?" inquired Mornac, indolently.
+
+I gave both.
+
+"You desire to declare?"
+
+I enumerated the diamonds, and designated them as those lately stolen
+from the crucifix of Louis XI.
+
+Mornac handed me a printed certificate of deposit, opened a
+compartment in the safe, and tossed in the bag without sealing it.
+And, as I stood waiting, he lighted a scented cigarette, glanced over
+at me, puffed once or twice, and finally dismissed me with a
+discourteous nod.
+
+I went, because he was Mornac; I thought that I was entitled to a
+bureau receipt, but could scarcely demand one from the chief of the
+entire department who had taken over the bureau solely in order to
+reform it, root and branch. Doubtless his curt dismissal of me without
+the customary receipt and his failure to seal the bag were two of his
+reforms.
+
+I limped off past the glittering steel cage, thankful that the jewels
+were safe, turned into the corridor, and hastened back to my own
+rooms.
+
+To tear off my rags, bathe, shave, and dress in a light suit of
+civilian clothes took me longer than usual, for I was a trifle lame.
+
+Bath and clean clothes ought to have cheered me; but the contrary was
+the case, and I sat down to a breakfast brought by a palace servant,
+and ate it gloomily, thinking of Buckhurst, and the Countess, and of
+Morsbronn, and of the muddy dead lying under the rifle smoke below my
+turret window.
+
+I thought, too, of that astonishing conspiracy which had formed under
+the very shadow of the imperial throne, and through which already the
+crucifix and diamonds of Louis XI. had been so nearly lost to France.
+
+Who besides Buckhurst was involved? How far had Colonel Jarras gone in
+the investigation during my absence? How close to the imperial throne
+had the conspiracy burrowed?
+
+Pondering, I slowly retraced my steps through the bedroom and
+dressing-room, and out into the tiled hallway, where, at the end of
+the dim corridor, the door of Colonel Jarras's bureau stood partly
+open.
+
+Jarras was sitting at his desk as I entered, and he gave me a
+leaden-eyed stare as I closed the door behind me and stood at
+attention.
+
+For a moment he said nothing, but presently he partly turned his
+ponderous body towards me and motioned me to a chair.
+
+As I sat down I glanced around and saw my old comrade, Speed, sitting
+in a dark corner, chewing a cigarette and watching me in alert
+silence.
+
+"You are present to report?" suggested Colonel Jarras, heavily.
+
+I bowed, glancing across at Speed, who shrugged his shoulders and
+looked at the floor with an ominous smile.
+
+Mystified, I began my report, but was immediately stopped by Jarras
+with a peevish gesture: "All right, all right; keep all that for the
+Chief of Department. Your report doesn't concern me."
+
+"Doesn't concern you!" I repeated; "are you not chief of this
+bureau, Colonel Jarras?"
+
+"No," snapped Jarras; "and there's no bureau now--at least no bureau
+for the Foreign Division."
+
+Speed leaned forward and said: "Scarlett, my friend, the Foreign
+Division of the Imperial Military Police is not in favor just now. It
+appears the Foreign Division is suspected."
+
+"Suspected? Of what?"
+
+"Treason, I suppose," said Speed, serenely.
+
+I felt my face begin to burn, but the astonishing news left me
+speechless.
+
+"I said," observed Speed, "that the Foreign Division is suspected;
+that is not exactly the case; it is not suspected, simply because it
+has been abolished."
+
+"Who the devil did that?" I asked, savagely.
+
+"Mornac."
+
+Mornac! The Emperor's shadow! Then truly enough it was all up with the
+Foreign Division. But the shame of it!--the disgrace of as faithful a
+body of police, mercenaries though they were, as ever worked for any
+cause, good or bad.
+
+"So it's the old whine of treason again, is it?" I said, while the
+blood beat in my temples. "Oh, very well, doubtless Monsieur Mornac
+knows his business. Are we transferred, Speed, or just kicked out into
+the street?"
+
+"Kicked out," replied Speed, rubbing his slim, bony hands together.
+
+"And you, sir?" I asked, turning to Jarras, who sat with his fat,
+round head buried in his shoulders, staring at the discolored blotter
+on his desk.
+
+The old Corsican straightened as though stung: "Since when, monsieur,
+have subordinates assumed the right to question their superiors?"
+
+I asked his pardon in a low voice, although I was no longer his
+subordinate. He had been a good and loyal chief to us all; the least I
+could do now was to show him respect in his bitter humiliation.
+
+I think he felt our attitude and that it comforted him, but all he
+said was: "It is a heavy blow. The Emperor knows best."
+
+As we sat there in silence, a soldier came to summon Colonel Jarras,
+and he went away, leaning on his ivory-headed cane, head bowed over
+the string of medals on his breast.
+
+When he had gone, Speed came over and shut the door, then shook hands
+with me.
+
+"He's gone to see Mornac; it will be our turn next. Look out for
+Mornac, or he'll catch you tripping in your report. Did you find
+Buckhurst?"
+
+"Look here," I said, angrily, "how can Mornac catch me tripping? I'm
+not under his orders."
+
+"You are until you're discharged. You see, they've taken it into
+their heads, since the crucifix robbery, to suspect everybody and
+anybody short of the Emperor. Mornac came smelling around here the day
+you left. He's at the bottom of all this--a nice business to cast
+suspicion on our division because we're foreigners. Gad, he looks like
+a pickpocket himself--he's got the oblique trick of the eyes and the
+restless finger movement."
+
+"Perhaps he is," I said.
+
+Speed looked at me sharply.
+
+"If I were in the service now I'd arrest Mornac--if I dared."
+
+"You might as well arrest the Emperor," I said, wearily.
+
+"That's it," observed Speed, throwing away his chewed cigarette.
+"Nobody dare touch Mornac; nobody dare even watch him. But if there's
+a leak somewhere, it's far more probable that Mornac did the dirty
+work than that there's a traitor in our division."
+
+Presently he added: "Did you catch Buckhurst?"
+
+"I don't want to talk about it," I said, disgusted.
+
+"--Because," continued Speed, "if you've got him, it may save us.
+Have you?"
+
+How I wished that I had Buckhurst safely handcuffed beside me!
+
+"If you've got him," persisted Speed, "we'll shake him like a rat
+until he squeals. And if he names Mornac--"
+
+"Do you think that Mornac would give him or us the chance?" I said.
+"Rubbish! He'd do the shaking _in camera_; and it would only be a
+hand-shaking if Buckhurst is really his creature. And he's rid himself
+of our division, anyhow. Wait!" I added, sharply; "perhaps that is
+the excuse! Perhaps that is the very reason that he's abolished the
+foreign division! We may have been getting too close to the root of
+this matter; I had already caught Buckhurst--"
+
+"You had?" cried Speed, eagerly.
+
+"But I'm not going to talk about it now," I added, sullenly. "My
+troubles are coming; I've a story to tell that won't please Mornac,
+and I have an idea that he means mischief to me."
+
+Speed looked curiously at me, and I went on:
+
+"I used my own judgment--supposing that Jarras was my chief. I knew
+he'd let me take my own way--but I don't know what Mornac will say."
+
+However, I was soon to know what Mornac had to say, for a soldier
+appeared to summon us both, and we followed to the temporary bureau
+which looked out to the east over the lovely Luxembourg gardens.
+
+Jarras passed us as we entered; his heavy head was bent, and I do not
+suppose that he saw either us or our salutes, for he shuffled off down
+the dark passage, tapping his slow way like a blind man; and Speed and
+I entered, saluting Mornac.
+
+The personage whom we saluted was a symmetrical, highly colored
+gentleman, with black mustache and Oriental eyes. His skin was too
+smooth--there was not a line or a wrinkle visible on hand or face,
+nothing but plump flesh pressing the golden collar of his light-blue
+tunic and the half-dozen gold rings on his carefully kept, restless
+fingers. His light, curved sabre hung by its silver chain from a nail
+on a wall behind him; beside it, suspended by the neck cord, was his
+astrakhan-trimmed dolman of palest turquoise-blue, and over that hung
+his scarlet cap.
+
+As he raised his heavy-lidded, insolent eyes to me, I thought I had
+never before appreciated the utter falseness of his visage as I did at
+that moment. Instantly I decided that he meant evil to me; and I
+instinctively glanced at Speed, standing beside me at attention, his
+clear blue eyes alert, his lank limbs and lean head fairly tremulous
+with comprehension.
+
+At a careless nod from Mornac I muttered the formal "I have to
+report, sir--" and began mumbling a perfunctory account of my
+movements since leaving Paris. He listened, idly contemplating a
+silver penknife which he alternately snapped open and closed, the
+click of the spring punctuating my remarks.
+
+I told the truth as far as I went, which brought me to my capture by
+Uhlans and the natural escape of my prisoner, Buckhurst. I merely
+added that I had secured the diamonds and had managed to reach Paris
+via Strasbourg.
+
+"Is that all?" inquired Mornac, listlessly.
+
+"All I have to report, sir."
+
+"Permit me to be the judge of how much you have to report," said
+Mornac. "Continue."
+
+I was silent.
+
+"Do you prefer that I draw out information by questions?" asked
+Mornac, looking up at me.
+
+I was already in his net; I ought not to have placed myself in the
+position of concealing anything, yet I distrusted him and wished to
+avoid giving him a chance to misunderstand me. But now it was too
+late; if the error could be wiped out at all, the only way to erase it
+was by telling him everything and giving him his chance to
+misinterpret me if he desired it.
+
+He listened very quietly while I told of my encounter with Buckhurst
+in Morsbronn, of our journey to Saverne, to Strasbourg, and finally my
+own arrival in Paris.
+
+"Where is Buckhurst?" he asked.
+
+"I do not know," I replied, doggedly.
+
+"That is to say that you had him in your power within the French
+lines yet did not secure him?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Your orders were to arrest him?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And shoot him if he resisted?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"But you let him go?"
+
+"There was something more important to do than to arrest Buckhurst. I
+meant to find out what he had on hand in Paradise."
+
+"So you disobeyed orders?"
+
+"If you care to so interpret my action."
+
+"Why did you not arrest the Countess de Vassart?"
+
+"I did; the Uhlans made me prisoner as I reported to you."
+
+"I mean, why did you not arrest her after you left Morsbronn?"
+
+"That would have prevented Buckhurst from going to Paradise."
+
+"Your orders were to arrest the Countess?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Did you obey those orders?"
+
+"No," I said, between my teeth.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"I had every reason to believe that an important conspiracy was being
+ripened somewhere near Paradise. I had every reason to believe that
+the robbery of the crown jewels might furnish funds for the plotters.
+
+"The arrest of one man could not break up the conspiracy; I desired
+to trap the leaders; and to that end I deliberately liberated this man
+Buckhurst as a stool-pigeon. If my judgment has been at fault, I
+accept the blame."
+
+Mornac's silver penknife closed. Presently he opened the blade again
+and tested the edge on his plump forefinger.
+
+"I beg to call your attention to the fact," I continued, "that a
+word from Buckhurst to the provost at Morsbronn would have sent me
+before the squad of execution. In a way, I bought my freedom. But," I
+added, slowly, "I should never have bought it if the bargain by which
+I saved my own skin had been a betrayal of France. Nobody wants to
+die; but in my profession we discount that. No man in my division is a
+physical coward. I purchased my freedom not only without detriment to
+France, but, on the contrary, to the advantage of France."
+
+"At the expense of your honor," observed Mornac.
+
+My ears were burning; I advanced a pace and looked Mornac straight
+between the eyes; but his eyes did not meet mine--they were fixed on
+his silver penknife.
+
+"I did the best I could do in the line of duty," I said. "You ask me
+why I did not break my word and arrest Buckhurst after we left the
+German lines. And I answer you that I had given my word not to arrest
+him, in pursuance of my plan to use him further."
+
+Mornac examined his carefully kept finger-tips in detail.
+
+"You say he bribed you?"
+
+"I said that he attempted to do so," I replied, sharply.
+
+"With the diamonds?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"You have them?"
+
+"I deposited them as usual."
+
+"Bring them."
+
+Angry as I was, I saluted, wheeled, and hastened off to the safe
+deposit. The jewel-bag was delivered when I presented my printed slip;
+I picked it up and marched back, savagely biting my mustache and
+striving to control my increasing exasperation. Never before had I
+endured insolence from a superior officer.
+
+Mornac was questioning Speed as I entered, and that young man, who has
+much self-control to learn, was already beginning to answer with
+disrespectful impatience, but my advent suspended matters, and Mornac
+took the bag of jewels from my hands and examined it. He seemed to be
+in no hurry to empty it; he lolled in his chair with an absent-minded
+expression like the expression of a cat who pretends to forget the
+mouse between her paws. Danger was written all over him; I squared my
+shoulders and studied him, braced for a shock.
+
+The shock came almost immediately, for, without a word, he suddenly
+emptied the jewel-bag on the desk before him. The bag contained
+little pebbles wrapped in tissue-paper.
+
+I heard Speed catch his breath sharply; I stared stupidly at the
+pebbles. Mornac made a careless, sweeping gesture, spreading the
+pebbles out before us with his restless, ringed fingers.
+
+"Suppose you explain this farce?" he suggested, unmoved.
+
+"Suppose _you_ explain it!" I stammered.
+
+He raised his delicately arched eyebrows. "What do you mean?"
+
+"I mean that an hour ago that bag contained the diamonds from the
+crucifix of Louis XI! I mean that I handed them over to you on my
+arrival at this bureau!"
+
+"Doubtless you can prove what you say," he observed, and his silver
+penknife snapped shut like the click of a trap, and he lay back in his
+padded chair and slipped the knife into his pocket.
+
+I looked at Speed; his sandy hair fairly bristled, but his face was
+drawn and tense. I looked at Mornac; his heavy, black eyes met mine
+steadily.
+
+"It seems to me," he said, "that it was high time we abolished the
+Foreign Division, Imperial Military Police."
+
+"I refuse to be discharged!" I said, hoarsely. "It is your word
+against mine; I demand an investigation!"
+
+"Certainly," he replied, almost wearily, and touched a bell. "Bring
+that witness," he added to the soldier who appeared in answer to the
+silvery summons.
+
+"I mean an official inquiry," I said--"a court-martial. It is my
+right where my honor is questioned."
+
+"It is my right, when you question my honor, to throw you into Mont
+Valérien, neck and heels," he said, showing his teeth under his silky,
+black mustache.
+
+Almost stunned by his change of tone, I stood like a stone. Somebody
+entered the room behind me, passed me; there was an odor of violets in
+the air, a faint rustle of silk, and I saw Mornac rise and bow to his
+guest and conduct her to a chair.
+
+His guest was the young Countess de Vassart.
+
+She looked up at me brightly, gave me a pretty nod of recognition,
+then turned expectantly to Mornac, who was still standing at her
+elbow, saying, "Then it is no longer a question of my exile,
+monsieur?"
+
+"No, madame; there has been a mistake. The government has no reason
+to suspect your loyalty." He turned directly on me. "Madame, do you
+know this officer?"
+
+"Yes," said the Countess, smiling.
+
+"Did you see him receive a small sack of diamonds in Morsbronn?"
+
+The Countess gave me a quick glance of surprise. "Yes," she said,
+wonderingly.
+
+"Thank you, madame; that is sufficient," he replied; and before I
+could understand what he was about he had conducted the Countess to
+the next room and had closed the door behind him.
+
+"Quick!" muttered Speed at my elbow; "let's back out of this trap.
+There's no use; he's one of them, and he means to ruin you."
+
+"I won't go!" I said, in a cold fury; "I'll choke the truth out of
+him, I tell you."
+
+"Man! Man! He's the Emperor's shadow! You're done for; come on while
+there's time. I tell you there's no hope for you here."
+
+"Hope! What do I care?" I said, harshly. "Why, Speed, that man is a
+common thief."
+
+"What of it?" whispered Speed. "Doesn't everybody know that the
+conspiracy runs close to the throne? What do you care? Come on, I tell
+you; I've had enough of this rotten government. So have you. And
+we've both seen enough to ruin us. Come on!"
+
+"But he's got those diamonds! Do you think I can stand that?"
+
+"I think you've got to," muttered Speed, savagely. "Do you want to
+rot in Cayenne? If you do, stay here and bawl for a court-martial!"
+
+"But the government--"
+
+"Let the government go to the devil! It's going fast enough, anyhow.
+Come, don't let Mornac find us here when he returns. He may be coming
+now--quick, Scarlett! We've got to cut for it!"
+
+"Speed," I said, unsteadily, "it's enough to make an honest man
+strike hands with Buckhurst in earnest."
+
+Speed took my arm with a cautious glance at the door of the next room,
+and urged me toward the corridor.
+
+"The government has kicked us out into the street," he muttered; "be
+satisfied that the government didn't kick us into Biribi. And it will
+yet if you don't come."
+
+"Come? Where? I haven't any money, and now they've got my honor--"
+
+"Rubbish!" he whispered, fairly dragging me into the hallway. "Here!
+No--don't go to your rooms. Leave everything--get clear of this
+rat-pit, I tell you."
+
+He half pushed, half dragged me to the parade; then, dropping my arm,
+he struck a jaunty pace through the archway, not even glancing at the
+sentinels. I kept pace with him, scarcely knowing what I did.
+
+In the Rue de Seine I halted suddenly, crying out that I must go back,
+but he seized me with a growl of "Idiot! come on!" and fairly shoved
+me through the colonnades of the Institute, along the quay, down the
+river-wall, to a dock where presently a swift river-boat swung in for
+passengers. And when the bateau mouche shot out again into mid-stream,
+Speed and I stood silently on deck, watching the silver-gray façades
+of Paris fly past above us under the blue sky.
+
+We sat far forward, quite alone, and separated from the few passengers
+by the pilot-house and jointed funnel. And there, carelessly lounging,
+with one of his lank legs crossed over the other and a cigar between
+his teeth, my comrade coolly recounted to me the infamous history of
+the past week:
+
+"Jarras put his honest, old, square-toed foot in it by accident; I
+don't know how he managed to do it, but this is certain: he suddenly
+found himself on a perfectly plain trail which could only end at
+Mornac's threshold.
+
+"Then he did a stupid thing--he called Mornac in and asked him, in
+perfect faith, to clear up the affair, never for a moment suspecting
+that Mornac was the man.
+
+"That occurred the day you started to catch Buckhurst. And on that
+day, too, I had found out something; and like a fool I told Jarras."
+
+Speed chewed his cigar and laughed.
+
+"In twenty-four hours Jarras was relieved of his command; I was
+requested not to leave the Luxembourg--in other words, I was under
+arrest, and Mornac took over the entire department and abolished the
+Foreign Division 'for the good of the service,' as the _Official_ had
+it next day.
+
+"Then somebody--Mornac probably--let loose a swarm of those shadowy
+lies called rumors--you know how that is done!--and people began to
+mutter, and the cafés began to talk of treason among the foreign
+police. Of course Rochefort took it up; of course the _Official_
+printed a half-hearted denial which was far worse than an avowal. Then
+the division was abolished, and the illustrated papers made filthy
+caricatures of us, and drew pictures of Mornac, sabre in hand,
+decapitating a nest full of American rattlesnakes and British cobras,
+and Rochefort printed a terrible elaboration of the fable of the
+farmer and the frozen serpent."
+
+"Oh, that's enough," I said, sick with rage and disgust. "Let them
+look out for their own country now. I pity the Empress; I pity the
+Emperor. I don't know what Mornac means to do, but I know that the
+Internationale boa-constrictor is big enough to swallow government,
+dynasty, and Empire, and it is going to try."
+
+"I am certain of one thing," said Speed, staring out over the sun-lit
+water with narrowing eyes. "I know that Mornac is using Buckhurst."
+
+"Perhaps it is Buckhurst who is using Mornac," I suggested.
+
+"I think both those gentlemen have the same view in end--to feather
+their respective nests under cover of a general smash," said Speed.
+"It would not do for Mornac to desert the Empire under any
+circumstances. But he can employ Buckhurst to squeeze it dry and then
+strike an attitude as its faithful defender in adversity."
+
+"But why does Buckhurst desire to go to Paradise?" I asked.
+
+The boat swung into a dock near the Point du Jour; a few passengers
+left, a few came aboard; the boat darted on again under the high
+viaduct of masonry, past bastions on which long siege cannon glistened
+in the sunshine, past lines of fresh earthworks, past grassy
+embankments on which soldiers moved to the rumble of drums.
+
+"I know something about Paradise," said Speed, in a low voice.
+
+I waited; Speed chewed his cigar grimly.
+
+"Look here, Scarlett," he said. "Do you know what has become of the
+crown jewels of France?"
+
+"No," I said.
+
+"Well, I'll tell you. You know, of course, that the government is
+anxious; you know that Paris is preparing to stand siege if the
+Prussians double up Bazaine and the army of Châlons in the north. But
+you don't know what a pitiable fright the authorities are in. Why,
+Scarlett, they are scared almost to the verge of idiocy."
+
+"They've passed that verge," I observed.
+
+"Yes, they have. They have had a terrible panic over the safety of
+the crown jewels--they were nervous enough before the robbery. And
+this is what they've done in secret:
+
+"The crown jewels, the bars of gold of the reserve, the great
+pictures from the Louvre, the antiques of value, including the Venus
+of Milo, have been packed in cases and loaded on trains under heavy
+guard.
+
+"Twelve of these trains have already left Paris for the war-port of
+Lorient. The others are to follow, one every twenty-four hours at
+midnight.
+
+"Whether these treasures are to be locked up in Lorient, or whether
+they are to be buried in the sand-dunes along the coast, I don't know.
+But I know this: a swift cruiser--the _Fer-de-Lance_--is lying off
+Paradise, between the light-house and the Ile de Groix, with steam up
+night and day, ready to receive the treasures of the government at the
+first alarm and run for the French possessions in Cochin-China.
+
+"And now, perhaps, you may guess why Buckhurst is so anxious to hang
+around Paradise."
+
+Of course I was startled. Speed's muttered information gave me the
+keys to many doors. And behind each door were millions and millions
+and millions of francs' worth of plunder.
+
+Our eyes met in mute interrogation; Speed smiled.
+
+"Of course," said I, with dry lips, "Buckhurst is devil enough to
+attempt anything."
+
+"Especially if backed by Mornac," said Speed.
+
+Suddenly the professional aspect of the case burst on me like a shower
+of glorious sunshine.
+
+"Oh, for the chance!" I said, brokenly. "Speed! Think of it! Think
+how completely we have the thing in hand!"
+
+"Yes," he said, with a shrug, "only we have just been kicked out of
+the service in disgrace, and we are now going to be fully occupied in
+running away from the police."
+
+That was true enough; I had scarcely had time to realize our position
+as escaped suspects of the department. And with the recognition of my
+plight came a rush of hopeless rage, of bitter regret, and
+soul-sickening disappointment.
+
+So this was the end of my career--a fugitive, disgraced, probably
+already hunted. This was my reward for faithful service--penniless,
+almost friendless, liable to arrest and imprisonment with no hope of
+justice from Emperor or court-martial--a banned, ruined, proscribed
+outcast, in blind flight.
+
+"I've thought of the possibility of this," observed Speed, quietly.
+"We've got to make a living somehow. In fact, I'm to let--and so are
+you."
+
+I looked at him, too miserable to speak.
+
+"I had an inkling of it," he said. A shrewd twinkle came into his
+clear, Yankee eyes; he chewed his wrecked cigar and folded his lank
+arms.
+
+"So," he continued, tranquilly, blinking at the sparkling river, "I
+drew out all my money--and yours, too."
+
+"Mine!" I stammered. "How could you?"
+
+"Forged an order," he admitted. "Can you forgive me, Scarlett?"
+
+"Forgive you! Bless your generous heart!" I muttered, as he handed me
+a sealed packet.
+
+"Not at all," he said, laughing; "a crime in time saves nine--eh,
+Scarlett? Pocket it; it's all there. Now listen. I have made
+arrangements of another kind. Do you remember an application for
+license from the manager of a travelling American show--a Yankee
+circus?"
+
+"Byram's Imperial American Circus?" I said.
+
+"That's it. They went through Normandy last summer. Well, Byram's
+agent is going to meet us at Saint-Cloud. We're engaged; I'm to do
+ballooning--you know I worked one of the military balloons before
+Petersburg. You are to do sensational riding. You were riding-master
+in the Spahis--were you not?"
+
+I looked at him, almost laughing. Suddenly the instinct of my vagabond
+days returned like a sweet wind from the wilds, smiting me full in the
+face.
+
+"I tamed three lions for my regiment at Constantine," I said.
+
+"Good lad! Then you can play with Byram's lions, too. Oh, what the
+devil!" he cried, recklessly; "it's all in a lifetime. Quand même,
+and who cares? We've life before us and an honest living in view, and
+Byram has packed two of his men back to England and I've tinkered up
+their passports to suit us. So we're reasonably secure."
+
+"Will you tell me, Speed, why you were wise enough to do all this
+while I was gone?" I asked, in astonishment.
+
+"Because," said Speed, deliberately, "I distrusted Mornac from the
+hour he entered the department."
+
+A splendid officer of police was spoiled when Mornac entered the
+department.
+
+Presently the deck guard began to shout: "Saint-Cloud! Saint-Cloud!"
+and the little boat glided up alongside the floating pier. Speed rose;
+I followed him across the gang-plank; and, side by side, we climbed
+the embankment.
+
+"Do you mean to say that Byram is going travelling about with his
+circus in spite of the war?" I whispered.
+
+"Yes, indeed. We start south from Chartres to-morrow."
+
+Presently I said: "Do you suppose we will go to Lorient
+or--Paradise?"
+
+"We will if I have anything to say about it," replied Speed, throwing
+away his ragged cigar.
+
+And I walked silently beside him, thinking of the young Countess and
+of Buckhurst.
+
+
+
+
+PART SECOND
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+THE ROAD TO PARADISE
+
+
+On the 3d of November Byram's American Circus, travelling slowly
+overland toward the Spanish frontier, drew up for an hour's rest at
+Quimperlé. I, however, as usual, prepared to ride forward to select a
+proper place for our night encampment, and to procure the necessary
+license.
+
+The dusty procession halted in the town square, which was crowded, and
+as I turned in my saddle I saw Byram stand up on the red-and-gold
+band-wagon and toss an armful of circulars and bills into the throng.
+
+The white bits of paper fluttered wide and disappeared in the sea of
+white Breton head-dresses; there was a rhythmic clatter of wooden
+shoes, an undulation of snowy coiffes, then a low murmur as the people
+slowly read the circulars aloud, their musical monotone accompanying
+the strident nasal voice of Byram, who stood on the tarnished
+band-wagon shouting his crowd around him.
+
+"Mossoors et madams! Ecooty see voo play! J'ai l'honnoor de vous
+presenter le ploo magnifique cirque--" And the invariable réclame
+continued to the stereotyped finis; the clown bobbed up behind Byram
+and made his usual grimaces, and the band played "The Cork Leg."
+
+The Bretons looked on in solemn astonishment: my comrade, Speed,
+languidly stood up on the elephant and informed the people that our
+circus was travelling to Lorient to fill a pressing engagement, and if
+we disappointed the good people of Lorient a riot would doubtless
+result, therefore it was not possible to give any performance before
+we reached Lorient--and the admission was only ten sous.
+
+Our clown then picked up the tatters of his threadbare comic speech.
+Speed, munching a stale sandwich, came strolling over to where I stood
+sponging out my horse's mouth with cool water.
+
+"We'll ride into Paradise in full regalia, I suppose," he observed,
+munching away reflectively; "it's the cheapest réclame."
+
+I dashed a bucket of water over my horse's legs. "You'd better look
+out for your elephant; those drunken Bretons are irritating him," I
+said. "Mahouts are born, not made."
+
+Speed turned; the elephant was squealing and thrusting out a
+prehensile trunk among the people. There would be trouble if any fool
+gave him tobacco.
+
+"Hi!" cried Speed, "tobah! Let the mem-log alone! Ai! he's snatched
+a coiffe! Drop it, Djebe! C'hast buhan! Don't be afraid, mesdames; the
+elephant is not ugly! Chomit oll en ho trankilite!"
+
+The elephant appeared to understand the mixture of Hindu, French, and
+Breton--or perhaps it was the sight of the steel ankus that Speed
+flourished in his quality of mahout. The crowd pressed forward again,
+reassured by the "Chomit oll en ho trankilite!"
+
+Speed swallowed the last crumb of his sandwich, wiped his hands on his
+handkerchief, and shoved them into his shabby pockets; the ankus
+dangled from his wrist.
+
+We were in seedy circumstances; an endless chain of bad luck had
+followed us from Chartres--bad weather, torrents of rain, flooded
+roads, damaging delays on railways already overcrowded with troops
+and war material, and, above all, we encountered everywhere that
+ominous apathy which burdened the whole land, even those provinces
+most remote from the seat of war. The blockade of Paris had paralyzed
+France.
+
+The fortune that Byram had made in the previous year was already gone;
+we no longer travelled by rail; we no longer slept at inns; we could
+barely pay for the food for our animals.
+
+As for the employés, the list had been cut down below the margin of
+safety, yet for a month no salaries had been paid.
+
+As I stood there in the public square of Quimperlé, passing the
+cooling sponge over my horse's nose, old Byram came out of the hotel
+on the corner, edged his way through the stolid crowd that surrounded
+us gaunt mountebanks, and shuffled up to me.
+
+"I guess we ain't goin' to push through to-night, Scarlett," he
+observed, wiping his sweating forehead on the sleeve of his linen
+duster.
+
+"No, governor, it's too far," I said.
+
+"We'll be all right, anyway," added Speed; "there's a change in the
+moon and this warm weather ought to hold, governor."
+
+"I dunno," said Byram, with an abstracted glance at the crowd around
+the elephant.
+
+"Cheer up, governor," I said, "we ought at least to pay expenses to
+the Spanish frontier. Once out of France we'll find your luck again
+for you."
+
+"Mebbe," he said, almost wearily.
+
+I glanced at Speed. This was the closest approach to a whine that we
+had heard from Byram. But the man had changed within a few days; his
+thin hair, brushed across his large, alert ears, was dusty and
+unkempt; hollows had formed under his shrewd eyes; his black
+broadcloth suit was as soiled as his linen, his boots shabby, his
+silk hat suitable only for the stage property of our clown.
+
+"Don't ride too far," said Byram, as I set foot to stirrup, "them
+band-wagon teams is most done up, an' that there camuel gits meaner
+every minute."
+
+I wheeled my horse out into the road to Paradise, cursing the
+"camuel," the bane of our wearied caravan.
+
+"Got enough cash for the license?" asked Byram, uneasily.
+
+"Plenty, governor; don't worry. Speed, don't let him mope. We'll be
+in Lorient this time to-morrow," I called back, with a swagger of
+assumed cheerfulness.
+
+Speed stepped swiftly across the square and laid his hand on my
+stirrup.
+
+"What are you going to do if you see Buckhurst?"
+
+"Nothing."
+
+"Or the Countess?"
+
+"I don't know."
+
+"I suppose you will go out of your way to find her if she's in
+Paradise?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And tell her the truth about Buckhurst?"
+
+"I expect to."
+
+After a moment's silence he said: "Don't do anything until I see you
+to-night, will you?"
+
+"All right," I replied, and set my horse at a gallop over the old
+stone bridge.
+
+The highway to the sea which winds down through acres of yellow gorse
+and waving broom to the cliffs of Paradise is a breezy road, swept by
+the sweet winds that blow across Brittany from the Côte d'Or to the
+Pyrenees.
+
+It is a land of sea-winds; and when in the still noontide of midsummer
+the winds are at play far out at sea, their traces remain in the
+furrowed wheat, in the incline of solitary trees, in the breezy trend
+of the cliff-clover and the blackthorn and the league-wide sweep of
+the moorlands.
+
+And through this land whose inland perfume always savored the unseen
+sea I rode down to Paradise.
+
+It was not until I had galloped through the golden forest of Kerselec
+that I came in sight of the ocean, although among the sunbeams and the
+dropping showers of yellow beech-leaves I fancied I could hear the
+sound of the surf.
+
+And now I rode slowly, in full sight of the sea where it lay, an
+immense gray band across the world, touching a looming horizon, and in
+throat and nostril the salt stung sweetly, and the whole world seemed
+younger for the breath of the sea.
+
+From the purple mystery of the horizon to the landward cliffs the
+ocean appeared motionless; it was only when I had advanced almost to
+the cliffs that I saw the movement of waves--that I perceived the
+contrast between inland inertia and the restless repose of the sea,
+stirring ceaselessly since creation.
+
+The same little sparkling river I had crossed in Quimperlé I now saw
+again, spreading out a wide, flat current which broke into waves where
+it tumbled seaward across the bar; I heard the white-winged gulls
+mewing, the thunderous monotone of the surf, and a bell in some unseen
+chapel ringing sweetly.
+
+I passed a stone house, another; then the white road curved under the
+trees and I rode straight into the heart of Paradise, my horse's hoofs
+awaking echoes in the silent, stone-paved square.
+
+Never had I so suddenly entered a place so peaceful, so quiet in the
+afternoon sun--yet the silence was not absolute, it was thrilling with
+exquisite sound, lost echoes of the river running along its quay of
+stone, half-heard harmonies of the ocean where white surf seethed over
+the sands beyond the headland.
+
+There was a fountain, too, dripping melodiously under the trees; I
+heard the breathless humming of a spinning-wheel from one of the low
+houses of gray stone which enclosed the square, and a young girl
+singing, and the drone of bees in a bed of resida.
+
+So this was Paradise! Truly the name did not seem amiss here, under
+the still vault of blue above; Paradise means peace to so many of
+us--surcease of care and sound and the brazen trample of nations--not
+the quiet of palace corridors or the tremendous silence of a
+cathedral, but the noiselessness of pleasant sounds, moving shadows of
+trees, wordless quietude, simplicity.
+
+A young girl with a face like the Madonna stole across the square in
+her felt shoes.
+
+"Can you tell me where the mayor lives?" I asked, looking down at her
+from my horse.
+
+She raised her white-coiffed head with an innocent smile: "Eman' barz
+ar sal o leina."
+
+"Don't you speak French?" I asked, appalled.
+
+"Ho! ia; oui, monsieur, s'il faut bien. The mayor is at breakfast in
+his kitchen yonder."
+
+"Thank you, my child."
+
+I turned my horse across the shady square to a stone house banked up
+with bed on bed of scarlet geraniums. The windows were open; a fat man
+with very small eyes sat inside eating an omelet.
+
+He watched me dismount without apparent curiosity, and when I had tied
+my horse and walked in at the open door he looked at me over the rim
+of a glass of cider, and slowly finished his draught without blinking.
+Then he said, "Bonjour."
+
+I told him that I wanted a license for the circus to camp for one
+night; that I also desired permission to pitch camp somewhere in the
+vicinity. He made out the license, stamped it, handed it to me, and I
+paid him the usual fee.
+
+"I've heard of circuses," he said; "they're like those shows at
+country fairs, I suppose."
+
+"Yes--in a way. We have animals."
+
+"What kind?"
+
+"Lions, tigers--"
+
+"I've seen them."
+
+"--a camel, an elephant--"
+
+"Alive?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+"Ma doué!" he said, with slow emotion, "have you a live elephant?"
+
+I admitted that fact.
+
+Presently I said, "I hope the people of Paradise will come to the
+circus when we get to Lorient."
+
+"Eh? Not they," said the mayor, wagging his head. "Do you think we
+have any money here in Paradise? And then," he added, cunningly, "we
+can all see your elephant when your company arrives. Why should we pay
+to see him again? War does not make millionaires out of the poor."
+
+I looked miserably around. It was quite true that people like these
+had no money to spend on strolling players. But we had to live
+somehow, and our animals could not exist on air, even well-salted
+air.
+
+"How much will it cost to have your town-crier announce the coming of
+the circus?" I inquired.
+
+"That will cost ten sous if he drums and reads the announcement from
+here to the château."
+
+I gave the mayor ten copper pennies.
+
+"What château?" I asked.
+
+"Dame, the château, monsieur."
+
+"Oh," said I, "where the Countess lives?"
+
+"The Countess? Yes, of course. Who else?"
+
+"Is the Countess there?"
+
+"Oui, dame, and others not to my taste."
+
+I asked no more questions, but the mayor did, and when he found it
+might take some time to pump me, he invited me to share his omelet and
+cider and afterwards to sit in the sun among his geraniums and satisfy
+his curiosity concerning the life of a strolling player.
+
+I was glad of something to eat. After I had unsaddled my horse and led
+him to the mayor's stable and had paid for hay and grain, I returned
+to sit in the mayor's garden and sniff longingly at his tobacco smoke
+and answer his impertinent questions as good-naturedly as they were
+intended.
+
+But even the mayor of Paradise grew tired of asking questions in time;
+the bees droned among the flowers, the low murmur of the sea stole in
+on our ears, the river softly lapped the quay. The mayor slept.
+
+He was fat, very fat; his short, velvet jacket hung heavy with six
+rows of enormous silver buttons, his little, round hat was tilted over
+his nose. A silver buckle decorated it in front; behind, two little
+velvet ribbons fluttered in futile conflict with the rising
+sea-breeze.
+
+Men in embroidered knee-breeches, with bare feet thrust into
+straw-filled sabots, sat sunning on the quay under the purple
+fig-trees; one ragged fellow in soiled velvet bolero and embossed
+leggings lay in the sun, chin on fists, wooden shoes crossed behind
+him, watching the water with the eyes of a poacher.
+
+This mild, balmy November weather, this afterglow of summer which in
+my own country we call Indian summer, had started new blossoms among
+the climbing tea-roses, lovely orange-tinted blossoms, and some of a
+clear lemon color, and their fragrance filled the air. Nowhere do
+roses blow as they blow near the sea, nowhere have I breathed such
+perfume as I breathed that drowsy afternoon in Paradise, where in
+every door-yard thickets of clove-scented pinks carpeted the ground
+and tall spikes of snowy phlox glimmered silver-white in the
+demi-light.
+
+Where on earth could a more peaceful scene be found than in this
+sea-lulled land, here in the subdued light under aged, spreading oaks,
+where moss crept over the pavements and covered the little fountain as
+though it had been the stony brink of a limpid forest spring?
+
+The mayor woke up toward five o'clock and stared at me with owlish
+gravity as though daring me to say that he had been asleep.
+
+"Um--ah--ma fois oui!" he muttered, blowing his nose loudly in a
+purple silk bandanna. Then he shrugged his shoulders and added:
+"C'est la vie, monsieur. Que voulez-vous?"
+
+And it was one kind of life after all--a blessed release from the
+fever of that fierce farandole which we of the outer world call
+"life."
+
+The mayor scratched his ear, yawned, stretched one leg, then the
+other, and glanced at me.
+
+"Paris still holds out?" he asked, with another yawn.
+
+"Oh yes," I replied.
+
+"And the war--is it still going badly for us?"
+
+"There is always hope," I answered.
+
+"Hope," he grumbled; "oh yes, we know what hope is--we of the coast
+live on it when there's no bread; but hope never yet filled my belly
+for me."
+
+"Has the war touched you here in Paradise?" I asked.
+
+"Touched us? Ho! Say it has crushed us and I'll strike palms with
+you. Why, not a keel has passed out of the port since August. Where is
+the fishing-fleet? Where are the sardine sloops that ought to have
+sailed from Algiers? Where are the Icelanders?"
+
+"Well, where are they?" I suggested.
+
+"Where? Ask the semaphore yonder. Where are our salt schooners for
+the Welsh coast? I don't know. They have not sailed, that's all I
+know. You do well to come with your circus and your elephant! You can
+peddle diamonds in the poor-house, too, if it suits your taste."
+
+"Have the German cruisers frightened all your craft from the sea?" I
+asked, astonished.
+
+"Yes, partly. Then there's an ugly French cruiser lying off Groix,
+yonder, and her black stacks are dribbling smoke all day and all
+night. We have orders to keep off and use Lorient when we want a
+port."
+
+"Do you know why the cruiser warns your fishing-boats from this
+coast?" I inquired.
+
+"No," he said, shortly.
+
+"Do you know the name of the cruiser?"
+
+"She's a new one, the _Fer-de-Lance_. And if I were not a patriot and
+a Breton I'd say: 'May Sainte-Anne rot her where she lies; she's
+brought a curse on the coast from Lorient to the Saint-Julien
+Light!--and the ghosts of the Icelanders will work her evil yet.'"
+
+The mayor's round, hairless face was red; he thumped the arm of his
+chair with pudgy fists and wagged his head.
+
+"We have not seen the end of this," he said--"oh no! There's a curse
+coming on Paradise--the cruiser brought it, and it's coming. Hé! did a
+Bannalec man not hear the were-wolf in Kerselec forest a week since?
+Pst! Not a word, monsieur. But old Kloark, of Roscoff, heard it
+too--oui dame!--and he knows the howl of the Loup-Garou! Besides, did
+I not with my own eyes see a black cormorant fly inland from the sea?
+And, by Sainte-Éline of Paradise! the gulls squeal when there's no
+storm brewing and the lançons prick the dark with flames along the
+coast till you'd swear the witches of Ker-Is were lighting
+death-candles from Paradise to Pont-Aven."
+
+"Do you believe in witches, monsieur the mayor?" I asked, gravely.
+
+He gave me a shrewd glance. "Not at all--not even in bed and the
+light out," he said, with a fat swagger. "_I_ believe in magic? Ho!
+foi non! But many do. Oui dame! Many do."
+
+"Here in Paradise?"
+
+"Parbleu! Men of parts, too, monsieur. Now there's Terrec, who has
+the evil eye--not that I believe it, but, damn him, he'd better not
+try any tricks on me!
+
+"Others stick twigs of aubépine in their pastures; the apothecary is
+a man of science, yet every year he makes a bonfire of dried gorse and
+drives his cattle through the smoke. It may keep off witches and
+lightning--or it may not. I myself do not do such things."
+
+"Still you believe the cruiser out at sea yonder is going to bring
+you evil?"
+
+"She has brought it. But it's all the same to me. I am mayor, and
+exempt, and I have cider and tobacco and boudin for a few months
+yet."
+
+He caressed his little, selfish chin, which hung between his mottled
+jowls, peered cunningly at me, and opened his mouth to say something,
+but at that moment we both caught sight of a peasant running and
+waving a packet of blue papers in the air. "Monsieur the mayor!
+Monsieur the mayor!" he called, while still far away.
+
+"Cré cochon de malheur!" muttered the mayor, turning pale. "He's got
+a telegram!"
+
+The man came clattering across the square in his wooden shoes.
+
+"A telegram," repeated the mayor, wiping the sudden sweat from his
+forehead. "I never get telegrams. I don't want telegrams!"
+
+He turned to me, almost bursting with suppressed prophecy.
+
+"It has come--the evil that the black cruiser brings us! You laughed!
+Tenez, monsieur; there's your bad luck in these blue morsels of
+paper!"
+
+And he snatched the telegram from the breathless messenger, reading it
+with dilating eyes.
+
+For a long while he sat there studying the telegram, his fat
+forefinger following the scrawl, a crease deepening above his
+eyebrows, and all the while his lips moved in noiseless repetition of
+the words he spelled with difficulty and his labored breathing grew
+louder.
+
+When at length the magistrate had mastered the contents of his
+telegram, he looked up with a stupid stare.
+
+"I want my drummer. Where's the town-crier?" he demanded, as though
+dazed.
+
+"He has gone to Lorient, m'sieu the mayor," ventured the messenger.
+
+"To get drunk. I remember. Imbecile! Why did he go to-day? Are there
+not six other days in this cursed week? Who is there to drum? Nobody.
+Nobody knows how in Paradise. Seigneur, Dieu! the ignorance of this
+town!"
+
+"M'sieu the mayor," ventured the messenger, "there's Jacqueline."
+
+"Ho! Vrai. The Lizard's young one! She can drum, they say. She stole
+my drum once. Why did she steal it but to drum upon it?"
+
+"The little witch can drum them awake in Ker-Is," muttered the
+messenger.
+
+The mayor rose, looked around the square, frowned. Then he raised his
+voice in a bellow: "Jacqueline! Jacqueline! _Thou_ Jacqueline!"
+
+A far voice answered, faintly breaking across the square from the
+bridge: "She is on the rocks with her sea-rake!"
+
+The mayor thrust the blue telegram into his pocket and waddled out of
+his garden, across the square, and up the path to the cliffs.
+
+Uninvited, I went with him.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+THE TOWN-CRIER
+
+
+The bell in the unseen chapel ceased ringing as we came out on the
+cliffs of Paradise, where, on the horizon, the sun hung low, belted
+with a single ribbon of violet cloud.
+
+Over acres of foaming shoals the crimson light flickered and spread,
+painting the eastern cliffs with sombre fire. The ebb-tide, red as
+blood, tumbled seaward across the bar, leaving every ledge a glowing
+cinder under the widening conflagration in the west.
+
+The mayor carried his silver-buttoned jacket over his arm; the air had
+grown sultry. As we walked our gigantic shadows strode away before us
+across the kindling stubble, seeming to lengthen at every stride.
+
+Below the cliffs, on a crescent of flat sand, from which sluggish,
+rosy rivulets crawled seaward, a man stood looking out across the
+water. And the mayor stopped and called down to him: "Ohé, the
+Lizard! What do you see on the ocean--you below?"
+
+"I see six war-ships speeding fast in column," replied the man,
+without looking up.
+
+The mayor hastily shaded his eyes with one fat hand, muttering: "All
+poachers have eyes like sea-hawks. There is a smudge of smoke to the
+north. Holy Virgin, what eyes the rascal has!"
+
+As for me, strain my eyes as I would, I saw nothing save the faintest
+stain of smoke on the horizon.
+
+"Hé, Lizard! Are they German, your six war-ships?" bawled the mayor.
+His voice had suddenly become tremulous.
+
+"They are French," replied the poacher, tranquilly.
+
+"Then Sainte-Éline keep them from the rocks!" sang out the mayor.
+"Ohé, Lizard, I want somebody to drum and read a proclamation.
+Where's Jacqueline?"
+
+At that instant a young girl, a mere child, appeared on the beach,
+dragging a sea-rake over the ground behind her. She was a lithe
+creature, bare-limbed and ragged, with the sea-tan on throat and knee.
+The blue tatters of her skirt hung heavy with brine; the creamy skin
+on her arms glittered with wet spray, and her hair was wet, too,
+clustering across her cheeks in damp elf-locks.
+
+The mayor glanced at her with that stolid contempt which Finistère
+Bretons cherish toward those women who show their hair--an immodesty
+unpardonable in the eyes of most Bretons.
+
+The girl caught sight of the mayor and gave him a laughing greeting
+which he returned with a shrug.
+
+"If you want a town-crier," she called up, in a deliciously fresh
+voice, scarcely tinged with the accent, "I'll cry your edicts and
+I'll drum for you, too!"
+
+"Can your daughter beat the drum?" asked the mayor of the poacher,
+ignoring the girl's eager face upturned.
+
+"Yes," said the poacher, indifferently, "and she can also beat the
+devil with two sticks."
+
+The girl threw her rake into a boat and leaped upon the rocks at the
+base of the cliff.
+
+"Jacqueline! Don't come up that way!" bawled the mayor, horrified.
+"Hey! Robert! Ohé! Lizard! Stop her or she'll break her neck!"
+
+The poacher looked up at his daughter then shrugged his shoulders and
+squatted down on his ragged haunches, restless eyes searching the
+level ocean, as sea-birds search.
+
+Breathless, hot, and laughing, the girl pulled herself up over the
+edge of the cliff. I held out my hand to aid her, but she pushed it
+away, crying, "Thank you all the same, but here I am!"
+
+"Spawn of the Lizard," I heard the mayor mutter to himself, "like a
+snake you wriggle where honest folk fall to destruction!" But he spoke
+condescendingly to the bright-eyed, breathless child. "I'll pay six
+sous if you'll drum for me."
+
+"I'll do it for love," she said, saucily--"for the love of drumming,
+not for your beaux yeux, m'sieu le maire."
+
+The mayor looked at her angrily, but, probably remembering he was at
+her mercy, suppressed his wrath and held out the telegram. "Can you
+read that, my child?"
+
+The girl, still breathing rapidly from her scramble, rested her hands
+on her hips and, head on one side, studied the blue sheets of the
+telegram over the mayor's outstretched arm.
+
+"Yes, I can read it. Why not? Can't you?"
+
+"Read? I the mayor of Paradise!" repeated the outraged magistrate.
+"What do you mean, lizard of lizards! gorse cat!"
+
+"Now if you are going to say such things I won't drum for you," said
+the child, glancing at me out of her sea-blue eyes and giving a shake
+to her elf-locks.
+
+"Yes, you will!" bawled the angry mayor. "Shame on your manners,
+Jacqueline Garenne! Shame on your hair hanging where all the world can
+see it! Shame on your bare legs--"
+
+"Not at all," said the child, unabashed. "God made my legs, m'sieu
+the mayor, and my hair, too. If my coiffe does not cover my hair,
+neither does the small Paris hat of the Countess de Vassart cover her
+hair. Complain of the Countess to m'sieu the curé, then I will listen
+to you."
+
+The mayor glared at her, but she tossed her head and laughed.
+
+"Ho fois! Everybody knows what you are," sniffed the mayor--"and
+nobody cares, either," he muttered, waddling past me, telegram in
+hand.
+
+The child, quite unconcerned, fell into step beside me, saying,
+confidentially: "When I was little I used to cry when they talked to
+me like that. But I don't now; I've made up my mind that they are no
+better than I."
+
+"I don't know why anybody should abuse you," I said, loudly enough
+for the mayor to hear. But that functionary waddled on, puffing,
+muttering, stopping every now and then in the narrow cliff-path to
+strike flint to tinder or to refill the tiny bowl of his pipe, which a
+dozen puffs always exhausted.
+
+"Oh, they all abuse us," said the child, serenely. "You see, you are
+a stranger and don't understand; but you will if you live here."
+
+"Why is everybody unkind to you?" I asked, after a moment.
+
+"Why? Oh, because I am what I am and my father is the Lizard."
+
+"A poacher?"
+
+"Ah," she said, looking up at me with delicious malice, "what is a
+poacher, monsieur?"
+
+"Sometimes he's a fine fellow gone wrong," I said, laughing. "So I
+don't believe any ill of your father, or of you, either. Will you drum
+for me, Jacqueline?"
+
+"For you, monsieur? Why, yes. What am I to read for you?"
+
+I gave her a hand-bill; at the first glance her eyes sparkled, the
+color deepened under her coat of amber tan; she caught her breath and
+read rapidly to the end.
+
+"Oh, how beautiful," she said, softly. "Am I to read this in the
+square?"
+
+"I will give you a franc to read it, Jacqueline."
+
+"No, no--only--oh, do let me come in and see the heavenly wonders!
+Would you, monsieur? I--I cannot pay--but would--_could_ you let me
+come in? I will read your notice, anyway," she added, with a quaver in
+her voice.
+
+The flushed face, the eager, upturned eyes, deep blue as the sea, the
+little hands clutching the show-bill, which fairly quivered between
+the tanned fingers--all these touched and amused me. The child was mad
+with excitement.
+
+What she anticipated, Heaven only knows. Shabby and tarnished as we
+were, the language of our hand-bills made up in gaudiness for the
+dingy reality.
+
+"Come whenever you like, Jacqueline," I said. "Ask for me at the
+gate."
+
+"And who are you, monsieur?"
+
+"My name is Scarlett."
+
+"Scarlett," she whispered, as though naming a sacred thing.
+
+The mayor, who had toddled some distance ahead of us, now halted in
+the square, looking back at us through the red evening light.
+
+"Jacqueline, the drum is in my house. I'll lend you a pair of sabots,
+too. Come, hasten little idler!"
+
+We entered the mayor's garden, where the flowers were glowing in the
+lustre of the setting sun. I sat down in a chair; Jacqueline waited,
+hands resting on her hips, small, shapely toes restlessly brushing the
+grass.
+
+"Truly this coming wonder-show will be a peep into paradise," she
+murmured. "Can all be true--really true as it is printed here in this
+bill--I wonder--"
+
+Before she had time to speculate further, the mayor reappeared with
+drum and drum-sticks in one hand and a pair of sabots in the other. He
+flung the sabots on the grass, and Jacqueline, quite docile now,
+slipped both bare feet into them.
+
+"You may keep them," said the mayor, puffing out his mottled cheeks
+benevolently; "decency must be maintained in Paradise, even if it
+beggars me."
+
+"Thank you," said Jacqueline, sweetly, slinging the drum across her
+hip and tightening the cords. She clicked the ebony sticks, touched
+the tightly drawn parchment, sounding it with delicate fingers, then
+looked up at the mayor for further orders.
+
+"Go, my child," said the mayor, amiably, and Jacqueline marched
+through the garden out into the square by the fountain, drum-sticks
+clutched in one tanned fist, the scrolls of paper in the other.
+
+In the centre of the square she stood a moment, looking around, then
+raised the drum-sticks; there came a click, a flash of metal, and the
+quiet square echoed with the startling outcrash. Back from roof and
+wall bounded the echoes; the stony pavement rang with the racket.
+Already a knot of people had gathered around her; others came swiftly
+to windows and doorsteps; the loungers left their stone benches by the
+river, the maids of Paradise flocked from the bridge. Even Robert the
+Lizard drew in his dripping line to listen. The drum-roll ceased.
+
+"_Attention! Men of Finistère!_ By order of the governor of Lorient,
+all men between the ages of twenty and forty, otherwise not exempt,
+are ordered to report at the navy-yard barracks, war-port of Lorient,
+on the 5th of November of the present year, to join the army of the
+Loire.
+
+"Whosoever is absent at roll-call will be liable to the punishment
+provided for such delinquents under the laws governing the state of
+siege now declared in Morbihan and Finistère. _Citizens, to arms!_
+
+"The enemy is on the march! Though Metz has fallen through treachery,
+Paris holds firm! Let the provinces rise and hurl the invader from the
+soil of the mother-land!
+
+"_Bretons!_ France calls! Answer with your ancient battle-cry,
+'Sainte-Anne! Sainte-Anne!' The eyes of the world are on Armorica! _To
+arms!_"
+
+The girl's voice ceased; a dead silence reigned in the square. The men
+looked at one another stupidly; a woman began to whimper.
+
+"The curse is on Paradise!" cried a hoarse voice.
+
+The drummer was already drawing another paper from her ragged pocket,
+and again in the same clear, emotionless voice, but slightly drawling
+her words, she read:
+
+"To the good people of Paradise! The manager of the famous American
+travelling circus, lately returned from a tour of the northern
+provinces, with camels, elephants, lions, and a magnificent company of
+artists, announces a stupendous exhibition to be held in Lorient at
+greatly reduced prices, thus enabling the intelligent and appreciative
+people of Paradise to honor the Republican Circus, recently known as
+the Imperial Circus, with their benevolent and discerning patronage!
+Long live France! Long live the Republic! Long live the Circus!"
+
+A resounding roll of the drum ended the announcements; the girl slung
+the drum over her shoulder, turned to the right, and passed over the
+stone bridge, sabots clicking. Presently from the hamlet of Alincourt
+over the stream came the dull roll of the drum again and the faint,
+clear voice:
+
+"Attention! Men of Finistère! By order of the governor of Lorient,
+all men--" The wind changed and her voice died away among the trees.
+
+The maids of Paradise were weeping now by the fountain; the men
+gathered near, and their slow, hushed voices scarcely rose above the
+ripple of the stream where Robert the Lizard fished in silence.
+
+It was after sunset before Jacqueline finished her rounds. She had
+read her proclamation in Alincourt hamlet, she had read it in
+Sainte-Ysole, her drum had aroused the inert loungers on the
+breakwater at Trinité-on-Sea. Now, with her drum on her shoulder and
+her sabots swinging in her left hand, she came down the cliffs beside
+the Chapel of Our Lady of Paradise, excited and expectant.
+
+Of the first proclamation which she had read she apparently understood
+little. When she announced the great disaster at Metz in the north,
+and when her passionless young voice proclaimed the levée en
+masse--the call to arms for the men of the coast from Sainte-Ysole to
+Trinité Beacon--she scarcely seemed to realize what it meant, although
+all around her women turned away sobbing, or clung, deathly white, to
+sons and husbands.
+
+But there was certainly something in the other proclamation which
+thrilled her and set her heart galloping as she loitered on the
+cliff.
+
+I walked across to the Quimperlé road and met her, dancing along with
+her drum; and she promptly confided her longings and desires to me as
+we stood together for an instant on the high-road. The circus! Once,
+it appeared, she had seen--very far off--a glittering creature turning
+on a trapeze. It was at the fair near Bannalec, and it was so long ago
+that she scarcely remembered anything except that somebody had pulled
+her away while she stood enchanted, and the flashing light of
+fairyland had been forever shut from her eyes.
+
+At times, when the maids of Paradise were sociable at the well in the
+square, she had listened to stories of the splendid circus which came
+once to Lorient. And now it was coming again!
+
+We stood in the middle of the high-road looking through the dust haze,
+she doubtless dreaming of the splendors to come, I very, very tired.
+The curtain of golden dust reddened in the west; the afterglow lit up
+the sky once more with brilliant little clouds suspended from
+mid-zenith. The moorland wind rose and tossed her elf-locks in her
+eyes and whipped her skirt till the rags fluttered above her smooth,
+bare knees.
+
+Suddenly, straight out of the flaming gates of the sunset, the miracle
+was wrought. Celestial shapes in gold and purple rose up in the gilded
+dust, chariots of silver, milk-white horses plumed with fire.
+
+Breathless, she shrank back among the weeds, one hand pressed to her
+throbbing throat. But the vision grew as she stared; there was
+heavenly music, too, and the clank of metal chains, and the smothered
+pounding of hoofs. Then she caught sight of something through the dust
+that filled her with a delicious terror, and she cried out. For there,
+uptowering in the haze, came trudging a great, gray creature, a
+fearsome, swaying thing in crimson trappings, flapping huge ears. It
+shuffled past, swinging a dusty trunk; the sparkling horsemen cantered
+by, tin armor blazing in the fading glory; the chariots dragged after,
+and the closed dens of beasts rolled behind in single file, followed
+by the band-wagon, where Heaven-inspired musicians played frantically
+and a white-faced clown balanced his hat on a stick and shrieked.
+
+So the circus passed into Paradise; and I turned and followed in the
+wake of dust, stale odors, and clamorous discord, sick at heart of
+wandering over a world I had not found too kind.
+
+And at my heels stole Jacqueline.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+IN CAMP
+
+
+We went into camp under the landward glacis of the cliffs, in a field
+of clover which was to be ploughed under in a few days. We all were
+there except Kelly Eyre, who had gone to telegraph the governor of
+Lorient for permission to enter the port with the circus. Another
+messenger also left camp on private business for me.
+
+It was part of my duty to ration the hay for the elephant and the
+thrice-accursed camel. The latter had just bitten Mr. Grigg, our
+clown--not severely--and Speed and Horan the "Strong Man" were
+hobbling the brute as I finished feeding my lions and came up to
+assist the others.
+
+"Watch that darn elephant, too, Mr. Grigg," said Byram, looking up
+from a plate of fried ham that Miss Crystal, our "Trapeze Lady," had
+just cooked for him over our gypsy fires of driftwood.
+
+"Look at that elephant! Look at him!" continued Byram, with a trace
+of animation lighting up his careworn face--"look at him now chuckin'
+hay over his back. Scrape it up, Mr. Scarlett; hay's thirty a ton in
+this war-starved country."
+
+As I started to clean up the precious hay, the elephant gave a curious
+grunt and swung his trunk toward me.
+
+"There's somethin' paltry about that elephant," said Byram, in a
+complaining voice, rising, with plate of ham in one hand, fork in the
+other. "He's gittin' as mean as that crafty camuel. Make him move,
+Mr. Speed, or he'll put his foot on the trombone."
+
+"Hô Djebe! Mâil!" said Speed, sharply.
+
+The elephant obediently shuffled forward; Byram sat down again, and
+wearily cut himself a bit of fried ham; and presently we were all
+sitting around the long camp-table in the glare of two smoky petroleum
+torches, eating our bread and ham and potatoes and drinking Breton
+cider, a jug of which Mr. Horan had purchased for a few coppers.
+
+Some among us were too tired to eat, many too tired for conversation,
+yet, from habit we fell into small talk concerning the circus, the
+animals, the prospects of better days.
+
+The ladies of the company, whatever quarrels they indulged in among
+themselves, stood loyally by Byram in his anxiety and need. Miss
+Crystal and Miss Delany displayed edifying optimism; Mrs. Horan
+refrained from nagging; Mrs. Grigg, a pretty little creature, who was
+one of the best equestriennes I ever saw, declared that we were living
+too well and that a little dieting wouldn't hurt anybody.
+
+McCadger, our band-master, came over from the other fire to say that
+the men had finished grooming the horses, and would I inspect the
+picket-line, as Kelly Eyre was still absent.
+
+When I returned, the ladies had retired to their blankets under their
+shelter-tent; poor little Grigg lay asleep at the table, his tired,
+ugly head resting among the unwashed tin plates; Speed sprawled in his
+chair, smoking a short pipe; Byram sat all hunched up, his head sunk,
+eyes vacantly following the movements of two men who were washing
+dishes in the flickering torch-light.
+
+He looked up at me, saying: "I guess Mr. Speed is right. Them lions
+o' yourn is fed too much horse-meat. Overeatin' is overheatin'; we've
+got to give 'em beef or they'll be clawin' you. Yes, sir, they're all
+het up. Hear 'em growl!"
+
+"That's a fable, governor," I said, smiling and dropping into a
+chair. "I've heard that theory before, but it isn't true."
+
+"The trouble with your lions is that you play with them too much and
+they're losing respect for you," said Speed, drowsily.
+
+"The trouble with my lions," said I, "is that they were born in
+captivity. Give me a wild lion, caught on his native heath, and I'll
+know what to expect from him when I tame him. But no man on earth can
+tell what a lion born in captivity will do."
+
+The hard cider had cheered Byram a little; he drew a cherished cigar
+from his vest-pocket, offered it to me, and when I considerately
+refused, he carefully set it alight with a splinter from the fire. Its
+odor was indescribable.
+
+"Luck's a curious phenomena, ain't it, Mr. Scarlett?" he said.
+
+I agreed with him.
+
+"Luck," continued Byram, waving his cigar toward the four quarters of
+the globe, "is the rich man's slave an' the poor man's tyrant. It's
+also a see-saw. When the devil plays in luck the cherubim git
+spanked--or words to that effec'--not meanin' no profanity."
+
+"It's about like that, governor," admitted Speed, lazily.
+
+Byram leaned back and sucked meditatively at his cigar. The new moon
+was just rising over the elephant's hindquarters, and the poetry of
+the incident appeared to move the manager profoundly. He turned and
+surveyed the dim bivouac, the two silent tents, the monstrous,
+shadowy bulk of the elephant, rocking monotonously against the sky.
+"Kind of Silurian an' solemn, ain't it," he murmured, "the moon
+shinin' onto the rump of that primeval pachyderm. It's like the dark
+ages of the behemoth an' the cony. I tell you, gentlemen, when them
+fearsome an' gigantic mamuels was aboundin' in the dawn of creation,
+the public missed the greatest show on earth--by a few million
+years!"
+
+We nodded sleepily but gravely.
+
+Byram appeared to have recovered something of his buoyancy and native
+optimism.
+
+"Gentlemen," he said, "let's kinder saunter over to the inn and have
+a night-cap with Kelly Eyre."
+
+This unusual and expensive suggestion startled us wide awake, but we
+were only too glad to acquiesce in anything which tended to raise his
+spirits or ours. Dog tired but smiling we rose; Byram, in his
+shirt-sleeves and suspenders, wearing his silk hat on the back of his
+head, led the way, fanning his perspiring face with a red-and-yellow
+bandanna.
+
+"Luck," said Byram, waving his cigar toward the new moon, "is bound
+to turn one way or t'other--like my camuel. Sometimes, resemblin' the
+camuel, luck will turn on you. Look out it don't bite you. I once made
+up a piece about luck:
+
+ "'Don't buck
+ Bad luck
+ Or you'll get stuck--'
+
+I disremember the rest, but it went on to say a few other words to
+that effec'."
+
+The lighted door of the inn hung ajar as we crossed the star-lit
+square; Byram entered and stood a moment in the doorway, stroking his
+chin. "Bong joor the company!" he said, lifting his battered hat.
+
+The few Bretons in the wine-room returned his civility; he glanced
+about and his eye fell on Kelly Eyre, Speed's assistant balloonist,
+seated by the window with Horan.
+
+"Well, gents," said Byram, hopefully, "an' what aire the prospects
+of smilin' fortune when rosy-fingered dawn has came again to kiss us
+back to life?"
+
+"Rotten," said Eyre, pushing a telegram across the oak table.
+
+Byram's face fell; he picked up the telegram and fumbled in his coat
+for his spectacles with unsteady hand.
+
+"Let me read it, governor," said Speed, and took the blue paper from
+Byram's unresisting, stubby fingers.
+
+"O-ho!" he muttered, scanning the message; "well--well, it's not so
+bad as all that--" He turned abruptly on Kelly Eyre--"What the devil
+are you scaring the governor for?"
+
+"Well, he's got to be told--I didn't mean to worry him," said Eyre,
+stammering, ashamed of his thoughtlessness.
+
+"Now see here, governor," said Speed, "let's all have a drink first.
+Hé ma belle!"--to the big Breton girl knitting in the corner--"four
+little swallows of eau-de-vie, if you please! Ah, thank you, I knew
+you were from Bannalec, where all the girls are as clever as they are
+pretty! Come, governor, touch glasses! There is no circus but the
+circus, and Byram is it's prophet! Drink, gentlemen!"
+
+But his forced gayety was ominous; we scarcely tasted the liqueur.
+Byram wiped his brow and squared his bent shoulders. Speed, elbows on
+the table, sat musing and twirling his half-empty glass.
+
+"Well, sir?" said Byram, in a low voice.
+
+"Well, governor? Oh--er--the telegram?" asked Speed, like a man
+fighting for time.
+
+"Yes, the telegram," said Byram, patiently.
+
+"Well, you see they have just heard of the terrible smash-up in the
+north, governor. Metz has surrendered with Bazaine's entire army. And
+they're naturally frightened at Lorient.... And I rather fear that the
+Germans are on their way toward the coast.... And ... well ... they
+won't let us pass the Lorient fortifications."
+
+"Won't let us in?" cried Byram, hoarsely.
+
+"I'm afraid not, governor."
+
+Byram stared at us. We had counted on Lorient to pull us through as
+far as the frontier.
+
+"Now don't take it so hard, governor," said Kelly Eyre; "I was
+frightened myself, at first, but I'm ashamed of it now. We'll pull
+through, anyhow."
+
+"Certainly," said Speed, cheerily, "we'll just lay up here for a few
+days and economize. Why can't we try one performance here, Scarlett?"
+
+"We can," said I. "We'll drum up the whole district from Pontivy to
+Auray and from Penmarch Point to Plouharnel! Why should the Breton
+peasantry not come? Don't they walk miles to the Pardons?"
+
+A gray pallor settled on Byram's sunken face; with it came a certain
+dignity which sorrow sometimes brings even to men like him.
+
+"Young gentlemen," he said, "I'm obliged to you. These here reverses
+come to everybody, I guess. The Lord knows best; but if He'll just
+lemme run my show a leetle longer, I'll pay my debts an' say, 'Thy
+will be done, amen!'"
+
+"We all must learn to say that, anyway," said Speed.
+
+"Mebbe," muttered Byram, "but I must pay my debts."
+
+After a painful silence he rose, steadying himself with his hand on
+Eyre's broad shoulder, and shambled out across the square, muttering
+something about his elephant and his camuel.
+
+Speed paid the insignificant bill, emptied his glass, and nodded at
+me.
+
+"It's all up," he said, soberly.
+
+"Let's come back to camp and talk it over," I said.
+
+Together we traversed the square under the stars, and entered the
+field of clover. In the dim, smoky camp all lights were out except one
+oil-drenched torch stuck in the ground between the two tents. Byram
+had gone to rest, so had Kelly Eyre. But my lions were awake, moving
+noiselessly to and fro, eyes shining in the dusk; and the elephant, a
+shapeless pile of shadow against the sky, stood watching us with
+little, evil eyes.
+
+Speed had some cigarettes, and he laid the pink package on the table.
+I lighted one when he did.
+
+"Do you really think there's a chance?" he asked, presently.
+
+"I don't know," I said.
+
+"Well, we can try."
+
+"Oh yes."
+
+Speed dropped his elbows on the table. "Poor old governor," he said.
+
+Then he began to talk of our own prospects, which were certainly
+obscure if not alarming; but he soon gave up speculation as futile,
+and grew reminiscent, recalling our first acquaintance as discharged
+soldiers from the African battalions, our hand-to-mouth existence as
+gentlemen farmers in Algiers, our bankruptcy and desperate struggle in
+Marseilles, first as dock-workmen, then as government horse-buyers for
+the cavalry, then as employés of the Hippodrome in Paris, where I
+finally settled down as bareback rider, lion-tamer, and instructor in
+the haute-école; and he accepted a salary as aid to Monsieur Gaston
+Tissandier, the scientist, who was experimenting with balloons at
+Saint-Cloud.
+
+He spoke, too, of our enlistment in the Imperial Police, and the hopes
+we had of advancement, which not only brought no response from me, but
+left us both brooding sullenly on our wrongs, crouched there over the
+rough camp-table under the stars.
+
+"Oh, hell!" muttered Speed, "I'm going to bed."
+
+But he did not move. Presently he said, "How did you ever come to
+handle wild animals?"
+
+"I've always been fond of animals; I broke colts at home; I had bear
+cubs and other things. Then, in Algiers, the regiment caught a couple
+of lions and kept them in a cage, and--well, I found I could do what I
+liked with them."
+
+"They're afraid of your eyes, aren't they?"
+
+"I don't know--perhaps it's that; I can't explain it--or, rather, I
+could partly explain it by saying that I am not afraid of them. But I
+never trust them."
+
+"You drag them all around the cage! You shove them about like sacks
+of meal!"
+
+"Yes,... but I don't trust them."
+
+"It seems to me," said Speed, "that your lions are getting rather
+impudent these days. They're not very much afraid of you now."
+
+"Nor I of them," I said, wearily; "I'm much more anxious about you
+when you go sailing about in that patched balloon of yours. Are you
+never nervous?"
+
+"Nervous? When?"
+
+"When you're up there?"
+
+"Rubbish."
+
+"Suppose the patches give way?"
+
+"I never think of that," he said, leaning on the table with a yawn.
+"Oh, Lord, how tired I am!... but I shall not be able to sleep. I'm
+actually too tired to sleep. Have you got a pack of cards, Scarlett?
+or a decent cigar, or a glass of anything, or anything to show me
+more amusing than that nightmare of an elephant? Oh, I'm sick of the
+whole business--sick! sick! The stench of the tan-bark never leaves my
+nostrils except when the odor of fried ham or of that devilish camel
+replaces it.
+
+"I'm too old to enjoy a gypsy drama when it's acted by myself; I'm
+tired of trudging through the world with my entire estate in my
+pocket. I want a home, Scarlett. Lord, how I envy people with homes!"
+
+He had been indulging in this outburst with his back partly turned
+toward me. I did not say anything, and, after a moment, he looked at
+me over his shoulder to see how I took it.
+
+"I'd like to have a home, too," I said.
+
+"I suppose homes are not meant for men like you and me," he said.
+"Lord, how I would appreciate one, though--anything with a bit of
+grass in the yard and a shovelful of dirt--enough to grow some damn
+flower, you know.... Did you smell the posies in the square
+to-night?... Something of that kind,... anything, Scarlett--anything
+that can be called a home!... But you can't understand."
+
+"Oh yes, I can," I said.
+
+He went on muttering, half to himself: "We're of the same
+breed--pariahs; fortunately, pariahs don't last long,... like the wild
+creatures who never die natural deaths,... old age is one of the
+curses they can safely discount,... and so can we, Scarlett, so can
+we.... For you'll be mauled by a lion or kicked into glory by a horse
+or an ox or an ass,... and I'll fall off a balloon,... or the camel
+will give me tetanus, or the elephant will get me in one way or
+another,... or something...."
+
+Again he twisted around to look at me. "Funny, isn't it?"
+
+"Rather funny," I said, listlessly.
+
+He leaned over, pulled another cigarette from the pink packet, broke a
+match from the card, and lighted it.
+
+"I feel better," he observed.
+
+I expressed sleepy gratification.
+
+"Oh yes, I'm much better. This isn't a bad life, is it?"
+
+"Oh no!" I said, sarcastically.
+
+"No, it's all right, and we've got to pull the poor old governor
+through and give a jolly good show here and start the whole country
+toward the tent door! Eh?"
+
+"Certainly. Don't let me detain you."
+
+"I'll tell you what," he said, "if we only had that poor little
+girl, Miss Claridge, we'd catch these Bretons. That's what took the
+coast-folk all over Europe, so Grigg says."
+
+Miss Claridge had performed in a large glass tank as the "Leaping
+Mermaid." It took like wildfire according to our fellow-performers. We
+had never seen her; she was killed by diving into her tank when the
+circus was at Antwerp in April.
+
+"Can't we get up something like that?" I suggested, hopelessly.
+
+"Who would do it? Miss Claridge's fish-tights are in the prop-box;
+who's to wear them?"
+
+He began to say something else, but stopped suddenly, eyes fixed. We
+were seated nearly opposite each other, and I turned around, following
+the direction of his eyes.
+
+Jacqueline stood behind me in the smoky light of the torch--Jacqueline,
+bare of arm and knee, with her sea-blue eyes very wide and the witch-locks
+clustering around the dim oval of her face. After a moment's absolute
+silence she said: "I came from Paradise. Don't you remember?"
+
+"From Paradise?" said Speed, smiling; "I thought it might be from
+elf-land."
+
+And I said: "Of course I remember you, Jacqueline. And I have an idea
+you ought to be in bed."
+
+There was another silence.
+
+"Won't you sit down?" asked Speed.
+
+"Thank you," said Jacqueline, gravely.
+
+She seated herself on a sack of sawdust, clasping her slender hands
+between her knees, and looked earnestly at the elephant.
+
+"He won't harm you," I assured her.
+
+"If you think I am afraid of _that_," she said, "you are mistaken,
+Monsieur Scarlett."
+
+"I don't think you are afraid of anything," observed Speed, smiling;
+"but I know you are capable of astonishment."
+
+"How do you know that?" demanded the girl.
+
+"Because I saw you with your drum on the high-road when we came past
+Paradise. Your eyes were similar to saucers, and your mouth was not
+closed, Mademoiselle Jacqueline."
+
+"Oh--pour ça--yes, I was astonished," she said. Then, with a quick,
+upward glance: "Were you riding, in armor, on a horse?"
+
+"No," said Speed; "I was on that elephant's head."
+
+This appeared to make a certain impression on Jacqueline. She became
+shyer of speech for a while, until he asked her, jestingly, why she
+did not join the circus.
+
+"It is what I wish," she said, under her breath.
+
+"And ride white horses?"
+
+"Will you take me?" she cried, passionately, springing to her feet.
+
+Amazed at her earnestness, I tried to explain that such an idea was
+out of the question. She listened anxiously at first, then her eyes
+fell and she stood there in the torch-light, head hanging.
+
+"Don't you know," said Speed, kindly, "that it takes years of
+practice to do what circus people do? And the life is not gay,
+Jacqueline; it is hard for all of us. We know what hunger means; we
+know sickness and want and cold. Believe me, you are happier in
+Paradise than we are in the circus."
+
+"It may be," she said, quietly.
+
+"Of course it is," he insisted.
+
+"But," she flashed out, "I would rather be unhappy in the circus
+than happy in Paradise!"
+
+He protested, smiling, but she would have her way.
+
+"I once saw a man, in spangles, turning, turning, and ever turning
+upon a rod. He was very far away, and that was very long ago--at the
+fair in Bannalec. But I have not forgotten! No, monsieur! In our
+net-shed I also have fixed a bar of wood, and on it I turn, turn
+continually. I am not ignorant of twisting. I can place my legs over
+my neck and cross my feet under my chin. Also I can stand on both
+hands, and I can throw scores of handsprings--which I do every morning
+upon the beach--I, Jacqueline!"
+
+She was excited; she stretched out both bare arms as though preparing
+to demonstrate her ability then and there.
+
+"I should like to see a circus," she said. "Then I should know what
+to do. That I can swing higher than any girl in Paradise has been
+demonstrated often," she went on, earnestly. "I can swim farther, I
+can dive deeper, I can run faster, with bare feet or with sabots, than
+anybody, man or woman, from the Beacon to Our Lady's Chapel! At bowls
+the men will not allow me because I have beaten them all, monsieur,
+even the mayor, which he never forgave. As for the farandole, I tire
+last of all--and it is the biniou who cries out for mercy!"
+
+She laughed and pushed back her hair, standing straight up in the
+yellow radiance like a moor-sprite. There was something almost
+unearthly in her lithe young body and fearless sea-blue eyes,
+sparkling from the shock of curls.
+
+"So you can dive and swim?" asked Speed, with a glance at me.
+
+"Like the salmon in the Läita, monsieur."
+
+"Under water?"
+
+"Parbleu!"
+
+After a pause I asked her age.
+
+"Fifteen, M'sieu Scarlett."
+
+"You don't look thirteen, Jacqueline."
+
+"I think I should grow faster if we were not so poor," she said,
+innocently.
+
+"You mean that you don't get enough to eat?"
+
+"Not always, m'sieu. But that is so with everybody except the
+wealthy."
+
+"Suppose we try her," said Speed, after a silence. "You and I can
+scrape up a little money for her if worst comes to worst."
+
+"How about her father?"
+
+"You can see him. What is he?"
+
+"A poacher, I understand."
+
+"Oh, then it's easy enough. Give him a few francs. He'll take the
+child's salary, anyway, if this thing turns out well."
+
+"Jacqueline," I said, "we can't afford to pay you much money, you
+know."
+
+"Money?" repeated the child, vacantly. "_Money!_ If I had my arms
+full--so!--I would throw it into the world--so!"--she glanced at
+Speed--"reserving enough for a new skirt, monsieur, of which I stand
+in some necessity."
+
+The quaint seriousness, the resolute fearlessness of this little maid
+of Paradise touched us both, I think, as she stood there restlessly,
+balancing on her slim bare feet, finger-tips poised on her hips.
+
+"Won't you take me?" she asked, sweetly.
+
+"I'll tell you what I'll do, Jacqueline," said I. "Very early in the
+morning I'll go down to your house and see your father. Then, if he
+makes no objection, I'll get you to put on a pretty swimming-suit, all
+made out of silver scales, and you can show me, there in the sea, how
+you can dive and swim and play at mermaid. Does that please you?"
+
+She looked earnestly at me, then at Speed.
+
+"Is it a promise?" she asked, in a quivering voice.
+
+"Yes, Jacqueline."
+
+"Then I thank you, M'sieu Scarlett,... and you, m'sieur, who ride the
+elephant so splendidly.... And I will be waiting for you when you
+come.... We live in the house below the Saint-Julien Light.... My
+father is pilot of the port.... Anybody will tell you." ...
+
+"I will not forget," said I.
+
+She bade us good-night very prettily, stepped back out of the circle
+of torch-light, and vanished--there is no other word for it.
+
+"Gracious," said Speed, "wasn't that rather sudden? Or is that the
+child yonder? No, it's a bush. Well, Scarlett, there's an uncanny
+young one for you--no, not uncanny, but a spirit in its most delicate
+sense. I've an idea she's going to find poor Byram's lost luck for
+him."
+
+"Or break her neck," I observed.
+
+Speed was quiet for a long while.
+
+"By-the-way," he said, at last, "are you going to tell the Countess
+about that fellow Buckhurst?"
+
+"I sent a note to her before I fed my lions," I replied.
+
+"Are you going to see her?"
+
+"If she desires it."
+
+"Who took the note, Scarlett?"
+
+"Jacqueline's father,... that Lizard fellow."
+
+"Well, don't let's stir up Buckhurst now," said Speed. "Let's do
+what we can for the governor first."
+
+"Of course," said I. "And I'm going to bed. Good-night."
+
+"Good-night," said Speed, thoughtfully. "I'll join you in a
+moment."
+
+When I was ready for bed and stood at the tent door, peering out into
+the darkness, I saw Speed curled up on a blanket between the
+elephant's forefeet, sound asleep.
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+JACQUELINE
+
+
+The stars were still shining when I awoke in my blanket, lighted a
+candle, and stepped into the wooden tub of salt-water outside the
+tent.
+
+I shaved by candle-light, dressed in my worn riding-breeches and
+jacket, then, candle in hand, began groping about among the faded bits
+of finery and tarnished properties until I found the silver-scaled
+swimming-tights once worn by the girl of whom we had heard so much.
+
+She was very young when she leaped to her death in Antwerp--a slim
+slip of a creature, they said--so I thought it likely that her suit
+might fit Jacqueline.
+
+The stars had begun to fade when I stepped out through the dew-soaked
+clover, carrying in one hand a satchel containing the swimming-suit,
+in the other a gun-case, in which, carefully oiled and doubly cased in
+flannel, reposed my only luxury--my breech-loading shot-gun.
+
+The silence, intensified by the double thunder of the breakers on the
+sands, was suddenly pierced by a far cock-crow; vague gray figures
+passed across the square as I traversed it; a cow-bell tinkled near
+by, and I smelt the fresh-blown wind from the downs.
+
+Presently, as I turned into the cliff-path, I saw a sober little
+Breton cow plodding patiently along ahead; beside her moved a
+fresh-faced maid of Paradise in snowy collarette and white-winged
+head-dress, knitting as she walked, fair head bent.
+
+As I passed her she glanced up with tear-dimmed eyes, murmuring the
+customary salutation: "Bonjour d'ac'h, m'sieu!" And I replied in the
+best patois I could command: "Bonjour d'ec'h a laran, na oeled Ket!
+Why do you cry, mademoiselle?"
+
+"Cry, m'sieu? They are taking the men of Paradise to the war. France
+must know how cruel she is to take our men from us."
+
+We had reached the green crest of the plateau; the girl tethered her
+diminutive cow, sat down on a half-imbedded stone, and continued her
+knitting, crying softly all the while.
+
+I asked her to direct me to the house where Robert, the Lizard, lived;
+she pointed with her needles to a large stone house looming up in the
+gray light, built on the rocks just under the beacon. It was white
+with sea-slime and crusted salt, yet heavily and solidly built as a
+fort, and doubtless very old, judging from the traces of sculptured
+work over portal and windows.
+
+I had scarcely expected to find the ragged Lizard and more ragged
+Jacqueline housed in such an anciently respectable structure, and I
+said so to the girl beside me.
+
+"The house is bare as the bones of Sainte-Anne," she said. "There is
+nothing within--not even crumbs enough for the cliff-rats, they say."
+
+So I went away across the foggy, soaking moorland, carrying my gun and
+satchel in their cases, descended the grassy cleft, entered a
+cattle-path, and picked my way across the wet, black rocks toward the
+abode of the poacher.
+
+The Lizard was standing on his doorsill when I came up; he returned my
+greeting sullenly, his keen eyes of a sea-bird roving over me from
+head to foot. A rumpled and sulky yellow cat, evidently just awake,
+sat on the doorstep beside him and yawned at intervals. The pair
+looked as though they had made a night of it.
+
+"You took my letter last night?" I asked.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Was there an answer for me?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Couldn't you have come to the camp and told me?"
+
+"I could, but I had other matters to concern me," he replied.
+"Here's your letter," and he fished it out of his tattered pocket.
+
+I was angry enough, but I did not wish to anger him at that moment. So
+I took the letter and read it--a formal line saying the Countess de
+Vassart would expect me at five that afternoon.
+
+"You are not noted for your courtesy, are you?" I inquired, smiling.
+
+Something resembling a grin touched his sea-scarred visage.
+
+"Oh, I knew you'd come for your answer," he said, coolly.
+
+"Look here, Lizard," I said, "I intend to be friends with you, and I
+mean to make you look on me as a friend. It's to my advantage and to
+yours."
+
+"To mine?" he inquired, sneeringly, amused.
+
+"And this is the first thing I want," I continued; and without
+further preface I unfolded our plans concerning Jacqueline.
+
+"Entendu," he said, drawling the word, "is that all?"
+
+"Do you consent?"
+
+"Is that all?" he repeated, with Breton obstinacy.
+
+"No, not all. I want you to be my messenger in time of need. I want
+you to be absolutely faithful to me."
+
+"Is that all?" he drawled again.
+
+"Yes, that is all."
+
+"And what is there in this, to my advantage, m'sieu?"
+
+"This, for one thing," I said, carelessly, picking up my gun-case. I
+slowly drew out the barrels of Damascus, then the rose-wood stock and
+fore-end, assembling them lovingly; for it was the finest weapon I had
+ever seen, and it was breaking my heart to give it away.
+
+The poacher's eyes began to glitter as I fitted the double bolts and
+locked breech and barrel with the extension rib. Then I snapped on the
+fore-end; and there lay the gun in my hands, a fowling-piece fit for
+an emperor.
+
+"Give it?" muttered the poacher, huskily.
+
+"Take it, my friend the Lizard," I replied, smiling down the wrench
+in my heart.
+
+There was a silence; then the poacher stepped forward, and, looking me
+square in the eye, flung out his hand. I struck my open palm smartly
+against his, in the Breton fashion; then we clasped hands.
+
+"You mean honestly by the little one?"
+
+"Yes," I said; "strike palms by Sainte Thekla of Ycône!"
+
+We struck palms heavily.
+
+"She is a child," he said; "there is no vice in her; yet I've seen
+them nearly finished at her age in Paris." And he swore terribly as he
+said it.
+
+We dropped hands in silence; then, "Is this gun mine?" he demanded,
+hoarsely.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Strike!" he cried; "take my friendship if you want it, on this
+condition--what I am is my own concern, not yours. Don't interfere,
+m'sieu; it would be useless. I should never betray you, but I might
+kill you. Don't interfere. But if you care for the good-will of a man
+like me, take it; and when you desire a service from me, tell me, and
+I'll not fail you, by Sainte-Éline of Paradise!"
+
+"Strike palms," said I, gravely; and we struck palms thrice.
+
+He turned on his heel, kicking off his sabots on the doorsill. "Break
+bread with me; I ask it," he said, gruffly, and stalked before me into
+the house.
+
+The room was massive and of noble proportion, but there was scarcely
+anything in it--a stained table, a settle, a little pile of rags on
+the stone floor--no, not rags, but Jacqueline's clothes!--and there at
+the end of the great chamber, built into the wall, was the ancient
+Breton bed with its Gothic carving and sliding panels of black oak,
+carved like the lattice-work in a chapel screen.
+
+Outside dawn was breaking through a silver shoal of clouds; already
+its slender tentacles of light were probing the shadows behind the
+lattice where Jacqueline lay sleeping.
+
+From the ashes on the hearth a spiral of smoke curled. The yellow cat
+walked in and sat down, contemplating the ashes.
+
+Slowly a saffron light filled the room; Jacqueline awoke in the dim
+bed.
+
+She pushed the panels aside and peered out, her sea-blue eyes heavy
+with slumber.
+
+"Ma doué!" she murmured; "it is M'sieu Scarlett! Aie! Aie! Am I a
+countess to sleep so late? Bonjour, m'sieu! Bonjour, pa-pa!" She
+caught sight of the yellow cat, "Et bien le bonjour, Ange Pitou!"
+
+She swathed herself in a blanket and sat up, looking at me sleepily.
+
+"You came to see me swim," she said.
+
+"And I've brought you a fish's silver skin to swim in," I replied,
+pointing at the satchel.
+
+She cast a swift glance at her father, who, with the gun on his
+knees, sat as though hypnotized by the beauty of its workmanship. Her
+bright eyes fell on the gun; she understood in a flash.
+
+"Then you'll take me?"
+
+"If you swim as well as I hope you can."
+
+"Turn your back!" she cried.
+
+I wheeled about and sat down on the settle beside the poacher. There
+came a light thud of small, bare feet on the stone floor, then
+silence. The poacher looked up.
+
+"She's gone to the ocean," he said; "she has the mania for
+baths--like you English." And he fell to rubbing the gunstock with
+dirty thumb.
+
+The saffron light in the room was turning pink when Jacqueline
+reappeared on the threshold in her ragged skirt and stained velvet
+bodice half laced, with the broken points hanging, carrying an armful
+of driftwood.
+
+Without a word she went to work; the driftwood caught fire from the
+ashes, flaming up in exquisite colors, now rosy, now delicate green,
+now violet; the copper pot, swinging from the crane, began to steam,
+then to simmer.
+
+"Papa!"
+
+"De quoi!" growled the poacher.
+
+"Were you out last night?"
+
+"Dame, I've just come in."
+
+"Is there anything?"
+
+The poacher gave me an oblique and evil glance, then coolly answered:
+"Three pheasant, two partridges, and a sea-trout in the net-shed. All
+are drawn."
+
+So swiftly she worked that the pink light had scarcely deepened to
+crimson when the poacher, laying the gun tenderly in the blankets of
+Jacqueline's tumbled bed, came striding back to the table where a
+sea-trout smoked on a cracked platter, and a bowl of bread and milk
+stood before each place.
+
+We ate silently. Ange Pitou, the yellow cat, came around with tail
+inflated. There were fishbones enough to gratify any cat, and Ange
+Pitou made short work of them.
+
+The poacher bolted his food, sombre eyes brooding or stealing across
+the room to the bed where his gun lay. Jacqueline, to my amazement,
+ate as daintily as a linnet, yet with a fresh, hearty unconsciousness
+that left nothing in her bowl or wooden spoon.
+
+"Schist?" inquired the poacher, lifting his tired eyes to me. I
+nodded. So he brought a jug of cold, sweet cider, and we all drank
+long and deeply, each in turn slinging the jug over the crooked
+elbow.
+
+The poacher rose, wiped his mouth with the back of his hand, and made
+straight for his new gun.
+
+"You two," he said, with a wave of his arm, "you settle it among
+yourselves. Jacqueline, is it true that Le Bihan saw woodcock dropping
+into the fen last night?"
+
+"He says so."
+
+"He is not a liar--usually," observed the poacher. He touched his
+beret to me, flung the fowling-piece over his shoulder, picked up a
+canvas bag in which I heard cartridges rattling, stepped into his
+sabots, and walked away. In a few moments the hysterical yelps of a
+dog, pleased at the prospect of a hunt, broke out from the net-shed.
+
+Jacqueline placed the few dishes in a pan of hot water, wiped her
+fingers, daintily, and picked up Ange Pitou, who promptly acknowledged
+the courtesy by bursting into a crackling purring.
+
+"Show me the swimming-suit," she said, shyly.
+
+I drew it out of the satchel and laid it across my knees.
+
+"Oh, it has a little tail behind--like a fish!" she cried, enchanted.
+"I shall look like the silver grilse of Quimperlé!"
+
+"Do you think you can swim in those scales?" I asked.
+
+"Swim? I--Jacqueline? Attendez un peu--you shall see!"
+
+She laughed an excited, confident little laugh and hugged Ange Pitou,
+who closed his eyes in ecstasy sheathing and unsheathing his sharp
+claws.
+
+"It is almost sunrise," I said.
+
+"It lacks many minutes to sunrise," she replied. "Ask Ange Pitou. At
+sunrise he leaves me; nothing can hold him; he does not bite or
+scratch, he just pushes and pulls until my arms are tired. Then he
+goes. It is always so."
+
+"Why does he do that?"
+
+"Ask him. I have often asked, but he never tells me--do you, my
+friend? I think he's a moor-sprite--perhaps a devil. Do devils hate
+all kinds of water?"
+
+"No, only holy water," I replied.
+
+"Well, then, he's something else. Look! Look! He is beginning! See
+him push to get free, see him drive his furry head into my hands. The
+sun is coming up out of the sea! It will soon be here."
+
+She opened her arms; the cat sprang to the doorstep and vanished.
+
+Jacqueline looked at the swimming-suit, then at me. "Will you go down
+to the beach, M'sieu Scarlett?"
+
+But I had not traversed half the strip of rock and hard sand before
+something flew past--a slim, glittering shape which suddenly doubled
+up, straightened again, and fell headlong into the thundering surf.
+
+The waves hurled her from crest to crest, clothing her limbs in froth;
+the singing foam rolled her over and over, stranding her on bubbling
+sands, until the swell found her again, lifted her, and tossed her
+seaward into the wide, white arms of the breakers.
+
+Back to land she drifted and scrambled up on the beach, a slender,
+drenched figure, glistening and flashing with every movement.
+
+Dainty of limb as a cat in wet grass, she shook the spray from her
+fingers and scrubbed each palm with sand, then sprang again headlong
+into the surf; there was a flash, a spatter, and she vanished.
+
+After a long, long while, far out on the water she rose, floating.
+
+Now the red sun, pushing above the ocean's leaden rim, flung its
+crimson net across the water. String after string of white-breasted
+sea-ducks beat to windward from the cove, whirling out to sea; the
+gray gulls flapped low above the shoal and settled in rows along the
+outer bar, tossing their sun-tipped wings; the black cormorant on the
+cliff craned its hideous neck, scanning the ocean with restless,
+brilliant eyes.
+
+Tossed back once more upon the beach like an opalescent shell,
+Jacqueline, ankle-deep in foam, looked out across the flaming waters,
+her drenched hair dripping.
+
+From the gorse on cliff and headland, one by one the larks shot
+skyward like amber rockets, trailing a shower of melody till the whole
+sky rained song. The crested vanneaux, passing out to sea, responded
+plaintively, flapping their bronze-green wings.
+
+The girl twisted her hair and wrung it till the last salt drop had
+fallen. Sitting there in the sands, idle fingers cracking the pods of
+gilded sea-weed, she glanced up at me and laughed contentedly.
+Presently she rose and walked out to a high ledge, motioning me to
+follow. Far below, the sun-lit water shimmered in a shallow basin of
+silver sand.
+
+"Look!" she cried, flinging her arms above her head, and dropped into
+space, falling like a star, down, down into the shallow sea. Far below
+I saw a streak of living light shoot through the water--on, on, closer
+to the surface now, and at last she fairly sprang into the air,
+quivering like a gaffed salmon, then fell back to float and clear her
+blue eyes from her tangled hair.
+
+She gave me a glance full of malice as she landed, knowing quite well
+that she had not only won, but had given me a shock with her long dive
+into scarce three feet of water.
+
+Presently she climbed to the sun-warmed hillock of sand and sat down
+beside me to dry her hair.
+
+A langouste, in his flaming scarlet coat of mail, passed through a
+glassy pool among the rocks, treading sedately on pointed claws; the
+lançons tunnelled the oozing beach under her pink feet, like streams
+of living quicksilver; the big, blue sea-crabs sidled off the reef,
+sheering down sideways into limpid depths. Landward the curlew walked
+in twos and threes, swinging their long sickle bills; the sea-swallows
+drove by like gray snow-squalls, melting away against the sky; a
+vitreous living creature, blazing with purest sapphire light, floated
+past under water.
+
+Ange Pitou, coveting a warm sun-bath in the sand, came wandering along
+pretending not to see us; but Jacqueline dragged him into her arms for
+a hug, which lasted until Ange Pitou broke loose, tail hoisted but
+ears deaf to further flattery.
+
+So Jacqueline chased Ange Pitou back across the sand and up the rocky
+path, pursuing her pet from pillar to post with flying feet that fell
+as noiselessly as the velvet pads of Ange Pitou.
+
+"Come to the net-shed, if you please!" she called back to me,
+pointing to a crazy wooden structure built above the house.
+
+As I entered the net-shed the child was dragging a pile of sea-nets to
+the middle of the floor.
+
+"In case I fall," she said, coolly.
+
+"Better let me arrange them, then," I said, glancing up at the
+improvised trapeze which dangled under the roof-beams.
+
+She thanked me, seized a long rope, and went up, hand over hand. I
+piled the soft nets into a mattress, but decided to stand near, not
+liking the arrangements.
+
+Meanwhile Jacqueline was swinging, head downward, from her trapeze.
+Her cheeks flamed as she twisted and wriggled through a complicated
+manoeuvre, which ended by landing her seated on the bar of the trapeze
+a trifle out of breath. With both hands resting on the ropes, she
+started herself swinging, faster, faster, then pretended to drop off
+backward, only to catch herself with her heels, substitute heels for
+hands, and hang. Doubling back on her own body, she glided to her
+perch beneath the roof, shook her damp hair back, set the trapeze
+flying, and curled up on the bar, resting as fearlessly and securely
+as a bullfinch in a tree-top.
+
+Above her the red-and-black wasps buzzed and crawled and explored the
+sun-scorched beams. Spiders watched her from their silken hammocks,
+and the tiny cliff-mice scuttled from beam to beam. Through the open
+door the sunshine poured a flood of gold over the floor where the
+bronzed nets were spread. Mending was necessary; she mentioned it, and
+set herself swinging again, crossing her feet.
+
+"You think you could drop from there into a tank of water?" I asked.
+
+"How deep?"
+
+"Say four feet."
+
+She nodded, swinging tranquilly.
+
+"Have you any fear at all, Jacqueline?"
+
+"No."
+
+"You would try whatever I asked you to try?"
+
+"If I thought I could," she replied, naïvely.
+
+"But that is not it. I am to be your master. You must have absolute
+confidence in me and obey orders instantly."
+
+"Like a soldier?"
+
+"Exactly."
+
+"Bien."
+
+"Then hang by your hands!"
+
+Quick as a flash she hung above me.
+
+"You trust me, Jacqueline?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then drop!"
+
+Down she flashed like a falling meteor. I caught her with that quick
+trick known to all acrobats, which left her standing on my knee.
+
+"Jump!"
+
+She sprang lightly to the heap of nets, lost her balance, stumbled,
+and sat down very suddenly. Then she threw back her head and laughed;
+peal on peal of deliciously childish laughter rang through the ancient
+net-shed, until, overhead, the passing gulls echoed her mirth with
+querulous mewing, and the sea-hawk, towering to the zenith, wheeled
+and squealed.
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+FRIENDS
+
+
+At seven o'clock that morning the men in the circus camp awoke,
+worried, fatigued, vaguely resentful, unusually profane. Horan was
+openly mutinous, and announced his instant departure.
+
+By eight o'clock a miraculous change had taken place; the camp was
+alive with scurrying people, galvanized into hopeful activity by my
+possibly unwarranted optimism and a few judiciously veiled threats.
+
+Clothed with temporary authority by Byram, I took the bit between my
+teeth and ordered the instant erection of the main tents, the
+construction of the ring, barriers, and benches, and the immediate
+renovating of the portable tank in which poor little Miss Claridge had
+met her doom.
+
+I detailed Kelly Eyre to Quimperlé with orders for ten thousand
+crimson hand-bills; I sent McCadger, with Dawley, the bass-drummer,
+and Irwin, the cornettist, to plaster our posters from Pont Aven to
+Belle Isle, and I gave them three days to get back, and promised them
+a hundred dollars apiece if they succeeded in sticking our bills on
+the fortifications of Lorient and Quimper, with or without
+permission.
+
+I sent Grigg and three exempt Bretons to beat up the country from
+Gestel and Rosporden to Pontivy, clear across to Quiberon, and as far
+east as St. Gildas Point.
+
+By the standing-stones of Carnac, I swore that I'd have all Finistère
+in that tent. "Governor," said I, "we are going to feature
+Jacqueline all over Brittany, and, if the ladies object, it can't be
+helped! By-the-way, _do_ they object?"
+
+The ladies did object, otherwise they would not have been human
+ladies; but the battle was sharp and decisive, for I was desperate.
+
+"It simply amounts to this," I said: "Jacqueline pulls us through or
+the governor and I land in jail. As for you, Heaven knows what will
+happen to you! Penal settlement, probably."
+
+And I called Speed and pointed at Jacqueline, sitting on her satchel,
+watching the proceedings with amiable curiosity.
+
+"Speed, take that child and rehearse her. Begin as soon as the tent
+is stretched and you can rig the flying trapeze. Use the net, of
+course. Horan rehearsed Miss Claridge; he'll stand by. Miss Crystal,
+your good-will and advice I depend upon. Will you help me?"
+
+"With all my heart," said Miss Crystal.
+
+That impulsive reply broke the sullen deadlock.
+
+Pretty little Mrs. Grigg went over and shook the child's hand very
+cordially and talked broken French to her; Miss Delany volunteered to
+give her some "Christian clothes"; Mrs. Horan burst into tears,
+complaining that everybody was conspiring to injure her and her
+husband, but a few moments later she brought Jacqueline some toast,
+tea, and fried eggs, an attention shyly appreciated by the puzzled
+child, who never before had made such a stir in the world.
+
+"Don't stuff her," said Speed, as Mrs. Horan enthusiastically trotted
+past bearing more toast. "Here, Scarlett, the ladies are spoiling
+her. Can I take her for the first lesson?"
+
+Byram, who had shambled up, nodded. I was glad to see him reassert his
+authority. Speed took the child by the hand, and together they entered
+the big white tent, which now loomed up like a mammoth mushroom
+against the blue sky.
+
+"Governor," I said, "we're all a bit demoralized; a few of us are
+mutinous. For Heaven's sake, let the men see you are game. This child
+has got to win out for us. Don't worry, don't object; back me up and
+let me put this thing through."
+
+The old man shoved his hands into his trousers-pockets and looked at
+me with heavy, hopeless eyes.
+
+"Now here's the sketch for the hand-bill," I said, cheerfully, taking
+a pencilled memorandum from my pocket. And I read:
+
+ "THE PATRIOTIC ANTI-PRUSSIAN REPUBLICAN CIRCUS,
+ MORE STUPENDOUS, MORE GIGANTIC, MORE
+ OVERPOWERING THAN EVER!
+ GLITTERING, MARVELLOUS, SOUL-COMPELLING!"
+
+"What's 'soul-compelling'?" asked Byram.
+
+"Anything you please, governor," I said, and read on rapidly until I
+came to the paragraph concerning Jacqueline:
+
+ "THE WONDER OF EARTH AND HEAVEN!
+ THE UNUTTERABLY BEAUTIFUL FLYING
+ MERMAID! CAUGHT ON THE
+ COAST OF BRITTANY!
+ WHAT IS SHE?
+ FISH? BIRD? HUMAN? DIVINE?
+ WHO KNOWS?
+ THE SCIENTISTS OF FRANCE DO NOT KNOW!!
+ THE SCIENTISTS OF THE WORLD
+ ARE CONFOUNDED!
+ IS SHE
+ A LOST SOUL
+ FROM THE SUNKEN CITY OF KER-YS?
+ 50,000 FRANCS REWARD FOR THE BRETON WHO CAN
+ PROVE THAT SHE DID NOT COME STRAIGHT FROM
+ PARADISE!!!"
+
+"That's a damn good bill," said Byram, suddenly.
+
+He was so seldom profane that I stared at him, worried lest his
+misfortunes had unbalanced him. But a faint, healthy color was already
+replacing the pallor in his loose cheeks, a glint of animation came
+into his sunken eyes. He lifted his battered silk hat, replaced it at
+an angle almost defiant, and scowled at Horan, who passed us sullenly,
+driving the camel tentwards with awful profanity.
+
+"Don't talk such langwidge in my presence, Mr. Horan," he said,
+sharply; "a camuel is a camuel, but remember: 'kind hearts is more
+than cornets,' an' it's easier for that there camuel to pass through
+the eye of a needle than for a cussin' cuss to cuss his way into
+Kingdom Come!"
+
+Horan, who had betrayed unmistakable symptoms of insubordination that
+morning, quailed under the flowing rebuke. He was a man of muscular
+strength and meagre intellect; words hit him like trip-hammers.
+
+"Certainly, governor," he stammered, and spoke to the camel politely,
+guiding that enraged and squealing quadruped to his manger with a
+forced smile.
+
+With mallet, hammer, saw, and screw-driver I worked until noon,
+maturing my plans all the while. These plans would take the last penny
+in the treasury and leave us in debt several thousand francs. But it
+was win or go to smash now, and personally I have always preferred a
+tremendous smash to a slow and oozy fizzle.
+
+A big pot of fragrant soup was served to the company at luncheon; and
+it amused me to see Jacqueline troop into the tent with the others and
+sit down with her bit of bread and her bowl of broth.
+
+She was flushed and excited, and she talked to her instructor, Speed,
+all the while, chattering like a linnet between mouthfuls of bread and
+broth.
+
+"How is she getting on?" I called across to Speed.
+
+"The child is simply startling," he said, in English. "She is not
+afraid of anything. She and Miss Crystal have been doing that
+hair-raising 'flying swing' _without rehearsal!_"
+
+Jacqueline, hearing us talking in English, turned and stared at me,
+then smiled and looked up sweetly at Speed.
+
+"You seem to be popular with your pupil," I said, laughing.
+
+"She's a fine girl--a fine, fearless, straight-up-and-down girl," he
+said, with enthusiasm.
+
+Everybody appeared to like her, though how much that liking might be
+modified if prosperity returned I was unable to judge.
+
+Now all our fortunes depended on her. She was not a ballon d'essai;
+she was literally the whole show; and if she duplicated the
+sensational success of poor little Miss Claridge, we had nothing to
+fear. But her troubles would then begin. At present, however, we were
+waiting for her to pull us out of the hole before we fell upon her and
+rent her professionally. And I use that "we" not only professionally,
+but with an attempt at chivalry.
+
+Byram's buoyancy had returned in a measure. He sat in his
+shirt-sleeves at the head of the table, vigorously sopping his tartine
+in his soup, and, mouth full, leaned forward, chewing and listening to
+the conversation around him.
+
+Everybody knew it was life or death now, that each one must drop petty
+jealousies and work for the common salvation. An artificial and almost
+feverish animation reigned, which I adroitly fed with alarming
+allusions to the rigor of the French law toward foreigners and other
+malefactors who ran into debt to French subjects on the sacred soil of
+France. And, having lived so long in France and in the French
+possessions, I was regarded as an oracle of authority by these
+ambulant professional people who were already deadly homesick, and
+who, in eighteen months of Europe, had amassed scarcely a dozen French
+phrases among them all.
+
+"I'll say one thing," observed Byram, with dignity; "if ever I git
+out of this darn continong with my circus, I'll recooperate in the
+undulatin' medders an' j'yful vales of the United States. Hereafter
+that country will continue to remain good enough for me."
+
+All applauded--all except Jacqueline, who looked around in
+astonishment at the proceedings, and only smiled when Speed explained
+in French.
+
+"Ask maddermoselle if she'll go home with us?" prompted Byram. "Tell
+her there's millions in it."
+
+Speed put the question; Jacqueline listened gravely, hesitated, then
+whispered to Speed, who reddened a trifle and laughed.
+
+Everybody waited for a moment. "What does she say?" inquired Byram.
+
+"Oh, nothing; she talked nonsense."
+
+But Jacqueline's dignity and serene face certainly contradicted
+Speed's words.
+
+Presently Byram arose, flourishing his napkin. "Time's up!" he said,
+with decision, and we all trooped off to our appointed labors.
+
+Now that I had stirred up this beehive and set it swarming again, I
+had no inclination to turn drone. Yet I remembered my note to the
+Countess de Vassart and her reply. So about four o'clock I made the
+best toilet I could in my only other suit of clothes, and walked out
+of the bustling camp into the square, where the mossy fountain
+splashed under the oaks and the children of Paradise were playing.
+Hands joined, they danced in a ring, singing:
+
+ "_Barzig ha barzig a Goneri
+ Ari e mab roue gand daou pe dri_"--
+
+ "Little minstrel-bard of Conéri
+ The son of the King has come with two or three--
+ Nay, with a whole bright flock of paroquets,
+ Crimson, silver, and violet."
+
+And the children, in their white coiffes and tiny wooden shoes, moved
+round and round the circle, in the middle of which a little lad and a
+little lass of Paradise stood motionless, hand clasping hand.
+
+The couplet ended, the two children in the middle sprang forward and
+dragged a third child out of the circle. Then the song began again,
+the reduced circle dancing around the three children in the middle.
+
+ "--The son of the King has come with two or three--
+ Nay, with a whole bright flock of paroquets,
+ Crimson, silver, and violet."
+
+It was something like a game I had played long ago--in the age of
+fable--and I lingered, touched with homesickness.
+
+The three children in the middle took a fourth comrade from the
+circle, crying, "Will you go to the moon or will you go to the
+stars?"
+
+"The moon," lisped the little maid, and she was led over to the
+fountain.
+
+"The stars," said the first prisoner, and was conducted to the stone
+bridge.
+
+Soon a small company was clustered on the bridge, another band at the
+fountain. Then, as there were no more to dance in a circle, the lad
+and lassie who had stood in the middle to choose candidates for the
+moon and stars clasped hands and danced gayly across the square to the
+group of expectant children at the fountain, crying:
+
+ "Baradoz! Baradoz!"
+ (Paradise! Paradise!)
+
+and the whole band charged on the little group on the bridge, shouting
+and laughing, while the unfortunate tenants of the supposed infernal
+regions fled in every direction, screaming:
+
+ "Pater noster
+ Dibi doub!
+ Dibi doub!
+ Dibi doub!"
+
+Their shouts and laughter still came faintly from the tree-shaded
+square as I crossed the bridge and walked out into the moorland toward
+the sea, where I could see the sun gilding the headland and the
+spouting-rocks of Point Paradise.
+
+Over the turning tide cormorants were flying, now wheeling like hawks,
+now beating seaward in a duck-like flight. I passed little, lonely
+pools on the moor, from which snipe rose with a startling squak!
+squak! and darted away inland as though tempest blown.
+
+Presently a blue-gray mass in mid-ocean caught my eye. It was the
+island of Groix, and between it and Point Paradise lay an ugly, naked,
+black shape, motionless, oozing smoke from two stubby funnels--the
+cruiser _Fer-de-Lance_! So solidly inert lay the iron-clad that it did
+not seem as if she had ever moved or ever could move; she looked like
+an imbedded ledge cropping up out of the sea.
+
+Far across the hilly moorland the white semaphore glistened like a
+gull's wing--too far for me to see the balls and cones hoisted or the
+bright signals glimmering along the halyards as I followed a trodden
+path winding south through the gorse. Then a dip in the moorland hid
+the semaphore and at the same moment brought a house into full
+view--a large, solid structure of dark stone, heavily Romanesque,
+walled in by an ancient buttressed barrier, above which I could see
+the tree-tops of a fruit-garden.
+
+The Château de Trécourt was a fine example of the so called
+"fortified farm"; it had its moat, too, and crumbling wing-walls,
+pierced by loop-holes and over-hung with miniature battlements. A
+walled and loop-holed passageway connected the house with another
+stone enclosure in which stood stable, granary, cattle-house, and
+sheepfold, all of stone, though the roofs of these buildings were
+either turfed or thatched. And over them the weather-vane, a golden
+Dorado, swam in the sunshine.
+
+One thing I noticed as I crossed the unused moat on a permanent
+bridge: the youthful Countess no longer denied herself the services of
+servants, for I saw a cloaked shepherd and his two wolf-like and
+tailless sheep-dogs watching the flock scattered over the downs; and
+there were at least half a dozen farm servants pottering about from
+stable to granary, and a toothless porter to answer the gate-bell and
+pilot me past the tiny loop-holed lodge-turret to the house. There was
+also a man, lying belly down in the bracken, watching me; and as I
+walked into the court I tried to remember where I had seen his face
+before.
+
+The entire front of the house was covered with those splendid
+orange-tinted tea-roses that I had noticed in Paradise; thicket on
+thicket of clove-scented pinks choked the flower-beds; and a broad mat
+of deep-tinted pansies lay on the lawn, spread out for all the world
+like a glorious Eastern rug.
+
+There was a soft whirring in the air like the sound of a humming-bird
+close by; it came from a spinning-wheel, and grew louder as a servant
+admitted me into the house and guided me to a sunny room facing the
+fruit garden.
+
+The spinner at the wheel was singing in an undertone--singing a Breton
+"gwerz," centuries old, retained in memory from generation to
+generation:
+
+ "Woe to the Maids of Paradise,
+ Yvonne!
+ Twice have the Saxons landed; twice!
+ Yvonne!
+ Yet must Paradise see them thrice!
+ Yvonne! Yvonne! Marivonik."
+
+Old as were the words, the melody was older--so old and quaint and
+sweet that it seemed a berceuse fashioned to soothe the drowsing
+centuries, lest the memories of ancient wrongs awake and rouse the
+very dead from their Gothic tombs.
+
+All the sad history of the Breton race was written in every minor
+note; all the mystery, the gentleness, the faith of the lost people of
+Armorica.
+
+And now the singer was intoning the "Gwerz Ar Baradoz"--the
+"Complaint of Paradise"--a slow, thrilling miséréré, scarcely
+dominating the velvet whir of the spinning-wheel.
+
+Suddenly the melody ceased, and a young Bretonne girl appeared in the
+doorway, courtesying to me and saying in perfect English: "How do you
+do, Mr. Scarlett; and how do you like my spinning songs, if you
+please?"
+
+The girl was Mademoiselle Sylvia Elven, the marvellously clever
+actress from the Odéon, the same young woman who had played the
+Alsacienne at La Trappe, as perfectly in voice and costume as she now
+played the Bretonne.
+
+"You need not be astonished at all," she said, calmly, "if you will
+only reflect that my name is Elven, which is also the name of a Breton
+town. Naturally, I am a Bretonne from Elven, and my own name is
+Duhamel--Sylvenne Duhamel. I thought I ought to tell you, so that you
+would not think me too clever and try to carry me off on your horse
+again."
+
+I laughed uncertainly; clever women who talk cleverly always disturb
+me. Besides, somehow, I felt she was not speaking the truth, yet I
+could not imagine why she should lie to me.
+
+"You were more fluent to the helpless turkey-girl," she suggested,
+maliciously.
+
+I had absolutely nothing to say, which appeared to gratify her, for
+she dimpled and smiled under her snowy-winged coiffe, from which a
+thick gold strand of hair curled on her forehead--a sad bit of
+coquetry in a Bretonne from Elven, if she told the truth.
+
+"I only came to renew an old and deeply valued friendship," she said,
+with mock sentimentality; "I am going back to my flax now."
+
+However, she did not move.
+
+"And, by-the-way," she said, languidly, "is there in your
+intellectual circus company a young gentleman whose name is Eyre?"
+
+"Kelly Eyre? Yes," I said, sulkily.
+
+"Ah."
+
+She strolled out of the room, hesitated, then turned in the doorway
+with a charming smile.
+
+"The Countess will return from her gallop at five."
+
+She waited as though expecting an answer, but I only bowed.
+
+"Would you take a message to Mistaire Kelly Eyre for me?" she asked,
+sweetly.
+
+I said that I would.
+
+"Then please say that: '_On Sunday the book-stores are closed in
+Paris._'"
+
+"Is that what I am to say?"
+
+"Exactly that."
+
+"Very well, mademoiselle."
+
+"Of course, if he asks who told you--you may say that it was a
+Bretonne at Point Paradise."
+
+"Nothing else?"
+
+"Nothing, monsieur."
+
+She courtesied and vanished.
+
+"Little minx," I thought, "what mischief are you preparing now?" and
+I rested my elbow on the window-sill and gazed out into the garden,
+where apricot-trees and fig-trees lined the winding walks between beds
+of old-fashioned herbs, anise, basil, caraway, mint, sage, and
+saffron.
+
+Sunlight lay warm on wall and gravel-path; scarlet apples hung aloft
+on a few young trees; a pair of trim, wary magpies explored the
+fig-trees, sometimes quarrelling, sometimes making common cause
+against the shy wild-birds that twittered everywhere among the vines.
+
+I fancied, after a few moments, that I heard the distant thudding of a
+horse's hoofs; soon I was sure of it, and rose to my feet expectantly,
+just as a flushed young girl in a riding-habit entered the room and
+gave me her gloved hand.
+
+Her fresh, breezy beauty astonished me; could this laughing, gray-eyed
+girl with her silky, copper-tinted hair be the same slender, grave
+young Countess whom I had known in Alsace--this incarnation of all
+that is wholesome and sweet and winning in woman? What had become of
+her mission and the soiled brethren of the proletariat? What had
+happened?
+
+I looked at her earnestly, scarcely understanding that she was saying
+she was glad I had come, that she had waited for me, that she had
+wanted to see me, that she had wished to tell me how deeply our tragic
+experience at La Trappe and in Morsbronn had impressed her. She said
+she had sent a letter to me in Paris which was returned, _opened_,
+with a strange note from Monsieur Mornac. She had waited for some
+word from me, here in Paradise, since September; "waited
+impatiently," she added, and a slight frown bent her straight brows
+for a moment--a moment only.
+
+"But come out to my garden," she said, smiling, and stripping off her
+little buff gauntlets. "There we will have tea a l'Anglaise, and
+sunshine, and a long, long, satisfying talk; at least I will," she
+added, laughing and coloring up; "for truly, Monsieur Scarlett, I do
+not believe I have given you one second to open your lips."
+
+Heaven knows I was perfectly content to watch her lips and listen to
+the music of her happy, breathless voice without breaking the spell
+with my own.
+
+She led the way along a path under the apricots to a seat against a
+sunny wall, a wall built of massive granite, deeply thatched with
+fungus and lichens, where, palpitating in the hot sun, the tiny
+lizards lay glittering, and the scarlet-banded nettle-butterflies
+flitted and hovered and settled to sun themselves, wings a-droop.
+
+Here in the sunshine the tea-rose perfume, mingling with the incense
+of the sea, mounted to my head like the first flush of wine to a man
+long fasting; or was it the enchantment of her youth and
+loveliness--the subtle influence of physical vigor and spiritual
+innocence on a tired, unstrung man?
+
+"First of all," she said, impulsively, "I know your life--all of it
+in minute particular. Are you astonished?"
+
+"No, madame," I replied; "Mornac showed you my dossier."
+
+"That is true," she said, with a troubled look of surprise.
+
+I smiled. "As for Mornac," I began, but she interrupted me.
+
+"Ah, Mornac! Do you suppose I believed him? Had I not proof on proof
+of your loyalty, your honor, your courtesy, your chivalry--"
+
+"Madame, your generosity--and, I fear, your pity--overpraises."
+
+"No, it does not! I know what you are. Mornac cannot make white
+black! I know what you have been. Mornac could not read you into
+infamy, even with your dossier under my own eyes!"
+
+"In my dossier you read a sorry history, madame."
+
+"In your dossier I read the tragedy of a gentleman."
+
+"Do you know," said I, "that I am now a performer in a third-rate
+travelling circus?"
+
+"I think that is very sad," she said, sweetly.
+
+"Sad? Oh no. It is better than the disciplinary battalions of
+Africa."
+
+Which was simply acknowledging that I had served a term in prison.
+
+The color faded in her face. "I thought you were pardoned."
+
+"I was--from prison, not from the battalion of Biribi."
+
+"I only know," she said, "that they say you were not guilty; that
+they say you faced utter ruin, even the possibility of death, for the
+sake of another man whose name even the police--even Monsieur de
+Mornac--could never learn. Was there such a man?"
+
+I hesitated. "Madame, there is such a man; _I_ am the man who
+_was_."
+
+"With no hope?"
+
+"Hope? With every hope," I said, smiling. "My name is not my own,
+but it must serve me to my end, and I shall wear it threadbare and
+leave it to no one."
+
+"Is there no hope?" she asked, quietly.
+
+"None for the man who _was_. Much for James Scarlett, tamer of lions
+and general mountebank," I said, laughing down the rising tide of
+bitterness. Why had she stirred those dark waters? I had drowned
+myself in them long since. Under them lay the corpse of a man I had
+forgotten--my dead self.
+
+"No hope?" she repeated.
+
+Suddenly the ghost of all I had lost rose before me with her
+words--rose at last after all these years, towering, terrible, free
+once more to fill the days with loathing and my nights with hell
+eternal,... after all these years!
+
+Overwhelmed, I fought down the spectre in silence. Kith and kin were
+not all in the world; love of woman was not all; a chance for a home,
+a wife, children, were not all; a name was not all. Raising my head, a
+trifle faint with the struggle and the cost of the struggle, I saw the
+distress in her eyes and strove to smile.
+
+"There is every hope," I said, "save the hopes of youth--the hope of
+a woman's love, and of that happiness which comes through love. I am a
+man past thirty, madame--thirty-five, I believe my dossier makes it.
+It has taken me fifteen years to bury my youth. Let us talk of
+Mornac."
+
+"Yes, we will talk of Mornac," she said, gently.
+
+So with infinite pains I went back and traced for her the career of
+Buckhurst, sparing her nothing; I led up to my own appearance on the
+scene, reviewed briefly what we both knew, then disclosed to her in
+its most trivial detail the conference between Buckhurst and myself in
+which his cynical avowal was revealed in all its native hideousness.
+
+She sat motionless, her face like cold marble, as I carefully gathered
+the threads of the plot and gently twitched that one which galvanized
+the mask of Mornac.
+
+"Mornac!" she stammered, aghast.
+
+I showed her why Buckhurst desired to come to Paradise; I showed her
+why Mornac had initiated her into the mysteries of my dossier, taking
+that infernal precaution, although he had every reason to believe he
+had me practically in prison, with the keys in his own pocket.
+
+"Had it not been for my comrade, Speed," I said, "I should be in one
+of Mornac's fortress cells. He overshot the mark when he left us
+together and stepped into his cabinet to spread my dossier before you.
+He counted on an innocent man going through hell itself to prove his
+innocence; he counted on me, and left Speed out of his calculations.
+He had your testimony, he had my dossier, he had the order for my
+arrest in his pocket.... And then I stepped out of sight! I, the
+honest fool, with my knowledge of his infamy, of Buckhurst's
+complicity and purposes--I was gone.
+
+"And now mark the irony of the whole thing: he had, criminally,
+destroyed the only bureau that could ever have caught me. But he did
+his best during the few weeks that were left him before the battle of
+Sedan. After that it was too late; it was too late when the first
+Uhlan appeared before the gates of Paris. And now Mornac, shorn of
+authority, is shut up in a city surrounded by a wall of German steel,
+through which not one single living creature has penetrated for two
+months."
+
+I looked at her steadily. "Eliminate Mornac as a trapped rat; cancel
+him as a dead rat since the ship of Empire went down at Sedan. I do
+not know what has taken place in Paris--save what all now know that
+the Empire is ended, the Republic proclaimed, and the Imperial police
+a memory. Then let us strike out Mornac and turn to Buckhurst. Madame,
+I am here to serve you."
+
+The dazed horror in her face which had marked my revelations of
+Buckhurst's villanies gave place to a mantling flush of pure anger.
+Shame crimsoned her neck, too; shame for her credulous innocence, her
+belief in this rogue who had betrayed her, only to receive pardon for
+the purpose of baser and more murderous betrayal.
+
+I said nothing for a long time, content to leave her to her own
+thoughts. The bitter draught she was draining could not harm her,
+could not but act as the most wholesome of tonics.
+
+Hers was not a weak character to sink, embittered, under the weight of
+knowledge--knowledge of evil, that all must learn to carry lightly
+through life; I had once thought her weak, but I had revised that
+opinion and substituted the words "pure in thought, inherently loyal,
+essentially unsuspicious."
+
+"Tell me about Buckhurst," I said, quietly. "I can help you, I
+think."
+
+The quick tears of humiliation glimmered for a second in her angry
+eyes; then pride fell from her, like a stately mantle which a princess
+puts aside, tired and content to rest.
+
+This was a phase I had never before seen--a lovely, natural young
+girl, perplexed, troubled, deeply wounded, ready to be guided, ready
+for reproof, perhaps even for that sympathy without which reproof is
+almost valueless.
+
+She told me that Buckhurst came to her house here in Paradise early in
+September; that while in Paris, pondering on what I had said, she had
+determined to withdraw herself absolutely from all organized
+socialistic associations during the war; that she believed she could
+do the greatest good by living a natural and cheerful life, by
+maintaining the position that birth and fortune had given her, and by
+using that position and fortune for the benefit of those less
+fortunate.
+
+This she had told Buckhurst, and the rascal appeared to agree with her
+so thoroughly that, when Dr. Delmont and Professor Tavernier arrived,
+they also applauded the choice she made of Buckhurst as distributer of
+money, food, and clothing to the provincial hospitals, now crowded to
+suffocation with the wreck of battle.
+
+Then a strange thing occurred. Dr. Delmont and Professor Tavernier
+disappeared without any explanation. They had started for St. Nazaire
+with a sum of money--twenty thousand francs, locked in the private
+strong-box of the Countess--to be distributed among the soldiers of
+Chanzy; and they had never returned.
+
+In the light of what she had learned from me, she feared that
+Buckhurst had won them over; perhaps not--she could not bear to
+suspect evil of such men.
+
+But she now believed that Buckhurst had used every penny he had
+handled for his own purposes; that not one hospital had received what
+she had sent.
+
+"I am no longer wealthy," she said, anxiously, looking up at me. "I
+did find time in Paris to have matters straightened; I sold La Trappe
+and paid everything. It left me with this house in Paradise, and with
+means to maintain it and still have a few thousand francs to give
+every year. Now it is nearly gone--I don't know where. I am dreadfully
+unhappy; I have such a horror of treachery that I cannot even
+understand it, but this ignoble man, Buckhurst, is assuredly a
+heartless rascal."
+
+"But," I said, patiently, "you have not yet told me where he is."
+
+"I don't know," she said. "A week ago a dreadful creature came here
+to see Buckhurst; they went across the moor toward the semaphore and
+stood for a long while looking at the cruiser which is anchored off
+Groix. Then Buckhurst came back and prepared for a journey. He said
+he was going to Tours to confer with the Red Cross. I don't know where
+he went. He took all the money for the general Red Cross fund."
+
+"When did he say he would return?"
+
+"He said in two weeks. He has another week yet."
+
+"Is he usually prompt?"
+
+"Always so--to the minute."
+
+"That is good news," I said, gayly. "But tell me one thing: do you
+trust Mademoiselle Elven?"
+
+"Yes, indeed!--indeed!" she cried, horrified.
+
+"Very well," said I, smiling. "Only for the sake of caution--extra,
+and even perhaps useless caution--say nothing of this matter to her,
+nor to any living soul save me."
+
+"I promise," she said, faintly.
+
+"One thing more: this conspiracy against the state no longer concerns
+me--officially. Both Speed and I did all we could to warn the Emperor
+and the Empress; we sent letters through the police in London, we used
+the English secret-service to get our letters into the Emperor's hand,
+we tried every known method of denouncing Mornac. It was useless;
+every letter must have gone through Mornac's hands before it reached
+the throne. We did all we dared do; we were in disguise and in hiding
+under assumed names; we could not do more.
+
+"Now that Mornac is not even a pawn in the game--as, indeed, I begin
+to believe he never really was, but has been from the first a dupe of
+Buckhurst--it is the duty of every honest man to watch Buckhurst and
+warn the authorities that he possibly has designs on the crown jewels
+of France, which that cruiser yonder is all ready to bear away to
+Saïgon.
+
+"How he proposes to attempt such a robbery I can't imagine. I don't
+want to denounce him to General Chanzy or Aurelles de Palladine,
+because the conspiracy is too widely spread and too dangerous to be
+defeated by the capture of one man, even though he be the head of it.
+
+"What I want is to entrap the entire band; and that can only be done
+by watching Buckhurst, not arresting him.
+
+"Therefore, madame, I have written and despatched a telegram to
+General Aurelles de Palladine, offering my services and the services
+of Mr. Speed to the Republic without compensation. In the event of
+acceptance, I shall send to London for two men who will do what is to
+be done, leaving me free to amuse the public with my lions. Meanwhile,
+as long as we stay in Paradise we both are your devoted servants, and
+we beg the privilege of serving you."
+
+During all this time the young Countess had never moved her eyes from
+my face--perhaps I was flattered--perhaps for that reason I talked on
+and on, pouring out wisdom from a somewhat attenuated supply.
+
+And I now rose to take my leave, bowing my very best bow; but she sat
+still, looking up quietly at me.
+
+"You ask the privilege of serving me," she said. "You could serve me
+best by giving me your friendship."
+
+"You have my devotion, madame," I said.
+
+"I did not ask it. I asked your friendship--in all frankness and
+equality."
+
+"Do you desire the friendship of a circus performer?" I asked,
+smiling.
+
+"I desire it, not only for what you are, but for what you have
+been--have always been, let them say what they will!"
+
+I was silent.
+
+"Have you never given women your friendship?" she asked.
+
+"Not in fifteen years--nor asked theirs."
+
+"Will you not ask mine?"
+
+I tried to speak steadily, but my voice was uncertain; I sat down,
+crushed under a flood of memories, hopes accursed, ambitions damned
+and consigned to oblivion.
+
+"You are very kind," I said. "You are the Countess de Vassart. A man
+is what he makes himself. I have made myself--with both eyes open; and
+I am now an acrobat and a tamer of beasts. I understand your goodness,
+your impulse to help those less fortunate than yourself. I also
+understand that I have placed myself where I am, and that, having done
+so deliberately, I cannot meet as friends and equals those who might
+have been my equals if not friends. Besides that, I am a native of a
+paradox--a Republic which, though caste-bound, knows no caste abroad.
+I might, therefore, have been your friend if you had chosen to waive
+the traditions of your continent and accept the traditions of mine.
+But now, madame, I must beg permission to make my adieux."
+
+She sprang up and caught both my hands in her ungloved hands. "Won't
+you take my friendship--and give me yours--my friend?"
+
+"Yes," I said, slowly. The blood beat in my temples, almost blinding
+me; my heart hammered in my throat till I shivered.
+
+As in a dream I bent forward; she abandoned her hands to me; and I
+touched a woman's hands with my lips for the first time in fifteen
+years.
+
+"In all devotion and loyalty--and gratitude," I said.
+
+"And in friendship--say it!"
+
+"In friendship."
+
+"Now you may go--if you desire to. When will you come again?"
+
+"When may I?"
+
+"When you will."
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+THE PATH OF THE LIZARD
+
+
+About nine o'clock the next morning an incident occurred which might
+have terminated my career in one way, and did, ultimately, end it in
+another.
+
+I had been exercising my lions and putting them through their paces,
+and had noticed no unusual insubordination among them, when suddenly,
+Timour Melek, a big Algerian lion, flew at me without the slightest
+provocation or warning.
+
+Fortunately I had a training-chair in my hand, on which Timour had
+just been sitting, and I had time to thrust it into his face. Thrice
+with incredible swiftness he struck the iron-chair, right, left, and
+right, as a cat strikes, then seized it in his teeth. At the same
+moment I brought my loaded whip heavily across his nose.
+
+"Down, Timour Melek! Down! down! down!" I said, steadily,
+accompanying each word with a blow of the whip across the nose.
+
+The brute had only hurt himself when he struck the chair, and now,
+under the blows raining on his sensitive nose, he doubtless remembered
+similar episodes in his early training, and shrank back, nearly
+deafening me with his roars. I followed, punishing him, and he fled
+towards the low iron grating which separated the training-cage from
+the night-quarters.
+
+This I am now inclined to believe was a mistake of judgment on my
+part. I should have driven him into a corner and thoroughly cowed him,
+using the training-chair if necessary, and trusting to my two
+assistants with their irons, who had already closed up on either side
+of the cage.
+
+I was not in perfect trim that morning. Not that I felt nervous in the
+least, nor had I any lack of self-confidence, but I was not myself. I
+had never in my life entered a lion-cage feeling as I did that
+morning--an indifference which almost amounted to laziness, an apathy
+which came close to melancholy.
+
+The lions knew I was not myself--they had been aware of it as soon as
+I set foot in their cage; and I knew it. But my strange apathy only
+increased as I went about my business, perfectly aware all the time
+that, with lions born in captivity, the unexpected is always to be
+expected.
+
+Timour Melek was now close to the low iron door between the
+partitions; the other lions had become unusually excited, bounding at
+a heavy gallop around the cage, or clinging to the bars like enormous
+cats.
+
+Then, as I faced Timour, ready to force him backward through the door
+into the night-quarters, something in the blank glare of his eyes
+seemed to fascinate me. I had an absurd sensation that he was slipping
+away from me--escaping; that I no longer dominated him nor had
+authority. It was not panic, nor even fear; it was a faint
+paralysis--temporary, fortunately; for at that instant instinct saved
+me; I struck the lion a terrific blow across the nose and whirled
+around, chair uplifted, just in time to receive the charge of Empress
+Khatoun, consort of Timour.
+
+She struck the iron-bound chair, doubling it up like crumpled paper,
+hurling me headlong, not to the floor of the cage, but straight
+through the sliding-bars which Speed had just flung open with a shout.
+As for me, I landed violently on my back in the sawdust, the breath
+knocked clean out of me.
+
+When I could catch my breath again I realized that there was no time
+to waste. Speed looked at me angrily, but I jerked open the grating,
+flung another chair into the cage, leaped in, and, singling out
+Empress Khatoun, I sailed into her with passionless thoroughness,
+punishing her to a stand-still, while the other lions, Aicha,
+Marghouz, Timour, and Genghis Khan snarled and watched me steadily.
+
+As I emerged from the cage Speed asked me whether I was hurt, and I
+gasped out that I was not.
+
+"What went wrong?" he persisted.
+
+"Timour and that young lioness--no, _I_ went wrong; the lions knew it
+at once; something failed me, I don't know what; upon my soul, Speed,
+I don't know what happened."
+
+"You lost your nerve?"
+
+"No, not that. Timour began looking at me in a peculiar way--he
+certainly dominated me for an instant--for a tenth of a second; and
+then Khatoun flew at me before I could control Timour--"
+
+I hesitated.
+
+"Speed, it was one of those seconds that come to us, when the
+faintest shadow of indecision settles matters. Engineers are subject
+to it at the throttle, pilots at the helm, captains in battle--"
+
+"Men in love," added Speed.
+
+I looked at him, not comprehending.
+
+"By-the-way," said Speed, "Leo Grammont, the greatest lion-tamer who
+ever lived, once told me that a man in love with a woman could not
+control lions; that when a man falls in love he loses that intangible,
+mysterious quality--call it mesmerism or whatever you like--the occult
+force that dominates beasts. And he said that the lions knew it, that
+they perceived it sometimes even before the man himself was aware
+that he was in love."
+
+I looked him over in astonishment.
+
+"What's the matter with you?" he asked, amused.
+
+"What's the matter with _you_?" I demanded. "If you mean to intimate
+that I have fallen in love you are certainly an astonishing ass!"
+
+"Don't talk that way," he said, good-humoredly. "I didn't dream of
+such a thing, or of offending you, Scarlett."
+
+It struck me at the same moment that my irritable and unwarranted
+retort was utterly unlike me.
+
+"I beg your pardon," I said. "I don't know exactly what is the
+matter with me to-day. First I quarrel with poor old Timour Melek,
+then I insult you. I've discovered that I have nerves; I never before
+knew it."
+
+"Cold flap-jacks and cider would have destroyed Hercules himself in
+time," observed Speed, following with his eyes the movements of a
+lithe young girl, who was busy with the hoisting apparatus of the
+flying trapeze. The girl was Jacqueline, dressed in a mended gown of
+Miss Delany's.
+
+"At times," muttered Speed, partly to himself, "that little witch
+frightens me. There is no risk she dares not take; even Horan gets
+nervous; and when that bull-necked numbskull is scared there's reason
+for it."
+
+We walked out into the main tent, where simultaneous rehearsals were
+everywhere in progress; and I picked up the ring-master's whip and
+sent it curling after "Briza," a harmless, fat, white mare on which
+pretty Mrs. Grigg was sitting expectantly. Round and round the ring
+she cantered, now astride two horses, now guiding a "spike,"
+practising assiduously her acrobatics. At intervals, far up in the
+rigging overhead, I caught glimpses of Miss Crystal swinging on her
+trapeze, watching the ring below.
+
+Byram came in to rehearse the opening processional and to rebuke his
+dearest foe, the unspeakable "camuel," bestridden by Mrs. Horan as
+Fatima, Queen of the Desert. Speed followed, squatted on the head of
+the elephant, ankus on thigh, shouting, "Hôut! Mäil! Djebé Noain!
+Mäil the hezar! Mäil!" he thundered, triumphantly, saluting Byram with
+lifted ankus as the elephant ambled past in a cloud of dust.
+
+"Clear the ring!" cried Byram.
+
+Miss Delany, who was outlining Jacqueline with juggler's knives, began
+to pull her stock of cutlery from the soft pine backing; elephant,
+camel, horses trampled out; Miss Crystal caught a dangling rope and
+slid earthward, and I turned and walked towards the outer door with
+Byram.
+
+As I looked back for an instant I saw Jacqueline, in her glittering
+diving-skin, calmly step out of her discarded skirt and walk towards
+the sunken tank in the middle of the ring, which three workmen were
+uncovering.
+
+She was to rehearse her perilous leap for the first time to-day, and I
+told Speed frankly that I was too nervous to be present, and so left
+him staring across the dusky tent at the slim child in spangles.
+
+I had an appointment to meet Robert the Lizard at noon, and I was
+rather curious to find out how much his promises were worth when the
+novelty of his new gun had grown stale. So I started towards the
+cliffs, nibbling a crust of bread for luncheon, though the incident of
+the morning had left me small appetite for food.
+
+The poacher was sunning himself on his doorsill when I came into view
+over the black basalt rocks. To my surprise, he touched his cap as I
+approached, and rose civilly, replying to my greeting with a brief,
+"Salute, m'sieu!"
+
+"You are prompt to the minute," I said, pleasantly.
+
+"You also," he observed. "We are quits, m'sieu--so far."
+
+I told him of the progress that Jacqueline was making; he listened in
+silence, and whether or not he was interested I could not determine.
+
+There was a pause; I looked out across the sun-lit ocean, taking time
+to arrange the order of the few questions which I had to ask.
+
+"Come to the point, m'sieu," he said, dryly. "We have struck
+palms."
+
+Spite of my training, spite of the caution which experience brings to
+the most unsuspicious of us, I had a curious confidence in this
+tattered rascal's loyalty to a promise. And apparently without reason,
+too, for there was something wrong with his eyes--or else with the way
+he used them. They were wonderful, vivid blue eyes, well set and well
+shaped, but he never looked at anybody directly except in moments of
+excitement or fury. At such moments his eyes appeared to be lighted up
+from behind.
+
+"Lizard," I said, "you are a poacher."
+
+His placid visage turned stormy.
+
+"None of that, m'sieu," he retorted; "remember the bargain! Concern
+yourself with your own affairs!"
+
+"Wait," I said. "I'm not trying to reform you. For my purposes it is
+a poacher I want--else I might have gone to another."
+
+"That sounds more reasonable," he admitted, guardedly.
+
+"I want to ask this," I continued: "are you a poacher from
+necessity, or from that pure love of the chase which is born in even
+worse men than you and I?"
+
+"I poach because I love it. There are no poachers from necessity;
+there is always the sea, which furnishes work for all who care to
+steer a sloop, or draw a seine, or wield a sea-rake. I am a pilot."
+
+"But the war?"
+
+"At least the war could not keep me from the sardine grounds."
+
+"So you poach from choice?"
+
+"Yes. It is in me. I am sorry, but what shall I do? _It's in me_."
+
+"And you can't resist?"
+
+He laughed grimly. "Go and call in the hounds from the stag's
+throat!"
+
+Presently I said:
+
+"You have been in jail?"
+
+"Yes," he replied, indifferently.
+
+"For poaching?"
+
+"Eur e'harvik rous," he said in Breton, and I could not make out
+whether he meant that he had been in jail for the sake of a woman or
+of a "little red doe." The Breton language bristles with double
+meanings, symbols, and allegories. The word for doe in Breton is
+_karvez_; or for a doe which never had a fawn, it is _heiez_; for a
+fawn the word is _karvik_.
+
+I mentioned these facts to him, but he only looked dangerous and
+remained silent.
+
+"Lizard," I said, "give me your confidence as I give you mine. I
+will tell you now that I was once in the police--"
+
+He started.
+
+"And that I expect to enter that corps again. And I want your aid."
+
+"My aid? For the police?" His laugh was simply horrible. "I? The
+Lizard? Continue, m'sieu."
+
+"I will tell you why. Yesterday, on a visit to Point Paradise, I saw
+a man lying belly down in the bracken; but I didn't let him know I saw
+him. I have served in the police; I think I recognize that man. He is
+known in Belleville as Tric-Trac. He came here, I believe, to see a
+man called Buckhurst. Can you find this Tric-Trac for me? Do you,
+perhaps, know him?"
+
+"Yes," said the Lizard, "I knew him in prison."
+
+"You have seen him here?"
+
+"Yes, but I will not betray him."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because he is a poor, hunted devil of a poacher like me!" cried the
+Lizard, angrily. "He must live; there's enough land in Finistère for
+us both."
+
+"How long has he been here in Paradise?"
+
+"For two months."
+
+"And he told you he lived by poaching?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"He lies."
+
+The Lizard looked at me intently.
+
+"He has played you; he is a thief, and he has come here to rob. He is
+a filou--a town rat. Can he bend a hedge-snare? Can he line a string
+of dead-falls? Can he even snare enough game to keep himself from
+starving? He a woodsman? _He_ a poacher of the bracken? You are
+simple, my friend."
+
+The veins in the poacher's neck began to swell and a dull color
+flooded his face.
+
+"Prove that he has played me," he said.
+
+"Prove it yourself."
+
+"How?"
+
+"By watching him. He came here to meet a man named Buckhurst."
+
+"I have seen that man Buckhurst, too. What is he doing here?" asked
+the Lizard.
+
+"That is what I want you to find out and help me to find out!" I
+said. "Voilà! Now you know what I want of you."
+
+The sombre visage of the poacher twitched.
+
+"I take it," said I, "that you would not make a comrade of a petty
+pickpocket."
+
+The poacher uttered an oath and shook his fist at me. "Bon sang!" he
+snarled, "I am an honest man if I am a poacher!"
+
+"That's the reason I trusted you," said I, good-humoredly. "Take
+your fists down, my friend, and think out a plan which will permit me
+to observe this Monsieur Tric-Trac at my leisure, without I myself
+being observed."
+
+"That is easy," he said. "I take him food to-day."
+
+"Then I was right," said I, laughing. "He is a Belleville rat, who
+cannot feed himself where there are no pockets to pick. Does he know a
+languste from a linnet? Not he, my friend!"
+
+The Lizard sat still, head bent, knees drawn up, apparently buried in
+thought. There is no injury one can do a Breton of his class like the
+injury of deceiving and mocking.
+
+If Tric-Trac, a man of the city, had come here to profit by the
+ignorance of a Breton--and perhaps laugh at his stupidity!
+
+But I let the ferment work in the dark blood of the Lizard, leaving
+him to his own sombre logic, undisturbed.
+
+Presently the Lizard raised his head and fixed his bright, intelligent
+eyes on me.
+
+"M'sieu," he said, in a curiously gentle voice, "we men of Paradise
+are called out for the army. I must go, or go to jail. How can I
+remain here and help you trap these filous?"
+
+"I have telegraphed to General Chanzy," I said, frankly. "If he
+accepts--or if General Aurelles de Palladine is favorable--I shall
+make you exempt under authority from Tours. I mean to keep you in my
+service, anyway," I added.
+
+"You mean that--that I need not go to Lorient--to this war?"
+
+"I hope so, my friend."
+
+He looked at me, astonished. "If you can do that, m'sieu, you can do
+anything."
+
+"In the meanwhile," I said, dryly, "I want another look at
+Tric-Trac."
+
+"I could show you Tric-Trac in an hour--but to go to him direct would
+excite his suspicion. Besides, there are two gendarmes in Paradise to
+conduct the conscripts to Lorient; there are also several
+gardes-champêtre. But I can get you there, in the open moorland, too,
+under everybody's noses! Shall I?" he said, with an eager ferocity
+that startled me.
+
+"You are not to injure him, no matter what he does or says," I said,
+sharply. "I want to watch him, not to frighten him away. I want to
+see what he and Buckhurst are doing. Do you understand?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then strike palms!"
+
+We struck vigorously.
+
+"Now I am ready to start," I said, pleasantly.
+
+"And now I am ready to tell you something," he said, with the fierce
+light burning behind his blue eyes. "If you were already in the
+police I would not help you--no, not even to trap this filou who has
+mocked me! If you again enter the police I will desert you!"
+
+He licked his dry lips.
+
+"Do you know what a blood-feud is?"
+
+"Yes," I said.
+
+"Then understand that a man in a high place has wronged me--and that
+he is of the police--the Imperial Military police!"
+
+"Who?"
+
+"You will know when I pass my fagot-knife into his throat," he
+snarled--"not before."
+
+The Lizard picked up his fishing-rod, slung a canvas bag over his
+stained velveteen jacket, gathered together a few coils of hair-wire,
+a pot of twig-lime, and other odds and ends, which he tucked into his
+broad-flapped coat-pocket. "Allons," he said, briefly, and we
+started.
+
+The canvas bag on his back bulged, perhaps with provisions, although
+the steel point of a murderous salmon-gaff protruded from the mouth of
+the sack and curved over his shoulder.
+
+The village square in Paradise was nearly deserted. The children had
+raced away to follow the newly arrived gendarmes as closely as they
+dared, and the women were in-doors hanging about their men, whom the
+government summoned to Lorient.
+
+There were, however, a few people in the square, and these the Lizard
+was very careful to greet. Thus we passed the mayor, waddling across
+the bridge, puffing with official importance over the arrival of the
+gendarmes. He bowed to me; the Lizard saluted him with, "Times are
+hard on the fat!" to which the mayor replied morosely, and bade him go
+to the devil.
+
+"Au revoir, donc," retorted the Lizard, unabashed. The mayor bawled
+after him a threat of arrest unless he reported next day in the
+square.
+
+At that the poacher halted. "Don't you wish you might get me!" he
+said, tauntingly, probably presuming on my conditional promise.
+
+"Do you refuse to report?" demanded the mayor, also halting.
+
+"Et ta soeur!" replied the poacher; "is she reporting at the
+caserne?"
+
+The mayor replied angrily, and a typical Breton quarrel began, which
+ended in the mayor biting his thumb-nail at the Lizard and wishing
+him "St. Hubert's luck"--an insult tantamount to a curse.
+
+Now St. Hubert was a mighty hunter, and his luck was proverbially
+marvellous. But as everything goes by contrary in Brittany, to wish a
+Breton hunter good luck was the very worst thing you could do him. Bad
+luck was certain to follow--if not that very day, certainly,
+inexorably, _some_ day.
+
+With wrath in his eyes the Lizard exhausted his profanity, stretching
+out his arm after the retreating mayor, who waddled away,
+gesticulating, without turning his head.
+
+"Come back! Toad! Sourd! V-Snake! Bat of the gorse!" shouted the
+Lizard. "Do you think I'm afraid of your spells, fat owl of Faöuet?
+Evil-eyed eel! The luck of Ker-Ys to you and yours! Ho fois! Do you
+think I am frightened--I, Robert the Lizard? Your wife is a camel and
+your daughter a cow!" The mayor was unmarried, but it didn't matter.
+And, moreover, as that official was now out of ear-shot, the Lizard
+turned anxiously to me.
+
+"Don't tell me you are superstitious enough to care what the mayor
+said," I laughed.
+
+"Dame, m'sieu, we shall have no luck to-day. To-morrow it doesn't
+matter--but if we go to-day, bad luck must come to us."
+
+"To-day? Nonsense!"
+
+"If not, then another day."
+
+"Rubbish! Come on."
+
+"Do you think we could take precautions?" he asked, furtively.
+
+"Take all you like," I said; "rack your brains for an antidote to
+neutralize the bad luck, only come on, you great gaby!"
+
+I knew many of the Finistère legends; out of the corner of my eye I
+watched this stalwart rascal, cowed by gross superstition, peeping
+about for some favorable sign to counteract the luck of St. Hubert.
+
+First he looked up at the crows, and counted them as they passed
+overhead cawing ominously--one--two--three--four--five! Five is danger!
+But wait, more were coming: one--two--three--four--five--six--seven--! A
+loss! Well, that was not as bad as some things. But hark! More crows
+coming: one--two--three! Death!
+
+"Jesû!" he faltered, ducking his head instinctively. "I'll look
+elsewhere for signs."
+
+The signs were all wrong that morning; first we met an ancient crone
+with a great pack of fagots on her bent back, and I was sure he could
+have strangled her cheerfully, because there are few worse omens for a
+hunter of game or of men. Then he examined the first mushroom he
+found, but under the pink-and-pearl cap we saw no insects crawling.
+The veil, too, was rent, showing the poisonous, fluted gills; and the
+toadstool blackened when he cut it with the blade of his fagot-knife.
+
+He tried once more, however, and searched through the gorse until he
+found a heavy lizard, green as an emerald. He teased it till it
+snapped at the silver franc in my hand; its teeth should have
+vanished, but when he held out his finger the creature bit into it
+till the blood spurted.
+
+Still I refused to turn back. What should he do? Then into his mind
+crept a Pouldu superstition. It was a charm against evil, including
+lightning, black-rot, rheumatism, and "douleurs" of other varieties.
+
+The charm was simple. We needed only to build a little fire of gorse,
+and walk through the smoke once or twice. So we built the fire and
+walked through the smoke, the Lizard coughing and cursing until I
+feared he might overdo it by smothering us both. Then stamping out
+the last spark--for he was a woodsman always--we tramped on in better
+humor with destiny.
+
+"You think that turned the curse backward, m'sieu?" he asked.
+
+"There is not the faintest doubt of that," I said.
+
+Far away towards Sainte-Ysole we saw the blue woods which were our
+goal. However, we had no intention of going there as the bee flies,
+partly because Tric-Trac might see us, partly because the Lizard
+wished any prowling passer-by to observe that he was occupied with his
+illegitimate profession. For my part, I very much preferred a brush
+with a garde-champêtre or a summons to explain why no shots were found
+in the Lizard's pheasants, rather than have anybody ask us why we were
+walking so fast towards Sainte-Ysole woods.
+
+Therefore we promptly selected a hedge for operations, choosing a
+high, thick one, which separated two fields of wheat stubble.
+
+Kneeling under the hedge, he broke a hole in it just large enough for
+a partridge to worry through. Then he bent his twig, fastened the
+hair-wire into a running noose, adjusted it, and stood up. This
+manoeuvre he repeated at various hedges or in thickets where he
+"lined" his trail with peeled twigs on every bush.
+
+Once he paused to reset a hare-trap with a turnip, picked up in a
+neighboring field; once he limed a young sapling and fixed a bit of a
+mirror in the branches, but not a bird alighted, although the
+blackthorns were full of fluttering wings. And all the while we had
+been twisting and doubling and edging nearer and nearer to the
+Sainte-Ysole woods, until we were already within their cool shadow,
+and I heard the tinkle of a stream among leafy depths.
+
+Now we had no fear; we were hidden from the eyes of the dry, staring
+plain, and the Lizard laughed to himself as he fastened a grasshopper
+to his hook and flung it into the broad, dark water of the pool at his
+feet.
+
+Slowly he fished up stream, but, although he seemed to be intent on
+his sport, there was something in the bend of his head that suggested
+he might be listening for other sounds than the complex melodies of
+mossy waterfalls.
+
+His poacher's eyes began to glisten and shimmer in the forest dusk
+like the eyes of wild things that hunt at night. As he noiselessly
+turned, his nostrils spread with a tremor, as a good dog's nose
+quivers at the point.
+
+Presently he beckoned me, stepped into the moss, and crawled without a
+sound straight through the holly thicket.
+
+"Watch here," he whispered. "Count a hundred when I disappear, then
+creep on your stomach to the edge of that bank. In the bed of the
+stream, close under you, you will see and hear your friend
+Tric-Trac."
+
+Before I had counted fifty I heard the Lizard cry out, "Bonjour,
+Tric-Trac!" but I counted on, obeying the Lizard's orders as I should
+wish mine to be obeyed. I heard a startled exclamation in reply to the
+Lizard's greeting, then a purely Parisian string of profanity, which
+terminated as I counted one hundred and crept forward to the mossy
+edge of the bank, under the yellow beech leaves.
+
+Below me stood the Lizard, intently watching a figure crouched on
+hands and knees before a small, iron-bound box.
+
+The person addressed as Tric-Trac promptly tried to hide the box by
+sitting down on it. He was a young man, with wide ears and unhealthy
+spots on his face. His hair, which was oily and thick, he wore neatly
+plastered into two pointed love-locks. This not only adorned and
+distinguished him, but it lent a casual and detached air to his ears,
+which stood at right angles to the plane of his face. I knew that
+engaging countenance. It was the same old Tric-Trac.
+
+"Zut, alors!" repeated Tric-Trac, venomously, as the poacher smiled
+again; "can't you give the company notice when you come in?"
+
+"Did you expect me to ring the tocsin?" asked the Lizard.
+
+"Flute!" snarled Tric-Trac. "Like a mud-rat, you creep with no
+sound--c'est pas polite, nom d'un nom!"
+
+He began nervously brushing the pine-needles from his skin-tight
+trousers, with dirty hands.
+
+"What's that box?" asked the Lizard, abruptly.
+
+"Box? Where?" A vacant expression came into Tric-Trac's face, and he
+looked all around him except at the box upon which he was sitting.
+
+"Box?" he repeated, with that hopeless effrontery which never deserts
+criminals of his class, even under the guillotine. "I don't see any
+box."
+
+"You're sitting on it," observed the Lizard.
+
+"_That_ box? Oh! You mean _that_ box? Oh!" He peeped at it between
+his meagre legs, then turned a nimble eye on the poacher.
+
+"What's in it?" demanded the poacher, sullenly.
+
+"Don't know," replied Tric-Trac, with brisk interest. "I found it."
+
+"_Found_ it!" repeated the Lizard, scornfully.
+
+"Certainly, my friend; how do you suppose I came by it?"
+
+"You stole it!"
+
+They faced each other for a moment.
+
+"Supposition that you are correct; what of it?" said the young
+ruffian, calmly.
+
+The Lizard was silent.
+
+"Did you bring me anything to chew on?" inquired Tric-Trac, sniffing
+at the poacher's sack.
+
+"Bread, cheese, three pheasants, cider--more than I eat in a week,"
+said the Lizard, quietly. "It will cost forty sous."
+
+He opened his sack and slowly displayed the provisions.
+
+I looked hard at the iron-bound box.
+
+_On one end was painted the Geneva cross._ Dr. Delmont and Professor
+Tavernier had disappeared carrying red-cross funds. Was that their
+box?
+
+"I said it costs forty sous--two silver francs," repeated the Lizard,
+doggedly.
+
+"Forty sous? That's robbery!" sniffed the young ruffian, now using
+that half-whining, half-sneering form of discourse peculiar alike to
+the vicious chevalier of Paris and his confrère of the provincial
+centres. Accent and slang alone distinguish between them; the argot,
+however, is practically the same.
+
+Tric-Trac fished a few coins from his pocket, counted carefully, and
+handed them, one by one, to the poacher.
+
+The poacher coolly tossed the food on the ground, and, as Tric-Trac
+rose to pick it up, seized the box.
+
+"Drop that!" said Tric-Trac, quickly.
+
+"What's in it?"
+
+"Nothing! Drop it, I tell you."
+
+"Where's the key?"
+
+"There's no key--it's a machine."
+
+"What's in it?"
+
+"Now I've been trying to find out for two weeks," sneered Tric-Trac,
+"and I don't know yet. Drop it!"
+
+"I'm going to open it all the same," said the Lizard, coolly, lifting
+the lid.
+
+A sudden silence followed; then the Lizard swore vigorously. There was
+another box within the light, iron-edged casket, a keyless cube of
+shining steel, with a knob on the top, and a needle which revolved
+around a dial on which were engraved the hours and minutes. And
+emblazoned above the dial was the coat of arms of the Countess de
+Vassart.
+
+When Tric-Trac had satisfied himself concerning the situation, he
+returned to devour his food.
+
+"Flute! Zut! Mince!" he observed; "you and your bad manners, they
+sicken me--tiens!"
+
+The Lizard, flat on his stomach, lay with the massive steel box under
+his chin, patiently turning the needle from figure to figure.
+
+"Wonderful! wonderful!" sneered Tric-Trac. "Continue, my friend, to
+put out your eyes with your fingers!"
+
+The Lizard continued to turn the needle backward and forward around
+the face of the dial. Once, when he twirled it impatiently, a tiny
+chime rang out from within the box, but the steel lid did not open.
+
+"It's the Angelus," said Tric-Trac, with a grimace. "Let us pray, my
+friend, for a cold-chisel--when my friend Buckhurst returns."
+
+Still the Lizard lay, unmoved, turning the needle round and round.
+
+Tric-Trac having devoured the cheese, bread, and an entire pheasant,
+made a bundle of the remaining food, emptied the cider-jug, wiped his
+beardless face with his cap, and announced that he would be pleased to
+"broil" a cigarette.
+
+"Do you want the gendarmes to scent tobacco?" said the Lizard.
+
+"Are the 'Flics' out already?" asked Tric-Trac, astonished.
+
+"They're in Paradise, setting the whole Department by the ears. But
+they can't look sideways at me; I'm going to be exempt."
+
+"It strikes me," observed Tric-Trac, "that you take great
+precautions for your own skin."
+
+"I do," said the Lizard.
+
+"What about me?"
+
+The poacher looked around at the young ruffian. Those muscles in the
+human face which draw back the upper lip are not the muscles used for
+laughter. Animals employ them when they snarl. And now the Lizard
+laughed that way; his upper lip shrank from the edge of his yellow
+teeth, and he regarded Tric-Trac with oblique and burning eyes.
+
+"What about me?" repeated Tric-Trac, in an offended tone. "Am I to
+live in fear of the Flics?"
+
+The Lizard laughed again, and Tric-Trac, disgusted, stood up, settled
+his cap over his wide ears, humming a song as he loosened his
+trousers-belt:
+
+ "Si vous t'nez à vot' squelette
+ Ne fait' pas comme Bibi!
+ Claquer plutôt dans vot' lit
+ Que de claquer à la Roquette!"--
+
+"Who are you gaping at?" he added, abruptly. "Bon; c'est ma geule.
+Et après? Drop that box!"
+
+"Come," replied the Lizard, coldly, placing the box on the moss,
+"you'd better not quarrel with me."
+
+"Oh, that's a threat, is it?" sneered Tric-Trac. He walked over to
+the steel box, lifted it, placed it in the iron-edged case, and sat
+down on the case.
+
+"I want you to comprehend," he added, "that you have pushed your
+nose into an affair that does not concern you. The next time you come
+here to sell your snared pheasants, come like a man, nom de Dieu! and
+not like a cat of the Glacière!--or I'll find a way to stop your
+curiosity."
+
+The dull-red color surged into the poacher's face and heavy neck; for
+a moment he stood as though stunned. Then he dragged out his knife.
+
+Tric-Trac sat looking at him insolently, one hand thrust into the
+bosom of his greasy coat.
+
+"I've got a toy under my cravate that says 'Papa!' six times--pop!
+pop! pop! pop! pop! pop! Papa!" he continued, calmly; "so there's no
+use in your turning red and swelling the veins in your neck. Go to the
+devil! Do you think I can't live without you? Go to the devil with
+your traps and partridges and fish-hooks--and that fagot-knife in your
+fist--and if you try to throw it at me you'll make a sad mistake!"
+
+The Lizard's half-raised hand dropped as Tric-Trac, with a movement
+like lightning, turned a revolver full on him, talking all the while
+in his drawling whine.
+
+"C'est çà! Now you are reasonable. Get out of this forest, my
+friend--or stay and join us. Eh! That astonishes you? Why? Idiot, we
+want men like you. We want men who have nothing to lose and--millions
+to gain! Ah, you are amazed! Yes, millions--I say it. I, Tric-Trac of
+the Glacière, who have done my time in Noumea, too! Yes, millions."
+
+The young ruffian laughed and slowly passed his tongue over his thin
+lips. The Lizard slowly returned his knife to its sheath, looked all
+around, then deliberately sat down on the moss cross-legged. I could
+have hugged him.
+
+"A million? Where?" he asked, vacantly.
+
+"Parbleu! Naturally you ask where," chuckled Tric-Trac. "Tiens! A
+supposition that it's in this box!"
+
+"The box is too small," said the Lizard, patiently.
+
+Tric-Trac roared. "Listen to him! Listen to the child!" he cried,
+delighted. "Too small to hold gold enough for you? Very well--but is
+_a ship big enough_?"
+
+"A big ship is."
+
+Tric-Trac wriggled in convulsions of laughter.
+
+"Oh, listen! He wants a big ship! Well--say a ship as big as that
+ugly, black iron-clad sticking up out of the sea yonder, like a
+Usine-de-gaz!"
+
+"I think that ship would be big enough," said the poacher,
+seriously.
+
+Tric-Trac did not laugh; his little eyes narrowed, and he looked
+steadily at the poacher.
+
+"Do you mean what I mean?" he asked, deliberately.
+
+"Well," said the Lizard, "what do you mean?"
+
+"I mean that France is busy stitching on a new flag."
+
+"Black?"
+
+"Red--_first_."
+
+"Oh-h!" mused the poacher. "When does France hoist that new red
+flag?"
+
+"When Paris falls."
+
+The poacher rested his chin on his doubled fist and leaned forward
+across his gathered knees. "I see," he drawled.
+
+"Under the commune there can be no more poverty," said Tric-Trac;
+"you comprehend that."
+
+"Exactly."
+
+"And no more aristocrats."
+
+"Exactly."
+
+"Well," said Tric-Trac, his head on one side, "how does that
+programme strike you?"
+
+"It is impossible, your programme," said the poacher, rising to his
+feet impatiently.
+
+"You think so? Wait a few days! Wait, my friend," cried Tric-Trac,
+eagerly; "and say!--come back here next Monday! There will be a few
+of us here--a few friends. And keep your mouth shut tight. Here! Wait.
+Look here, friend, don't let a little pleasantry stand between
+comrades. Your fagot-knife against my little flute that sings
+pa-pa!--that leaves matters balanced, eh?"
+
+The young ruffian had followed the Lizard and caught him by his
+stained velvet coat.
+
+"Voyons," he persisted, "do you think the commune is going to let a
+comrade starve for lack of Badinguet's lozenges? Here, take a few of
+these!" and the rascal thrust out a dirty palm full of twenty-franc
+gold pieces.
+
+"What are these for?" muttered the Lizard, sullenly.
+
+"For your beaux yeux, imbecile!" cried Tric-Trac, gayly. "Come back
+when you want more. My comrade, Citizen Buckhurst, will be glad to see
+you next Monday. Adieu, my friend. Don't chatter to the Flics!"
+
+He picked up his box and the packet of provisions, dropped his
+revolver into the side-pocket of his jacket, cocked his greasy cap,
+blew a kiss to the Lizard, and started off straight into the forest.
+After a dozen steps he hesitated, turned, and looked back at the
+poacher for a moment in silence. Then he made a friendly grimace.
+
+"You are not a fool," he said, "so you won't follow me. Come again
+Monday. It will really be worth while, dear friend." Then, as on an
+impulse, he came all the way back, caught the Lizard by the sleeve,
+raised his meagre body on tip-toe, and whispered.
+
+The Lizard turned perfectly white; Tric-Trac trotted away into the
+woods, hugging his box and smirking.
+
+The Lizard and I walked back together. By the time we reached Paradise
+bridge I understood him better, and he understood me. And when we
+arrived at the circus tent, and when Speed came up, handing me a
+telegram from Chanzy refusing my services, the Lizard turned to me
+like an obedient hound to take my orders--now that I was not to
+re-enter the Military Police.
+
+I ordered him to disobey the orders from Lorient and from the mayor of
+Paradise; to take to the woods as though to avoid the conscription; to
+join Buckhurst's franc-company of ruffians, and to keep me fully
+informed.
+
+"And, Lizard," I said, "you may be caught and hanged for it by the
+police, or stabbed by Tric-Trac."
+
+"Bien," he said, coolly.
+
+"But it is a brave thing you do; a soldierly thing!"
+
+He was silent.
+
+"It is for France," I said.
+
+He shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"And we'll catch this Tric-Trac red-handed," I suggested.
+
+"Ah--yes!" His eyes glowed as though lighted up from behind. "And
+another who is high in the police, and a friend of this Tric-Trac!"
+
+"Was it that man's name he whispered to you when you turned so
+white?" I said, suddenly.
+
+The Lizard turned his glowing eyes on me.
+
+"Was the man's name--Mornac?" I asked, at a hopeless venture.
+
+The Lizard shivered; I needed no reply, not even his hoarse, "Are you
+the devil, that you know all things?"
+
+I looked at him wonderingly. What wrong could Mornac have done a
+ragged outcast here on the Breton coast? And where was Mornac? Had he
+left Paris in time to avoid the Prussian trap? Was he here in this
+country, rubbing elbows with Buckhurst?
+
+"Did Tric-Trac tell you that Mornac was at the head of that band?" I
+demanded.
+
+"Why do you ask me?" stammered the Lizard; "you know
+everything--even when it is scarcely whispered!"
+
+The superstitious astonishment of the man, his utter collapse and his
+evident fear of me, did not suit me. Treachery comes through that kind
+of fear; I meant to rule him in another and safer manner. I meant to
+be absolutely honest with him.
+
+It was difficult to persuade him that I had only guessed the name
+whispered; that, naturally, I should think of Mornac as a high officer
+of police, and particularly so since I knew him to be a villain, and
+had also divined his relations with Buckhurst.
+
+I drew from the poacher that Tric-Trac had named Mornac as head of the
+communistic plot in Brittany; that Mornac was coming to Paradise very
+soon, and that then something gay might be looked for.
+
+And that night I took Speed into my confidence and finally Kelly Eyre,
+our balloonist.
+
+And we talked the matter over until long after midnight.
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+FOREWARNED
+
+
+The lions had now begun to give me a great deal of trouble. Timour
+Melek, the old villain, sat on his chair, snarling and striking at me,
+but still going through his paces; Empress Khatoun was a perfect devil
+of viciousness, and refused to jump her hoops; even poor little Aïcha,
+my pet, fed by me soon after her foster-mother, a big Newfoundland,
+had weaned her, turned sullen in the pyramid scene. I roped her and
+trimmed her claws; it was high time.
+
+Oh, they knew, and I knew, that matters had gone wrong with me; that I
+had, for a time, at least, lost the intangible something which I once
+possessed--that occult right to dominate.
+
+It worried me; it angered me. Anger in authority, which is a weakness,
+is quickly discovered by beasts.
+
+Speed's absurd superstition continued to recur to me at inopportune
+moments; in my brain his voice was ceaselessly sounding--"A man in
+love, a man in love, a man in love"--until a flash of temper sent my
+lions scurrying and snarling into a pack, where they huddled and
+growled, staring at me with yellow, mutinous eyes.
+
+Yet, strangely, the greater the risk, and the plainer to me that my
+lions were slipping out of my control, the more my apathy increased,
+until even Byram began to warn me.
+
+Still I never felt the slightest physical fear; on the contrary, as
+my irritation increased my disdain grew. It seemed a monstrous bit of
+insolence on the part of these overgrown cats to meditate an attack on
+me. Even though I began to feel that it was only a question of time
+when the moment must arrive, even though I gradually became certain
+that the first false move on my part would precipitate an attack, the
+knowledge left me almost indifferent.
+
+That morning, as I left the training-cage--where, among others, Kelly
+Eyre stood looking on--I suddenly remembered Sylvia Elven and her
+message to Eyre, which I had never delivered.
+
+We strolled towards the stables together; he was a pleasant,
+clean-cut, fresh-faced young fellow, a man I had never known very
+well, but one whom I was inclined to respect and trust.
+
+"My son," said I, politely, "do you think you have arrived at an age
+sufficiently mature to warrant my delivering to you a message from a
+pretty girl?"
+
+"There's no harm in attempting it, my venerable friend," he replied,
+laughing.
+
+"This is the message," I said: "_On Sunday the book-stores are
+closed in Paris._"
+
+"Who gave you that message, Scarlett?" he stammered.
+
+I looked at him curiously, brutally; a red, hot blush had covered his
+face from neck to hair.
+
+"In case you asked, I was to inform you," said I, "that a Bretonne
+at Point Paradise sent the message."
+
+"A Bretonne!" he repeated, as though scared.
+
+"A Bretonne!"
+
+"But I don't know any!"
+
+I shrugged my shoulders discreetly.
+
+"Are you certain she was a Bretonne?" he asked. His nervousness
+surprised me.
+
+"Does she not say so?" I replied.
+
+"I know--I know--but that message--there is only one woman who could
+have sent it--" He hesitated, red as a pippin.
+
+He was so young, so manly, so unspoiled, and so red, that on an
+impulse I said: "Kelly, it was Mademoiselle Elven who sent you the
+message."
+
+His face expressed troubled astonishment.
+
+"Is that her name?" he asked.
+
+"Well--it's one of them, anyway," I replied, beginning to feel
+troubled in my turn. "See here, Kelly, it's not my business, but you
+won't mind if I speak plainly, will you? The times are queer--you
+understand. Everybody is suspicious; everybody is under suspicion in
+these days. And I want to say that the young lady who sent that
+curious message to you is as clever as twenty men like you and me."
+
+He was silent.
+
+"If it is a love affair, I'll stop now--not a question, you
+understand. If it is not--well, as an older and more battered and
+world-worn man, I'm going to make a suggestion to you--with your
+permission."
+
+"Make it," he said, quietly.
+
+"Then I will. Don't talk to Mademoiselle Elven. You, Speed, and I
+know something about a certain conspiracy; we are going to know more
+before we inform the captain of that cruiser out there beyond Point
+Paradise. I know Mademoiselle Elven--slightly. I am afraid of her--and
+I have not yet decided why. Don't talk to her."
+
+"But--I don't know her," he said; "or, at least I don't know her by
+that name."
+
+After a moment I said: "Is the person in question the companion of
+the Countess de Vassart?"
+
+"If she is I do not know it," he replied.
+
+"Was she once an actress?"
+
+"It would astonish me to believe it!" he said.
+
+"Then who do you believe sent you that message, Kelly?"
+
+His cheeks began to burn again, and he gave me an uncomfortable look.
+A silence, and he sat down in my dressing-room, his boyish head buried
+in his hands. After a glance at him I began changing my training-suit
+for riding-clothes, whistling the while softly to myself. As I
+buttoned a fresh collar he looked up.
+
+"Mr. Scarlett, you are well-born and--you are here in the circus with
+the rest of us. You know what we are--you know that two or three of us
+have seen better days,... that something has gone wrong with us to
+bring us here,... but we never speak of it,... and never ask
+questions.... But I should like to tell you about myself;... you are a
+gentleman, you know,... and I was not born to anything in
+particular.... I was a clerk in the consul's office in Paris when
+Monsieur Tissandier took a fancy to me, and I entered his balloon
+ateliers to learn to assist him."
+
+He hesitated. I tied my necktie very carefully before a bit of broken
+mirror.
+
+"Then the government began to make much of us,... you remember? We
+started experiments for the army.... I was intensely interested, and
+... there was not much talk about secrecy then,... and my salary was
+large, and I was received at the Tuileries. My head was turned;...
+life was easy, brilliant. I made an invention--a little electric screw
+which steered a balloon ... sometimes..." He laughed, a mirthless
+laugh, and looked at me. All the color had gone from his face.
+
+"There was a woman--" I turned partly towards him.
+
+"We met first at the British Embassy,... then elsewhere,...
+everywhere.... We skated together at the club in the Bois at that
+celebrated fête,... you know?--the Emperor was there--"
+
+"I know," I said.
+
+He looked at me dreamily, passed his hand over his face, and went on:
+
+"Somehow we always talked about military balloons. And that evening
+... she was so interested in my work ... I brought some little
+sketches I had made--"
+
+"I understand," I said.
+
+He looked at me miserably. "She was to return the sketches to me at
+Calman's--the fashionable book-store,... next day.... I never thought
+that the next day was to be Sunday.... The book-stores of Paris are
+not open on Sunday--_but the War Office is_."
+
+I began to put on my coat.
+
+"And the sketches were asked for?" I suggested--"and you naturally
+told what had become of them?"
+
+"I refused to name her."
+
+"Of course; men of our sort can't do that."
+
+"I am not of your sort--you know it."
+
+"Oh yes, you are, my friend--and the same kind of fool, too. There's
+only one kind of man in this world."
+
+He looked at me listlessly.
+
+"So they sent you to a fortress?" I asked.
+
+"To New Caledonia,... four years.... I was only twenty, Scarlett,...
+and ruined.... I joined Byram in Antwerp and risked the tour through
+France."
+
+After a moment's thought I said: "In your opinion, what nation
+profited by your sketches? Italy? Spain? Prussia? Bavaria? England?...
+Perhaps Russia?"
+
+"Do you mean that this woman was a foreign spy?"
+
+"Perhaps. Perhaps she was only careless, or capricious,... or
+inconstant.... You never saw her again?"
+
+"I was under arrest on Sunday. I do not know.... I like to believe
+that she went to the book-store on Monday,... that she made an
+innocent mistake,... but I never knew, Scarlett,... I never knew."
+
+"Suppose you ask her?" I said.
+
+He reddened furiously.
+
+"I cannot.... If she did me a wrong, I cannot reproach her; if she
+was innocent--look at me, Scarlett!--a ragged, ruined mountebank in a
+travelling circus,... and she is--"
+
+"An honest woman that a man might care for?"
+
+"That is ... my belief."
+
+"If she is," I said, "go and ask her about those drawings."
+
+"But if she is not,... I cannot tell _you_!" he flashed out.
+
+"Let us shake hands, Kelly," I said,... "and be very good friends.
+Will you?"
+
+He gave me his hand rather shyly.
+
+"We will never speak of her again," I said,... "unless you desire
+it. You have had a terrible lesson in caution; I need say no more.
+Only remember that I have trusted you with a secret concerning
+Buckhurst's conspiracy."
+
+His firm hand tightened on mine, then he walked away, steadily, head
+high. And I went out to saddle my horse for a canter across the moor
+to Point Paradise.
+
+It was a gray day, with a hint of winter in the air, and a wind that
+set the gorse rustling like tissue-paper. Up aloft the sun glimmered,
+a white spot in a silvery smother; pale lights lay on moorland and
+water; the sea tumbled over the bar, boiling like a flood of liquid
+lead from which the spindrift curled and blew into a haze that buried
+the island of Groix and turned the anchored iron-clad to a phantom.
+
+A day for a gallop, if ever there was such a day!--a day to wash out
+care from a troubled mind and cleanse it in the whipping, reeking, wet
+east wind--a day for a fox! And I rose in my saddle and shouted aloud
+as a red fox shot out of the gorse and galloped away across the
+endless moorland, with the feathers of a mallard still sticking to his
+whiskers.
+
+Oh, what a gallop, with risk enough, too; for I did not know the coast
+moors; and the deep clefts from the cliffs cut far inland, so that eye
+and ear and bridle-hand were tense and ready to catch danger ere it
+ingulfed us in some sea-churned crevice hidden by the bracken. And how
+the gray gulls squealed, high whirling over us, and the wild ducks in
+the sedge rose with clapping wings, craning their necks, only to swing
+overhead in circles, whimpering, and drop, with pendent legs and wings
+aslant, back into the bog from which we startled them.
+
+A ride into an endless gray land, sweet with sea-scents, rank with the
+perfume of salty green things; a ride into a land of gushing winds,
+wet as spray, strong and caressing, too, and full of mischief; winds
+that set miles of sedge rippling; sudden winds, that turned still
+pools to geysers and set the yellow gorse flowers flying; winds that
+rushed up with a sea-roar like the sound in shells, then, sudden, died
+away, to leave the furrowed clover motionless and the tall reeds still
+as death.
+
+So, by strange ways and eccentric circles, like the aërial paths of
+homing sea-birds, I came at last to the spot I had set out for,
+consciously; yet it surprised me to find I had come there.
+
+Before I crossed the little bridge I scented the big orange-tinted
+tea-roses and the pinks. Leaves on apricots were falling; the fig-tree
+was bare of verdure, and the wind chased the big, bronzed leaves
+across the beds of herbs, piling them into heaps at the base of the
+granite wall.
+
+A boy took my horse; a servant in full Breton costume admitted me;
+the velvet humming of Sylvia Elven's spinning-wheel filled the
+silence, like the whirring of a great, soft moth imprisoned in a
+room:
+
+ "Woe to the Maids of Paradise,
+ Yvonne!
+ Twice have the Saxons landed--twice!
+ Yvonne!
+ Yet shall Paradise see them thrice!
+ Yvonne! Yvonne! Marivonik!
+
+ "Fair is their hair and blue their eyes,
+ Yvonne!
+ Body o' me! their words are lies,
+ Yvonne!
+ Maids of Paradise, oh, be wise!
+ Yvonne! Yvonne! Marivonik!"
+
+The door swung open noiselessly; the whir of the wheel and the sound
+of the song filled the room for an instant, then was shut out as the
+Countess de Vassart closed the door and came forward to greet me.
+
+In her pretty, soft gown, with a tint of blue ribbon at the neck and
+shoulders, she seemed scarcely older than a school-girl, so radiant,
+so sweet and fresh she stood there, giving me her little hand to touch
+in friendship.
+
+"It was so good of you to come," she said; "I know you made it a
+duty and gave up a glorious gallop to be amiable to me. Did you?"
+
+I tried to say something, but her loveliness confused me.
+
+Somebody brought tea--I don't know who; all I could see clearly was
+her gray eyes meeting mine--the light from the leaded window touching
+her glorious, ruddy hair.
+
+As for the tea, I took whatever she offered; doubtless I drank it, but
+I don't remember. Nor do I remember what she said at first, for
+somehow I began thinking about my lions, and the thought obsessed me
+even while striving to listen to her, even in the tingling maze of
+other thoughts which kept me dumb under the exquisite spell of this
+intimacy with her.
+
+The delicate odor of ripened herbs stole into the room from the
+garden; far away, through the whispering whir of the spinning-wheel, I
+heard the sea.
+
+"Do you like Sylvia's song?" she asked, turning her head to listen.
+"It is a very old song--a very, very old one--centuries old. It's all
+about the English, how they came to harry our coasts in those
+days--and it has almost a hundred verses!" Something of the Bretonne
+came into her eyes for a moment, that shadow of sadness, that patient
+fatalism in which, too, there is something of distrust. The next
+instant her eyes cleared and she smiled.
+
+"The Trécourts suffered much from the English raiders. I am a
+Trécourt, you know. That song was made about us--about a young girl,
+Yvonne de Trécourt, who was carried away by the English. She was
+foolish; she had a lover among the Saxons,... and she set a signal for
+him, and they came and sacked the town, and carried her away, and that
+was what she got for her folly."
+
+She bent her head thoughtfully; the sound of the sea grew louder in
+the room; a yellow light stole out of the west and touched the
+window-panes, slowly deepening to orange; against it the fruit trees
+stood, a leafless tracery of fragile branches.
+
+"It is the winter awaking, very far away," she said, under her
+breath.
+
+Something in the hollow monotone of the sea made me think again of the
+low grumble of restless lions. The sound was hateful. Why should it
+steal in here--why haunt me even in this one spot in all the world
+where a world-tired man had found a moment's peace in a woman's eyes.
+
+"Are you troubled?" she asked, then colored at her own question, as
+though deeming the impulse to speak unwarranted.
+
+"No, not troubled. Happiness is often edged with a shadow. I am
+content to be here."
+
+She bent her head and looked at the heavy rose lying in solitary
+splendor on the table. The polished wood reflected it in subdued tints
+of saffron.
+
+"It is a strange friendship," I said.
+
+"Ours?... yes."
+
+I said, musing: "To me it is like magic. I scarce dare speak, scarce
+breathe, lest the spell break."
+
+She was silent.
+
+"--Lest the spell break--and this house, this room, fade away,
+leaving me alone, staring at the world once more."
+
+"If there is a spell, you have cast it," she said, laughing at my
+sober face. "A wizard ought to be able to make his spells endure."
+
+Then her face grew graver. "You must forget the past," she said;
+"you must forget all that was cruel and false and unhappy,... will
+you not?"
+
+"Yes, madame."
+
+"I, too," she said, "have much to forget and much to hope for; and
+you taught me how to forget and how to hope."
+
+"I, madame?"
+
+"Yes,... at La Trappe, at Morsbronn, and here. Look at me. Have I not
+changed?"
+
+"Yes," I said, fascinated.
+
+"I know I have," she said, as though speaking to herself. "Life
+means more now. Somehow my childhood seems to have returned, with all
+its hope of the world and all its confidence in the world, and its
+certainty that all will be right. Years have fallen from my shoulders
+like a released burden that was crushing me to my knees. I have
+awakened from a dream that was not life at all,... a dream in which
+I, alone, staggered through darkness, bearing the world on my
+shoulders--the world doubly weighted with the sorrows of mankind,... a
+dream that lasted years, but..._you_ awoke me."
+
+She leaned forward and lifted the rose, touching her face with it.
+
+"It was so simple, after all--this secret of the world's malady. You
+read it for me. I know now what is written on the eternal tablets--to
+live one's own life as it is given, in honor, charity, without malice;
+to seek happiness where it is offered; to share it when possible; to
+uplift. But, most of all, to be happy and accept happiness as a
+heavenly gift that is to be shared with as many as possible. And this
+I have learned since ... I knew you."
+
+The light in the room had grown dimmer; I leaned forward to see her
+face.
+
+"Am I not right?" she asked.
+
+"I think so.... I am learning from you."
+
+"But you taught this creed to me!" she cried.
+
+"No, you are teaching it to me. And the first lesson was a gift,...
+your friendship."
+
+"Freely given, gladly given," she said, quickly. "And yours I have
+in return,... and will keep always--always--"
+
+She crushed the rose against her mouth, looking at me with inscrutable
+gray eyes, as I had seen her look at me once at La Trappe, once in
+Morsbronn.
+
+I picked up my gloves and riding-crop; as I rose she stood up in the
+dusk, looking straight at me.
+
+I said something about Sylvia Elven and my compliments to her,
+something else about the happiness I felt at coming to the château
+again, something about her own goodness to me--Heaven knows what!--and
+she gave me her hand and I held it a moment.
+
+"Will you come again?" she asked.
+
+I stammered a promise and made my way blindly to the door which a
+servant threw open, flung myself astride my horse, and galloped out
+into the waste of moorland, seeing nothing, hearing nothing save the
+low roar of the sea, like the growl of restless lions.
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+A RESTLESS MAN
+
+
+When I came into camp, late that afternoon, I found Byram and Speed
+groping about among a mass of newspapers and letters, the first mail
+we circus people had received for nearly two months.
+
+There were letters for all who were accustomed to look for letters
+from families, relatives, or friends at home. I never received
+letters--I had received none of that kind in nearly a score of years,
+yet that curious habit of expectancy had not perished in me, and I
+found myself standing with the others while Byram distributed the
+letters, one by one, until the last home-stamped envelope had been
+given out, and all around me the happy circus-folk were reading in
+homesick contentment. I know of no lonelier man than he who lingers
+empty-handed among those who pore over the home mail.
+
+But there were newspapers enough and to spare--French, English,
+American; and I sat down by my lion's cage and attempted to form some
+opinion of the state of affairs in France. And, as far as I could read
+between the lines, this is what I gathered, partly from my own
+knowledge of past events, partly from the foreign papers, particularly
+the English:
+
+When, on the 3d of September, the humiliating news arrived that the
+Emperor was a prisoner and his army annihilated, the government, for
+the first time in its existence, acted with promptness and decision
+in a matter of importance. Secret orders were sent by couriers to the
+Bank of France, to the Louvre, and to the Invalides; and, that same
+night, train after train rushed out of Paris loaded with the
+battle-flags from the Invalides, the most important pictures and
+antique sculptures from the Louvre, the greater part of the gold and
+silver from the Bank of France, and, last but by no means least, the
+crown and jewels of France.
+
+This Speed and I already knew.
+
+These trains were despatched to Brest, and at the same time a telegram
+was directed to the admiral commanding the French iron-clad fleet in
+the Baltic to send an armored cruiser to Brest with all haste
+possible, there to await further orders, but to be fully prepared in
+any event to take on board certain goods designated in cipher. This we
+knew in a general way, though Speed understood that Lorient was to be
+the port of departure.
+
+The plan was a good one and apparently simple; and there seemed to be
+no doubt that jewels, battle-flags, pictures, and coin were already
+beyond danger from the German armies, now plodding cautiously
+southward toward the capital, which was slowly recovering from its
+revolutionary convulsions and preparing for a siege.
+
+The plan, then, was simple; but, for an equally simple reason, it
+miscarried in the following manner. Early in August, while the French
+armies from the Rhine to the Meuse were being punished with frightful
+regularity and precision, the French Mediterranean squadron had sailed
+up and down that interesting expanse of water, apparently in patriotic
+imitation of the historic
+
+ "King of France and twenty thousand men."
+For, it now appeared, the French admiral was afraid that the Spanish
+navy might aid the German ships in harassing the French transports,
+which at that time were frantically engaged in ferrying a sea-sick
+Algerian army across the Mediterranean to the mother country.
+
+Of course there was no ground for the admiral's suspicions. The German
+war-ships stayed in their own harbors, the Spaniards made no offensive
+alliance with Prussia, and at length the French admiral sailed
+triumphantly away with his battleships and cruisers.
+
+On the 7th of August the squadron of four battleships, two armored
+corvettes, and a despatch-boat steamed out of Brest, picking up on its
+way northward three more iron-clad frigates, and several cruisers and
+despatch-boats; and on the 11th of August, 1870, the squadron anchored
+off Heligoland, from whence Admiral Fourichon proclaimed the blockade
+of the German coast.
+
+It must have been an imposing sight! There lay the great iron-clads,
+the _Magnanime_, the _Héroine_, the _Provence_, the _Valeureuse_, the
+_Revanche_, the _Invincible_, the _Couronne_! There lay the cruisers,
+the _Atalante_, the _Renaud_, the _Cosmao_, the _Decrès_! There, too,
+lay the single-screw despatch-boats _Reine-Hortense_, _Renard_, and
+_Dayot_. And upon their armored decks, three by three, stalked the
+French admirals. Yet, without cynicism, it may be said that the
+admirals of France fought better, in 1870, on dry land than they did
+on the ocean.
+
+However, the German ships stayed peacefully inside their fortified
+ports, and the three French admirals pranced peacefully up and down
+outside, until the God of battles intervened and trouble naturally
+ensued.
+
+On the 6th of September all the seas of Europe were set clashing under
+a cyclone that rose to a howling hurricane. The British iron-clad
+_Captain_ foundered off Finistère; the French fleet in the Baltic was
+scattered to the four winds.
+
+In the midst of the tempest a French despatch-boat, the _Hirondelle_,
+staggered into sight, signalling the flag-ship. Then the French
+admiral for the first time learned the heart-breaking news of Sedan,
+and as the tempest-tortured battle-ship drove seaward the signals went
+up: "Make for Brest!" The blockade of the German coast was at an
+end.
+
+On the 4th of September the treasure-laden trains had left Paris for
+Brest. On the 5th the _Hirondelle_ steamed out towards the fleet with
+the news from Sedan and the orders for the detachment of a cruiser to
+receive the crown jewels. On the 6th the news and the orders were
+signalled to the flag-ship; but the God of battles unchained a tempest
+which countermanded the order and hurled the iron-clads into outer
+darkness.
+
+Some of the ships crept into English ports, burning their last lumps
+of coal, some drifted into Dunkerque; but the flag-ship disappeared
+for nine long days, at last to reappear off Cherbourg, a stricken
+thing with a stricken crew and an admiral broken-hearted.
+
+So, for days and days, the treasure-laden trains must have stood
+helpless in the station at Brest, awaiting the cruiser that did not
+come.
+
+On the 17th of September the French Channel squadron, of seven heavy
+iron-clads, unexpectedly steamed into Lorient harbor and dropped
+anchor amid thundering salutes from the forts; and the next day one of
+the treasure-trains came flying into Lorient, to the unspeakable
+relief of the authorities in the beleaguered capital.
+
+Speed and I already knew the secret orders sent. The treasures,
+including the crown diamonds, were to be stored in the citadel, and an
+armored cruiser was to lie off the arsenal with banked fires, ready to
+receive the treasures at the first signal and steam to the French
+fortified port of Saïgon in Cochin China, by a course already
+determined.
+
+Why on earth those orders had been changed so that the cruiser was to
+lie off Groix I could not imagine, unless some plot had been
+discovered in Lorient which had made it advisable to shift the
+location of the treasures for the third time.
+
+Pondering there at the tent door, amid my heap of musty newspapers, I
+looked out into the late, gray afternoon and saw the maids of Paradise
+passing and repassing across the bridge with a clicking of wooden
+shoes and white head-dresses glimmering in the dusk of the trees.
+
+The town had filled within a day or two; the Paradise coiffe was not
+the only coiffe to be seen in the square; there was the
+delicate-winged head-dress of Faöuet, the beautiful coiffes of
+Rosporden, Sainte-Anne d'Auray, and Pont Aven; there, too, flashed the
+scarlet skirts of Bannalec and the gorgeous embroidered bodices of the
+interior; there were the men of Quimperlé in velvet, the men of
+Penmarch, the men of Faöuet with their dark, Spanish-like faces and
+their sombreros, and their short yellow jackets and leggings. All in
+holiday costume, too, for the maids were stiff in silver and lace, and
+the men wore carved sabots and embroidered gilets.
+
+"Governor," I called out to Byram, "the town is filling fast. It's
+like a Pardon in Morbihan; we'll pack the old tent to the
+nigger's-heaven!"
+
+"It's a fact," he said, pushing his glasses up over his forehead and
+fanning his face with his silk hat. "We're going to open to a lot of
+money, Mr. Scarlett, and ... I ain't goin' to forgit them that stood
+by me, neither."
+
+He placed a heavy hand on my shoulder, and, stooping, peered into my
+face.
+
+"Air you sick, m' friend?" he asked.
+
+"I, governor? Why, no."
+
+"Ain't been bit by that there paltry camuel nor nothin', hev ye?"
+
+"No; do I look ill?"
+
+"Peaked--kind o' peaked. White, with dark succles under your eyes.
+Air you nervous?"
+
+"About the lions? Oh no. Don't worry about me, governor."
+
+He sighed, adjusted his spectacles, and blew his nose.
+
+"Mr. Speed--he's worriting, too; he says that Empress Khatoun means
+to hev ye one o' these days."
+
+"You tell Mr. Speed to worry over his own affairs--that child,
+Jacqueline, for instance. I suppose she made her jump without trouble
+to-day? I was too nervous to stay and watch her."
+
+"M' friend," said Byram, in solemn ecstasy, "I take off my hat to
+that there kid!" And he did so with a flourish. "You orter seen her;
+she hung on that flying trap, jest as easy an' sassy! We was all half
+crazy. Speed he grew blue around the gills; Miss Crystal, a-swingin'
+there in the riggin' by her knees, kept a swallerin' an' lickin' her
+lips, she was that scared.
+
+"'Ready?' she calls out in a sort o' quaver.
+
+"'Ready!' sez little Jacqueline, cool as ice, swingin' by her knees.
+'Go!' sez Miss Crystal, an' the kid let go, an' Miss Crystal grabbed
+her by the ankles. 'Ready?' calls up Speed, beside the tank.
+
+"'Ready!' sez the kid, smilin'. 'Drop!' cries Speed. An' Jacqueline
+shot down like a blazing star--whir! swish! splash! All over! An' that
+there nervy kid a floatin' an' a sportin' like a minnie-fish at
+t'other end o' the tank! Oh, gosh, but it was grand! It was jest--"
+
+Speech failed; he walked away, waving his arms, his rusty silk hat on
+the back of his head.
+
+A few moments later drums began to roll from the square. Speed,
+passing, called out to me that the conscripts were leaving for
+Lorient; so I walked down to the bridge, where the crowd had gathered
+and where a tall gendarme stood, his blue-and-white uniform distinct
+in the early evening light. The mayor was there, too, dressed in his
+best, waddling excitedly about, and buttonholing at intervals a young
+lieutenant of infantry, who appeared to be extremely bored.
+
+There were the conscripts of the Garde Mobile, an anxious peasant
+rabble, awkward, resigned, docile as cattle. Here stood a farmer,
+reeking of his barnyard; here two woodsmen from the forest, belted and
+lean; but the majority were men of the sea, heavy-limbed, sun-scorched
+fellows, with little, keen eyes always half closed, and big, helpless
+fists hanging. Some carried their packets slung from hip to shoulder,
+some tied their parcels to the muzzles of their obsolete muskets. A
+number wore the boatman's smock, others the farmer's blouse of linen,
+but the greater number were clad in the blue-wool jersey and cloth
+béret of the sailor.
+
+Husbands, sons, lovers, looked silently at the women. The men uttered
+no protest, no reproach; the women wept very quietly. In their hearts
+that strange mysticism of the race predominated--the hopeless
+acceptance of a destiny which has, for centuries, left its imprint in
+the sad eyes of the Breton. Generations of martyrdom leave a cowed and
+spiritually fatigued race which breeds stoics.
+
+Like great white blossoms, the spotless head-dresses of the maids of
+Paradise swayed and bowed above the crowd.
+
+A little old woman stood beside a sailor, saying to anybody who would
+listen to her: "My son--they are taking my son. Why should they take
+my son?"
+
+Another said: "They are taking mine, too, but he cannot fight on
+land. He knows the sea; he is not afraid at sea. Can nobody help us?
+He cannot fight on land; he does not know how!"
+
+A woman carrying a sleeping baby stood beside the drummers at the
+fountain. Five children dragged at her skirts and peered up at the
+mayor, who shrugged his shoulders and shook his fat head.
+
+"What can I do? He must march with the others, your man," said the
+mayor, again and again. But the woman with the baby never ceased her
+eternal question: "What can we live on if you take him? I do not mean
+to complain too much, but we have nothing. What can we live on, m'sieu
+the mayor?"
+
+But now the drummers had stepped out into the centre of the square and
+were drawing their drum-sticks from the brass sockets in their
+baldricks.
+
+"Good-bye! Good-bye!" sobbed the maids of Paradise, giving both hands
+to their lovers. "We will pray for you!"
+
+"Pray for us," said the men, holding their sweethearts' hands.
+
+"Attention!" cried the officer, a slim, hectic lieutenant from
+Lorient.
+
+The mayor handed him the rolls, and the lieutenant, facing the
+shuffling single rank, began to call off:
+
+"Roux of Bannalec?"
+
+"Here, monsieur--"
+
+"Don't say, 'Here, monsieur!' Say, 'Present!' Now, Roux?"
+
+"Present, monsieur--"
+
+"Idiot! Kedrec?"
+
+"Present!"
+
+"That's right! Penmarch?"
+
+"Present!"
+
+"Rhuis of Sainte-Yssel?"
+
+"Present!"
+
+"Hervé of Paradise Beacon?"
+
+"Present!"
+
+"Laenec?"
+
+"Present!"
+
+"Duhamel?"
+
+"Present!"
+
+The officer moistened his lips, turned the page, and continued:
+
+"Carnac of Alincourt?"
+
+There was a silence, then a voice cried, "Crippled!"
+
+"Mark him off, lieutenant," said the mayor, pompously; "he's our
+little hunchback."
+
+"Shall I mark you in his place?" asked the lieutenant, with a smile
+that turned the mayor's blood to water. "No? You would make a fine
+figure for a forlorn hope."
+
+A man burst out laughing, but he was half crazed with grief, and his
+acrid mirth found no response. Then the roll-call was resumed:
+
+"Gestel?"
+
+"Present!"
+
+"Garenne!"
+
+There was another silence.
+
+"Robert Garenne!" repeated the officer, sharply. "Monsieur the mayor
+has informed me that you are liable for military duty. If you are
+present, answer to your name or take the consequences!"
+
+The poacher, who had been lounging on the bridge, slouched slowly
+forward and touched his cap.
+
+"I am organizing a franc corps," he said, with a deadly sidelong
+glance at the mayor, who now stood beside the lieutenant.
+
+"You can explain that at Lorient," replied the lieutenant. "Fall in
+there!"
+
+"But I--"
+
+"Fall in!" repeated the lieutenant.
+
+The poacher's visage became inflamed. He hesitated, looking around for
+an avenue of escape. Then he caught my disgusted eye.
+
+"For the last time," said the lieutenant, coolly drawing his
+revolver, "I order you to fall in!"
+
+The poacher backed into the straggling rank, glaring.
+
+"Now," said the lieutenant, "you may go to your house and get your
+packet. If we have left when you return, follow and report at the
+arsenal in Lorient. Fall out! March!"
+
+The poacher backed out to the rear of the rank, turned on his heel,
+and strode away towards the coast, clinched fists swinging by his
+side.
+
+There were not many names on the roll, and the call was quickly
+finished. And now the infantry drummers raised their sticks high in
+the air, there was a sharp click, a crash, and the square echoed.
+
+"March!" cried the officer; and, drummers ahead, the long single rank
+shuffled into fours, and the column started, enveloped in a throng of
+women and children.
+
+"Good-bye!" sobbed the women. "We will pray!"
+
+"Good-bye! Pray!"
+
+The crowd pressed on into the dusk. Far up the darkening road the
+white coiffes of the women glimmered; the drum-roll softened to a
+distant humming.
+
+The children, who did not understand, had gathered around a hunchback,
+the exempt cripple of the roll-call.
+
+"Ho! Fois!" I heard him say to the crowd of wondering little ones,
+"if I were not exempt I'd teach these Prussians to dance the
+farandole to my biniou! Oui, dame! And perhaps I'll do it yet, spite
+of the crooked back I was not born with--as everybody knows! Oui,
+dame! Everybody knows I was born as straight as the next man!"
+
+The children gaped, listening to the distant drumming, now almost
+inaudible.
+
+The cripple rose, lighted a lantern, and walked slowly out toward the
+cliffs, carrying himself with that uncanny dignity peculiar to
+hunchbacks. And as he walked he sang, in his thin, sharp voice, the
+air of "The Three Captains":
+
+ "J'ai eu dans son coeur la plac' la plus belle,
+ La plac' la plus belle.
+ J'ai passé trois ans, trois ans avec elle,
+ Trois ans avec elle.
+ J'ai eu trois enfants qui sont capitaines,
+ Qui sont capitaines.
+ L'un est à Bordeaux, l'autre à la Rochelle,
+ L'autre à la Rochelle.
+ Le troisième ici, caressent les belles,
+ Caressent les belles."
+
+Far out across the shadowy cliffs I heard his lingering, strident
+chant, and caught the spark of his lantern; then silence and darkness
+fell over the deserted square; the awed children, fingers interlocked,
+crept homeward through the dusk; there was no sound save the rippling
+wash of the river along the quay of stone.
+
+Tired, a trifle sad, thinking perhaps of those home letters which had
+come to all save me, I leaned against the river wall, staring at the
+darkness; and over me came creeping that apathy which I had already
+learned to recognize and even welcome as a mental anæsthetic which set
+that dark sentinel, care, a-drowsing.
+
+What did I care, after all? Life had stopped for me years before;
+there was left only a shell in which that unseen little trickster, the
+heart, kept tap-tapping away against a tired body. Was that what we
+call life? The sorry parody!
+
+A shape slunk near me through the dusk, furtive, uncertain. "Lizard,"
+I said, indifferently. He came up, my gun on his ragged shoulder.
+
+"You go with your class?" I asked.
+
+"No, I go to the forest," he said, hoarsely. "You shall hear from
+me."
+
+I nodded.
+
+"Are you content?" he demanded, lingering.
+
+The creature wanted sympathy, though he did not know it. I gave him my
+hand and told him he was a brave man; and he went away, noiselessly,
+leaving me musing by the river wall.
+
+After a long while--or it may only have been a few minutes--the square
+began to fill again with the first groups of women, children, and old
+men who had escorted the departing conscripts a little way on their
+march to Lorient. Back they came, the maids of Paradise silent,
+tearful, pitifully acquiescent; the women of Bannalec, Faöuet,
+Rosporden, Quimperlé chattering excitedly about the scene they had
+witnessed. The square began to fill; lanterns were lighted around the
+fountain; the two big lamps with their brass reflectors in front of
+the mayor's house illuminated the pavement and the thin tree-foliage
+with a yellow radiance.
+
+The chatter grew louder as new groups in all sorts of gay head-dresses
+arrived; laughter began to be heard; presently the squealing of the
+biniou pipes broke out from the bowling-green, where, high on a bench
+supported by a plank laid across two cider barrels, the hunchback sat,
+skirling the farandole. Ah, what a world entire was this lost little
+hamlet of Paradise, where merrymakers trod on the mourners' heels,
+where the scream of the biniou drowned the floating note of the
+passing bell, where Misery drew the curtains of her bed and lay
+sleepless, listening to Gayety dancing breathless to the patter of a
+coquette's wooden shoes!
+
+Long tables were improvised in the square, piled up with bread,
+sardines, puddings, hams, and cakes. Casks of cider, propped on skids,
+dotted the outskirts of the bowling-green, where the mayor, enthroned
+in his own arm-chair, majestically gave his orders in a voice
+thickened by pork, onions, and gravy.
+
+Truly enough, half of Finistère and Morbihan was gathering at Paradise
+for a fête. The slow Breton imagination had been fired by our circus
+bills and posters; ancient Armorica was stirring in her slumber,
+roused to consciousness by the Yankee bill-poster.
+
+At the inn all rooms were taken; every house had become an inn; barns,
+stables, granaries had their guests; fishermen's huts on coast and
+cliff were bright with coiffes and embroidered jerseys.
+
+In their misfortune, the lonely women of Paradise recognized in this
+influx a godsend--a few francs to gain with which to face those coming
+wintry months while their men were absent. And they opened their tiny
+houses to those who asked a lodging.
+
+The crowds which had earlier in the evening gathered to gape at our
+big tent were now noisiest in the square, where the endless drone of
+the pipes intoned the farandole.
+
+A few of our circus folk had come down to enjoy the picturesque
+spectacle. Speed, standing with Jacqueline beside me, began to laugh
+and beat time to the wild music. A pretty maid of Bannalec, white
+coiffe and scarlet skirts a-flutter, called out with the broad freedom
+of the chastest of nations: "There is the lover I could pray for--if
+he can dance the farandole!"
+
+"I'll show you whether I can dance the farandole, ma belle!" cried
+Speed, and caught her hand, but she snatched her brown fingers away
+and danced off, laughing: "He who loves must follow, follow, follow
+the farandole!"
+
+Speed started to follow, but Jacqueline laid a timid hand on his arm.
+
+"I dance, M'sieu Speed," she said, her face flushing under her
+elf-locks.
+
+"You blessed child," he cried, "you shall dance till you drop to
+your knees on the bowling-green!" And, hand clasping hand, they swung
+out into the farandole. For an instant only I caught a glimpse of
+Jacqueline's blissful face, and her eyes like blue stars burning; then
+they darkened into silhouettes against the yellow glare of the
+lanterns and vanished.
+
+Byram rambled up for a moment, to comment on the quaint scene from a
+showman's point of view. "It would fill the tent in old Noo York, but
+it's n. g. in this here country, where everybody's either a coryphee
+or a clown or a pantaloon! Camuels ain't no rara avises in the Sairy,
+an' no niggers go to burnt-cork shows. Phylosophy is the thing, Mr.
+Scarlett! Ruminate! Ruminate!"
+
+I promised to do so, and the old man rambled away, coat and vest on
+his arm, silk hat cocked over his left eye, the lamp-light shining on
+the buckles of his suspenders. Dear old governor!--dear, vulgar
+incarnation of those fast vanishing pioneers who invented
+civilization, finding none; who, self-taught, unashamed taught their
+children the only truths they knew, that the nation was worthy of all
+good, all devotion, and all knowledge that her sons could bring her to
+her glory that she might one day fulfil her destiny as greatest among
+the great on earth.
+
+The whining Breton bagpipe droned in my ears; the dancers flew past;
+laughter and cries arose from the tables in the square where the
+curate of St. Julien stood, forefinger wagging, soundly rating an
+intoxicated but apologetic Breton in the costume of Faöuet.
+
+I was tired--tired of it all; weary of costumes and strange customs,
+weary of strange tongues, of tinsel and mummers, and tarnished finery;
+sick of the sawdust and the rank stench of beasts--and the vagabond
+life--and the hopeless end of it all--the shabby end of a useless
+life--a death at last amid strangers! Soldiers in red breeches,
+peasants in embroidered jackets, strolling mountebanks all tinselled
+and rouged--they were all one to me.... I wanted my own land.... I
+wanted my own people.... I wanted to go home ... home!--and die, when
+my time came, under the skies I knew as a child,... under that
+familiar moon which once silvered my nursery windows....
+
+I turned away across the bridge out into the dark road. Long before I
+came to the smoky, silent camp I heard the monotonous roaring of my
+lions, pacing their shadowy dens.
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+THE CIRCUS
+
+
+A little after sunrise on the day set for our first performance, Speed
+sauntered into my dressing-room in excellent humor, saying that not
+only had the village of Paradise already filled up with the peasantry
+of Finistère and Morbihan, but every outlying hamlet from St. Julien
+to Pont Aven was overflowing; that many had even camped last night
+along the roadside; in short, that the country was unmistakably
+aroused to the importance of the Anti-Prussian Republican circus and
+the Flying Mermaid of Ker-Ys.
+
+I listened to him almost indifferently, saying that I was very glad
+for the governor's sake, and continued to wash a deep scratch on my
+left arm, using salt water to allay the irritation left by Aïcha's
+closely pared claws--the vixen.
+
+But the scratch had not poisoned me; I was in fine physical condition;
+rehearsals had kept us all in trim; our animals, too, were in good
+shape; and the machinery started without a creak when, an hour later,
+Byram himself opened the box-office at the tent-door and began to sell
+tickets to an immense crowd for the first performance, which was set
+for two o'clock that afternoon.
+
+I had had an unpleasant hour's work with the lions, during which
+Marghouz, a beast hitherto lazy and docile, had attempted to creep
+behind me. Again I had betrayed irritation; again the lions saw it,
+understood it, and remembered. Aïcha tore my sleeve; when I dragged
+Timour Melek's huge jaws apart he endured the operation patiently, but
+as soon as I gave the signal to retire he sprang snarling to the
+floor, mane on end, and held his ground, just long enough to defy me.
+Poor devils! Who but I knew that they were right and I was wrong! Who
+but I understood what lack of freedom meant to the strong--meant to
+caged creatures, unrighteously deprived of liberty! Though born in
+captivity, wild things change nothing; they sleep by day, walk by
+night, follow as well as they can the instincts which a caged life
+cannot crush in them, nor a miserable, artificial existence
+obliterate.
+
+They are right to resist.
+
+I mentioned something of this to Speed as I was putting on my coat to
+go out, but he only scowled at me, saying: "Your usefulness as a
+lion-tamer is ended, my friend; you are a fool to enter that cage
+again, and I'm going to tell Byram."
+
+"Don't spoil the governor's pleasure now," I said, irritably; "the
+old man is out there selling tickets with both hands, while little
+Griggs counts receipts in a stage whisper. Let him alone, Speed; I'm
+going to give it up soon, anyway--not now--not while the governor has
+a chance to make a little money; but soon--very soon. You are right; I
+can't control anything now--not even myself. I must give up my lions,
+after all."
+
+"When?" said Speed.
+
+"Soon--I don't know. I'm tired--really tired. I want to go home."
+
+"Home! Have you one?" he asked, with a faint sneer of surprise.
+
+"Yes; a rather extensive lodging, bounded east and west by two
+oceans, north by the lakes, south by the gulf. Landlord's a
+relation--my Uncle Sam."
+
+"Are you really going home, Scarlett?" he asked, curiously.
+
+"I have nothing to keep me here, have I?"
+
+"Not unless you choose to settle down and ... marry."
+
+I looked at him; presently my face began to redden; and, "What do you
+mean?" I asked, angrily.
+
+He replied, in a very mild voice, that he did not mean anything that
+might irritate me.
+
+I said, "Speed, don't mind my temper; I can't seem to help it any
+more; something has changed me, something has gone wrong."
+
+"Perhaps something has gone right," he mused, looking up at the
+flying trapeze, where Jacqueline swung dangling above the tank,
+watching us with sea-blue eyes.
+
+After a moment's thought I said: "Speed, what the devil do you mean
+by that remark?"
+
+"Now you're angry again," he said, wearily.
+
+"No, I'm not. Tell me what you mean."
+
+"Oh, what do you imagine I mean?" he retorted. "Do you think I'm
+blind? Do you suppose I've watched you all these years and don't know
+you? Am I an ass, Scarlett? Be fair; am I?"
+
+"No; not an ass," I said.
+
+"Then let me alone--unless you want plain speaking instead of a
+bray."
+
+"I do want it."
+
+"Which?"
+
+"You know; go on."
+
+"Am I to tell you the truth?"
+
+"As you interpret it--yes."
+
+"Very well, my friend; then, at your respectful request, I beg to
+inform you that you are in love with Madame de Vassart--and have been
+for months."
+
+I did not pretend surprise; I knew he was going to say it. Yet it
+enraged me that he should think it and say it.
+
+"You are wrong," I said, steadily.
+
+"No, Scarlett; I am right."
+
+"You are wrong," I repeated.
+
+"Don't say that again," he retorted. "If you do not know it, you
+ought to. Don't be unfair; don't be cowardly. Face it, man! By Heaven,
+you've got to face it some time--here, yonder, abroad, on the ocean,
+at home--no matter where, you've got to face it some day and tell
+yourself the truth!"
+
+His words hurt me for a moment; then, as I listened, that strange
+apathy once more began to creep over me. Was it really the truth he
+had told me? Was it? Well--and then? What meaning had it to me?... Of
+what help was it?... of what portent?... of what use?... What door did
+it unlock? Surely not the door I had closed upon myself so many years
+ago!
+
+Something of my thoughts he may have divined as I stood brooding in
+the sunny tent, staring listlessly at my own shadow on the floor, for
+he laid his hand on my shoulder and said: "Surely, Scarlett, if
+happiness can be reborn in Paradise, it can be reborn here. I know
+you; I have known you for many years. And in all that time you have
+never fallen below my ideal!"
+
+"What are you saying, Speed?" I asked, rousing from my lethargy to
+shake his hand from my shoulder.
+
+"The truth. In all these years of intimacy, familiarity has never
+bred contempt in me; I am not your equal in anything; it does not hurt
+me to say so. I have watched you as a younger brother watches,
+lovingly, jealous yet proud of you, alert for a failing or a weakness
+which I never found--or, if I thought I found a flaw in you, knowing
+that it was but part of a character too strong, too generous for me to
+criticise."
+
+"Speed," I said, astonished, "are you talking about me--about
+_me_--a mountebank--and a failure at that? You know I'm a failure--a
+nobody--" I hesitated, touched by his kindness. "Your loyalty to me
+is all I have. I wish it were true that I am such a man as you believe
+me to be."
+
+"It is true," he said, almost sullenly. "If it were not, no man
+would say it of you--though a woman might. Listen to me, Scarlett. I
+tell you that a man shipwrecked on the world's outer rocks--if he does
+not perish--makes the better pilot afterwards."
+
+"But ... I perished, Speed."
+
+"It is not true," he said, violently; "but you will if you don't
+steer a truer course than you have. Scarlett, answer me!"
+
+"Answer you? What?"
+
+"Are you in love?"
+
+"Yes," I said.
+
+He waited, looked up at me, then dropped his hands in his pockets and
+turned away toward the interior of the tent where Jacqueline, having
+descended from the rigging, stood, drawing her slim fingers across the
+surface of the water in the tank.
+
+I walked out through the tent door, threading my way among the curious
+crowds gathered not only at the box-office, but even around the great
+tent as far as I could see. Byram hailed me with jovial abandon,
+perspiring in his shirt-sleeves, silk hat on the back of his head;
+little Grigg made one of his most admired grimaces and shook the heavy
+money-box at me; Horan waved his hat above his head and pointed at the
+throng with a huge thumb. I smiled at them all and walked on.
+
+Cloud and sunshine alternated on that capricious November morning; the
+sea-wind was warm; the tincture of winter had gone. On that day,
+however, I saw wavering strings of wild ducks flying south; and the
+little hedge-birds of different kinds were already flocking amiably
+together in twittering bands that filled the leafless blackthorns on
+the cliffs;--true prophets, all, of that distant cold, gathering
+somewhere in the violet north.
+
+I walked fast across the moors, as though I had a destination. And I
+had; yet when I understood it I sheered off, only to turn again and
+stare fascinated in the direction of the object that frightened me.
+
+There it rose against the seaward cliffs, the little tower of Trécourt
+farm, sea-smitten and crusted, wind-worn, stained, gray as the
+lichened rocks scattered across the moorland. Over it the white gulls
+pitched and tossed in a windy sky; beyond crawled the ancient and
+wrinkled sea.
+
+"It is a strange thing," I said aloud, "to find love at the world's
+edge." I looked blindly across the gray waste. "But I have found it
+too late."
+
+The wind blew furiously; I heard the gulls squealing in the sky, the
+far thunder of the surf.
+
+Then, looking seaward again, for the first time I noticed that the
+black cruiser was gone, that nothing now lay between the cliffs and
+the hazy headland of Groix save a sheet of lonely water spreading
+league on league to meet a flat, gray sky.
+
+Why had the cruiser sailed? As I stood there, brooding, to my numbed
+ears the moor-winds bore a sound coming from a great distance--the
+sound of cannon--little, soft reports, all but inaudible in the wind
+and the humming undertone of the breakers. Yet I knew the sound, and
+turned my unquiet eyes to the sea, where nothing moved save the far
+crests of waves.
+
+For a while I stood listening, searching the sea, until a voice hailed
+me, and I turned to find Kelly Eyre almost at my elbow.
+
+"There is a man in the village haranguing the people," he said,
+abruptly. "We thought you ought to know."
+
+"A man haranguing the people," I repeated. "What of it?"
+
+"Speed thinks the man is Buckhurst."
+
+"What!" I cried.
+
+"There's something else, too," he said, soberly, and drew a telegram
+from his pocket.
+
+I seized it, and studied the fluttering sheet:
+
+ "The governor of Lorient, on complaint of the mayor of
+ Paradise, forbids the American exhibition, and orders
+ the individual Byram to travel immediately to Lorient
+ with his so-called circus, where a British steamship
+ will transport the personnel, baggage, and animals to
+ British territory. The mayor of Paradise will see that
+ this order of expulsion is promptly executed.
+
+ "(Signed) Breteuil.
+ "Chief of Police."
+
+"Where did you get that telegram?" I asked.
+
+"It's a copy; the mayor came with it. Byram does not know about it."
+
+"Don't let him know it!" I said, quickly; "this thing will kill him,
+I believe. Where is that fool of a mayor? Come on, Kelly! Stay close
+beside me." And I set off at a swinging pace, down the hollow, out
+across the left bank of the little river, straight to the bridge,
+which we reached almost on a run.
+
+"Look there!" cried my companion, as we came in sight of the square.
+
+The square was packed with Breton peasants; near the fountain two
+cider barrels had been placed, a plank thrown across them, and on this
+plank stood a man holding a red flag.
+
+The man was John Buckhurst.
+
+When I came nearer I could see that he wore a red scarf across his
+breast; a little nearer and I could hear his passionless voice
+sounding; nearer still, I could distinguish every clear-cut word:
+
+"Men of the sea, men of that ancient Armorica which, for a thousand
+years, has suffered serfdom, I come to you bearing no sword. You need
+none; you are free under this red flag I raise above you."
+
+He lifted the banner, shaking out the red folds.
+
+"Yet if I come to you bearing no sword, I come with something better,
+something more powerful, something so resistless that, using it as
+your battle-cry, the world is yours!
+
+"I come bearing the watchword of world-brotherhood--Peace, Love,
+Equality! I bear it from your battle-driven brothers, scourged to the
+battlements of Paris by the demons of a wicked government! I bear it
+from the devastated towns of the provinces, from your homeless
+brothers of Alsace and Lorraine.
+
+"Peace, Love, Equality! All this is yours for the asking. The commune
+will be proclaimed throughout France; Paris is aroused, Lyons is
+ready, Bordeaux watches, Marseilles waits!
+
+"You call your village Paradise--yet you starve here. Let this little
+Breton village be a paradise in truth--a shrine for future happy
+pilgrims who shall say: 'Here first were sewn the seeds of the world's
+liberty! Here first bloomed the perfect flower of universal
+brotherhood!"
+
+He bent his sleek, gray head meekly, pausing as though in profound
+meditation. Suddenly he raised his head; his tone changed; a faint
+ring of defiance sounded under the smooth flow of words.
+
+He began with a blasphemous comparison, alluding to the money-changers
+in the temple--a subtle appeal to righteous violence.
+
+"It rests with us to cleanse the broad temple of our country and
+drive from it the thieves and traitors who enslave us! How can we do
+it? They are strong; we are weak. Ah, but _are_ they truly strong?
+You say they have armies? Armies are composed of men. These men are
+your brothers, whipped forth to die--for what? For the pleasure of a
+few aristocrats. Who was it dragged your husbands and sons away from
+your arms, leaving you to starve? The governor of Lorient. Who is he?
+An aristocrat, paid to scourge your husbands and children to
+battle--paid, perhaps, by Prussia to betray them, too!"
+
+A low murmur rose from the people. Buckhurst swept the throng with
+colorless eyes.
+
+"Under the commune we will have peace. Why? Because there can be no
+hunger, no distress, no homeless ones where the wealth of all is
+distributed equally. We will have no wars, because there will be
+nothing to fight for. We will have no aristocrats where all must labor
+for the common good; where all land is equally divided; where love,
+equality, and brotherhood are the only laws--"
+
+"Where's the mayor?" I whispered to Eyre.
+
+"In his house; Speed is with him."
+
+"Come on, then," I said, pushing my way around the outskirts of the
+crowd to the mayor's house.
+
+The door was shut and the blinds drawn, but a knock brought Speed to
+the door, revolver in hand.
+
+"Oh," he said, grimly, "it's time you arrived. Come in."
+
+The mayor was lying in his arm-chair, frightened, sulky, obstinate,
+his fat form swathed in a red sash.
+
+"O-ho!" I said, sharply, "so you already wear the colors of the
+revolution, do you?"
+
+"Dame, they tied it over my waistcoat," he said, "and there are no
+gendarmes to help me arrest them--"
+
+"Never mind that just now," I interrupted; "what I want to know is
+why you wrote the governor of Lorient to expel our circus."
+
+"That's my own affair," he snapped; "besides, who said I wrote?"
+
+"Idiot," I said, "somebody paid you to do it. Who was it?"
+
+The mayor, hunched up in his chair, shut his mouth obstinately.
+
+"Somebody paid you," I repeated; "you would never have complained of
+us unless somebody paid you, because our circus is bringing money into
+your village. Come, my friend, that was easy to guess. Now let me
+guess again that Buckhurst paid you to complain of us."
+
+The mayor looked slyly at me out of the corner of his mottled eyes,
+but he remained mute.
+
+"Very well," said I; "when the troops from Lorient hear of this
+revolution in Paradise, they'll come and chase these communards into
+the sea. And after that they'll stand you up against a convenient wall
+and give you thirty seconds for absolution--"
+
+"Stop!" burst out the mayor, struggling to his feet. "What am I to
+do? This gentleman, Monsieur Buckhurst, will slay me if I disobey him!
+Besides," he added, with cowardly cunning, "they are going to do the
+same thing in Lorient, too--and everywhere--in Paris, in Bordeaux, in
+Marseilles--even in Quimperlé! And when all these cities are flying
+the red flag it won't be comfortable for cities that fly the
+tricolor." He began to bluster. "I'm mayor of Paradise, and I won't
+be bullied! You get out of here with your circus and your foolish
+elephants! I haven't any gendarmes just now to drive you out, but you
+had better start, all the same--before night."
+
+"Oh," I said, "before night? Why before night?"
+
+"Wait and see then," he muttered. "Anyway, get out of my house--d'
+ye hear?"
+
+"We are going to give that performance at two o'clock this
+afternoon," I said. "After that, another to-morrow at the same hour,
+and on every day at the same hour, as long as it pays. Do you
+understand?"
+
+"Perfectly," sneered the mayor.
+
+"And," I continued, "if the governor of Lorient sends gendarmes to
+conduct us to the steamship in Lorient harbor, they'll take with them
+somebody besides the circus folk."
+
+"You mean me?" he inquired.
+
+"I do."
+
+"What do I care?" he bawled in a fury. "You had better go to
+Lorient, I tell you. What do you know about the commune? What do you
+know about universal brotherhood? Everybody's everybody's brother,
+whether you like it or not! I'm your brother, and if it doesn't suit
+you you may go to the devil!"
+
+Watching the infuriated magistrate, I said in English to Speed: "This
+is interesting. Buckhurst has learned we are here, and has paid this
+fellow heavily to have us expelled. What sense do you make of all
+this?--for I can make none."
+
+"Nor can I," muttered Speed; "there's a link gone; we'll find it
+soon, I fancy. Without that link there's no logic in this matter."
+
+"Look here," I said, sharply, to the mayor, who had waddled toward
+the door, which was guarded by Kelly Eyre.
+
+"Well, I'm looking," he snarled.
+
+Then I patiently pointed out to him his folly, and he listened with
+ill-grace, obstinate, mute, dull cunning gleaming from his half-closed
+eyes.
+
+Then I asked him what he would do if the cruiser began dropping shells
+into Paradise; he deliberately winked at me and thrust his tongue into
+his cheek.
+
+"So you know that the cruiser has gone?" I asked.
+
+He grinned.
+
+"Do you suppose Buckhurst's men hold the semaphore? If they do, they
+sent that cruiser on a fool's errand," whispered Speed.
+
+Here was a nice plot! I stepped to the window. Outside in the square
+Buckhurst was still speaking to a spellbound, gaping throng. A few men
+cheered him. They were strangers in Paradise.
+
+"What's he doing it for?" I asked, utterly at a loss to account for
+proceedings which seemed to me the acme of folly. "He must know that
+the commune cannot be started here in Brittany! Speed, what is that
+man up to?"
+
+Behind us the mayor was angrily demanding that we leave his house; and
+after a while we did so, skirting the crowd once more to where, in a
+cleared space near the fountain, Buckhurst stood, red flag in hand,
+ranging a dozen peasants in line. The peasants were not Paradise men;
+they wore the costumes of the interior, and somebody had already armed
+them with scythes, rusty boarding-pikes, stable-forks, and one or two
+flintlock muskets. An evil-looking crew, if ever I saw one; wild-eyed,
+long-haired, bare of knee and ankle, loutish faces turned toward the
+slim, gray, pale-faced orator who confronted them, flag in hand. They
+were the scum of Morbihan.
+
+He told them that they were his guard of honor, the glory of their
+race--a sacred battalion whose names should shine high on the
+imperishable battlements of freedom.
+
+Around them the calm-eyed peasants stared at them stupidly; women
+gazed fascinated when Buckhurst, raising his flag, pointed in silence
+to the mayor's house, where that official stood in his doorway,
+observing the scene:
+
+"Forward!" said Buckhurst, and the grotesque escort started with a
+clatter of heavy sabots and a rattle of scythes. The crowd fell back
+to give them way, then closed in behind like a herd of sheep,
+following to the mayor's house, where Buckhurst set his sentinels and
+then entered, closing the door behind him.
+
+"Well!" muttered Speed, in amazement.
+
+After a long silence, Kelly Eyre looked at his watch. "It's time we
+were in the tent," he observed, dryly; and we turned away without a
+word. At the bridge we stopped and looked back. The red flag was
+flying from the mayor's house.
+
+"Speed," I said, "there's one thing certain: Byram can't stay if
+there's going to be fighting here. I heard guns at sea this morning; I
+don't know what that may indicate. And here's this idiotic revolution
+started in Paradise! That means the troops from Lorient, and a
+wretched lot of bushwhacking and guerrilla work. Those Faöuet Bretons
+that Buckhurst has recruited are a bad lot; there is going to be
+trouble, I tell you."
+
+Eyre suggested that we arm our circus people, and Speed promised to
+attend to it and to post them at the tent doors, ready to resist any
+interference with the performance on the part of Buckhurst's
+recruits.
+
+It was already nearly one o'clock as we threaded our way through the
+crowds at the entrance, where our band was playing gayly and thousands
+of white head-dresses fluttered in the sparkling sunshine that poured
+intermittently from a sky where great white clouds were sailing
+seaward.
+
+"Walk right up, messoors! Entry done, mesdames, see voo play!"
+shouted Byram, waving a handful of red and blue tickets. "Animals all
+on view before the performance begins! Walk right into the corridor of
+livin' marvels and defunct curiosities! Bring the little ones to see
+the elephant an' the camuel--the fleet ship of the Sairy! Don't miss
+nothing! Don't fail to contemplate le ploo magnifique spectacle in
+all Europe! Don't let nobody say you died an' never saw the only
+Flyin' Mermaid! An' don't forget the prize--ten thousand francs to the
+man, woman, or che-ild who can prove that this here Flyin' Mermaid
+ain't a fictious bein' straight from Paradise!"
+
+Speed and I made our way slowly through the crush to the stables, then
+around to the dressing-rooms, where little Grigg, in his spotted
+clown's costume, was putting the last touches of vermilion to his
+white cheeks, and Horan, draped in a mangy leopard-skin to imitate
+Hercules, sat on his two-thousand-pound dumbbell, curling his shiny
+black mustache with Mrs. Grigg's iron.
+
+"Jacqueline's dressed," cried Miss Crystal, parting the curtain of
+her dressing-room, just enough to show her pretty, excited eyes and
+nose.
+
+"All right; I won't be long," replied Speed, who was to act as
+ring-master. And he turned and looked at me as I raised the canvas
+flap which screened my dressing-room.
+
+"I think," I said, "that we had better ride over to Trécourt after
+the show--not that there's any immediate danger--"
+
+"There is no immediate danger," said Speed, "because she is here."
+
+My face began to burn; I looked at him miserably. "How do you know?"
+
+"She is there in the tent. I saw her."
+
+He came up and held his hand on my shoulder. "I'm sorry I told you,"
+he said.
+
+"Why?" I asked. "She knows what I am. Is there any reason why she
+should not be amused? I promise you she shall be!"
+
+"Then why do you speak so bitterly? Don't misconstrue her presence.
+Don't be a contemptible fool. If I have read her face--and I have
+never spoken to her, as you know--I tell you, Scarlett, that young
+girl is going through an ordeal! Do women of that kind come to shows
+like this to be amused?"
+
+"What do you mean?" I said, angrily.
+
+"I mean that she _could_ not keep away! And I tell you to be careful
+with your lions, to spare her any recklessness on your part, to finish
+as soon as you can, and get out of that cursed cage. If you don't
+you're a coward, and a selfish one at that!"
+
+His words were like a blow in the face; I stared at him, too confused
+even for anger.
+
+"Oh, you fool, you fool!" he said, in a low voice. "She cares for
+you; can't you understand?"
+
+And he turned on his heel, leaving me speechless.
+
+I do not remember dressing. When I came out into the passageway Byram
+beckoned me, and pointed at a crack in the canvas through which one
+could see the interior of the amphitheatre. A mellow light flooded the
+great tent; spots of sunshine fell on the fresh tan-bark, where long,
+luminous, dusty beams slanted from the ridge-pole athwart the golden
+gloom.
+
+Tier on tier the wooden benches rose, packed with women in brilliant
+holiday dress, with men gorgeous in silver and velvet, with children
+decked in lace and gilt chains. The air was filled with the starched
+rustle of white coiffes and stiff collarettes; a low, incessant
+clatter of sabots sounded from gallery to arena; gusts of breathless
+whispering passed like capricious breezes blowing, then died out in
+the hush which fell as our band-master, McCadger, raised his wand and
+the band burst into "Dixie."
+
+At that the great canvas flaps over the stable entrance slowly parted
+and the scarlet-draped head of Djebe, the elephant, appeared. On he
+came, amid a rising roar of approval, Speed in gorgeous robes perched
+on high, ankus raised. After him came the camel, all over tassels and
+gold net, bestridden by Kelly Eyre, wearing a costume seldom seen
+anywhere, and never in the Sahara. White horses, piebald horses, and
+cream-colored horses pranced in the camel's wake, dragging assorted
+chariots tenanted by gentlemen in togas; pretty little Mrs. Grigg, in
+habit and scarlet jacket, followed on Briza, the white mare; Horan
+came next, driving more horses; the dens of ferocious beasts creaked
+after, guarded by a phalanx of stalwart stablemen in plumes and armor;
+then Miss Crystal, driving zebras to a gilt chariot; then more men in
+togas, leading monkeys mounted on ponies; and finally Mrs. Horan
+seated on a huge egg drawn by ostriches.
+
+Once only they circled the sawdust ring; then the band stopped, the
+last of the procession disappeared, the clown came shrieking and
+tumbling out into the arena with his "Here we are again!"
+
+And the show was on.
+
+I stood in the shadow of the stable-tent, dressed in my frock-coat,
+white stock, white cords, and hunting-boots, sullen, imbittered, red
+with a false shame that better men than I have weakened under, almost
+desperate in my humiliation, almost ready to end it all there among
+those tawny, restless brutes pacing behind the bars at my elbow,
+watching me stealthily with luminous eyes.
+
+She knew what I was--but that she could come to see with her own eyes
+I could not understand, I could not forgive. Speed's senseless words
+rang in my ears--"She cares for you!" But I knew they were
+meaningless, I knew she could not care for me. What fools' paradise
+would he have me enter? What did he know of this woman whom I knew and
+understood--whom I honored for her tenderness and pity to all who
+suffered--who I knew counted me as one among a multitude of unhappy
+failures whom her kindness and sympathy might aid.
+
+Because she had, in her gracious ignorance, given me a young girl's
+impulsive friendship, was I to mistake her? What could Speed know of
+her--of her creed, her ideals, her calm, passionless desire to help
+where help was needed--anywhere--in the palace, in the faubourgs, in
+the wretched chaumières, in the slums? It was all one to her--to this
+young girl whose tender heart, bruised by her own sad life, opened to
+all on whom the evil days had dawned.
+
+And yet she had come here--and that was cruel; and she was not cruel.
+Could she know that I had a shred of pride left--one little, ragged
+thread of pride left in me--that she should come to see me do my
+mountebank tricks to the applause of a greasy throng?
+
+No, she had not thought of that, else she would have stayed away; for
+she was kind, above all else--generous and kind.
+
+Speed passed me in ring-master's dress; there came the hollow thud of
+hoofs as Mrs. Grigg galloped into the ring on her white mare, gauze
+skirts fluttering, whip raised; and, "Hoop-la!" squealed the clown as
+his pretty little wife went careering around and around the tan-bark,
+leaping through paper-hoops, over hurdles, while the band played
+frantically and the Bretons shouted in an ecstasy of excitement.
+
+Then Grigg mounted his little trick donkey; roars of laughter greeted
+his discomfiture when Tim, the donkey, pitched him headlong and
+cantered off with a hee-haw of triumph.
+
+Miss Delany tripped past me in her sky-blue tights to hold the
+audience spellbound with her jugglery, and spin plates and throw
+glittering knives until the satiated people turned to welcome Horan
+and his "cogged" dumbbells and clubs.
+
+"Have you seen her?" whispered Speed, coming up to me, long whip
+trailing.
+
+I shook my head.
+
+He looked at me in disgust. "Here's something for you," he said,
+shortly, and thrust an envelope into my hand.
+
+In the envelope was a little card on which was written: "I ask you to
+be careful, for a friend's sake." On the other side of the card was
+engraved her name.
+
+I raised my head and looked at Speed, who began to laugh nervously.
+"That's better," he said; "you don't look like a surly brute any
+more."
+
+"Where is she?" I said, steadying my voice, which my leaping heart
+almost stifled.
+
+He drew me by the elbow and looked toward the right of the
+amphitheatre. Following the direction of his eyes, I saw her leaning
+forward, pale-faced, grave, small, gloved hands interlocked. Beside
+her sat Sylvia Elven, apparently amused at the antics of the clown.
+
+Shame filled me. Not the false shame I had felt--that vanished--but
+shame that I could have misunderstood the presence of this brave
+friend of mine, this brave, generous, tender-hearted girl, who had
+given me her friendship, who was true enough to care what might happen
+to me--and brave enough to say so.
+
+"I will be careful," I said to Speed, in a low voice. "If it were
+not for Byram I would not go on to-day--but that is a matter of honor.
+Oh, Speed," I broke out, "is she not worth dying for?"
+
+"Why not live for her?" he observed, dryly.
+
+"I will--don't misunderstand me--I know she could never even think of
+me--as I do--of her--yes, as I dare to, Speed. I dare to love her with
+all this wretched heart and soul of mine! It's all right--I think I am
+crazy to talk like this--but you are kind, Speed--you will forget
+what I said--you have forgotten it already--bless your heart--"
+
+"No, I haven't," he retorted, obstinately. "You must win her--you
+must! Shame on you for a coward if you do not speak that word which
+means life to you both!"
+
+"Speed!" I began, angrily.
+
+"Oh, go to the devil!" he snapped, and walked off to where Jacqueline
+stood glittering, her slim limbs striking fire from every silver
+scale.
+
+"All ready, little sweetheart!" he cried, reassuringly, as she raised
+her blue eyes to his and shook her elf-locks around her flushed face.
+"It's our turn now; they're uncovering the tank, and Miss Crystal is
+on her trapeze. Are you nervous?"
+
+"Not when you are by me," said Jacqueline.
+
+"I'll be there," he said, smiling. "You will see me when you are
+ready. Look! There's the governor! It's your call! Quick, my child!"
+
+"Good-bye," said Jacqueline, catching his hand in both of hers, and
+she was off and in the middle of the ring before I could get to a
+place of vantage to watch.
+
+Up into the rigging she swung, higher, higher, hanging like a
+brilliant fly in all that net-work of wire and rope, turning,
+twisting, climbing, dropping to her knees, until the people's cheers
+rose to a sustained shriek.
+
+"Ready!" quavered Miss Crystal, hanging from her own trapeze across
+the gulf.
+
+It was the first signal. Jacqueline set her trapeze swinging and hung
+by her knees, face downward.
+
+"Ready!" called Miss Crystal again, as Jacqueline's trapeze swung
+higher and higher.
+
+"Ready!" said Jacqueline, calmly.
+
+"Go!"
+
+[Illustration: "I WAS ON MY KNEES"]
+
+Like a meteor the child flashed across the space between the two
+trapezes; Miss Crystal caught her by her ankles.
+
+"Ready?" called Speed, from the ground below. He had turned quite
+pale. I saw Jacqueline, hanging head down, smile at him from her dizzy
+height.
+
+"Ready," she said, calmly.
+
+"Go!"
+
+Down, down, like a falling star, flashed Jacqueline into the shallow
+pool, then shot to the surface, shimmering like a leaping mullet,
+where she played and dived and darted, while the people screamed
+themselves hoarse, and Speed came out, ghastly and trembling,
+colliding with me like a blind man.
+
+"I wish I had never let her do it; I wish I had never brought her
+here--never seen her," he stammered. "She'll miss it some day--like
+Miss Claridge--and it will be murder--and I'll have done it! Anybody
+but that child, Scarlett, anybody else--but I can't bear to have her
+die that way--the pretty little thing!"
+
+He let go of my arm and stood back as my lion-cages came rolling out,
+drawn by four horses.
+
+"It's your turn," he said, in a dazed way. "Look out for that
+lioness."
+
+As I walked out into the arena I saw only one face. She tried to
+smile, and so did I; but a terrible, helpless sensation was already
+creeping over me--the knowledge that I was causing her distress--the
+knowledge that I was no longer sure of myself--that, with my love for
+her, my authority over these caged things had gone, never to return. I
+knew it, I recognized it, and admitted it now. Speed's words rang
+true--horribly true.
+
+I entered the cage, afraid.
+
+Almost instantly I was the centre of a snarling mass of lions; I saw
+nothing; my whip rose and fell mechanically. I stood like one
+stunned, while the tawny forms leaped right and left.
+
+Suddenly I heard a keeper say, "Look out for Empress Khatoun, sir!"
+And a moment later a cry, "Look out, sir!"
+
+Something went wrong with another lion, too, for the people were
+standing up and shouting, and the sleeve of my coat hung from the
+elbow, showing my bare shoulder. I staggered up against the bars of
+the sliding door as a lioness struck me heavily and I returned the
+blow. I remember saying, aloud: "I must keep my feet; I must not
+fall!" Then daylight grew red, and I was on my knees, with the foul
+breath of a lion in my face. A hot iron bar shot across the cage. The
+roaring of beasts and people died out in my ears; then, with a shock,
+my soul seemed to be dashed out of me into a terrific darkness.
+
+
+
+
+PART THIRD
+
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+A GUEST-CHAMBER
+
+
+A light was shining in my eyes and I was talking excitedly; that and
+the odor of brandy I remember--and something else, a steady roaring in
+my ears; then darkness, out of which came a voice, empty, meaningless,
+finally soundless.
+
+After a while I realized that I was in pain; that, at intervals,
+somebody forced morsels of ice between my lips; that the darkness
+around me had turned grayer.
+
+Time played tricks on me; centuries passed steadily, year following
+year--long years they were, too, with endless spring-tides, summers,
+autumns, winters, each with full complement of months, and every month
+crowded with days. Space, illimitable space, surrounded me--skyless,
+starless space. And through its terrific silence I heard a clock
+ticking seconds of time.
+
+Years and years later a yellow star rose and stood still before my
+open eyes; and after a long while I saw it was the flame of a candle:
+and somebody spoke my name.
+
+"I know you, Speed," I said, drowsily.
+
+"You are all right, Scarlett?"
+
+"Yes,... all right."
+
+"Does the candle-light pain you?"
+
+"No;... do they contract?"
+
+"A little.... Yes, I am sure the pupils of your eyes are contracting.
+Don't talk."
+
+"No;... then it was concussion of the brain?"
+
+"Yes;... the shock is passing.... Don't talk."
+
+Time moved on again; space slowly contracted into a symmetrical shape,
+set with little points of light; sleep and fatigue alternated with
+glimmers of reason, which finally grew into a faint but steady
+intelligence. And, very delicately, memory stirred in a slumbering
+brain.
+
+Reason and memory were mine again, frail toys for a stricken man, so
+frail I dared not, for a time, use them for my amusement--and one of
+them was broken, too--memory!--broken short at the moment when full in
+my face I had felt the hot, fetid breath of a lion.
+
+"Speed!"
+
+"Yes; I am here."
+
+"What time is it?"
+
+I heard the click of his hunting-case. "Eleven o'clock."
+
+"What day?"
+
+"Saturday."
+
+"When--" I hesitated. I was afraid.
+
+"Well?" he asked, quietly.
+
+"When was I hurt? Many days ago--many weeks?"
+
+"You were hurt at half-past three this afternoon."
+
+I tried to comprehend; I could not, and after a while I gave up my
+feeble grasp on time.
+
+"What is that roaring sound?" I asked. "Not drums? Not my lions?"
+
+"It is the sea."
+
+"So near?"
+
+"Very near."
+
+I turned my head on the white pillow. "Where is this bed? Where is
+this room?"
+
+"Shall I tell you?"
+
+I was silent, struggling with memory.
+
+"Tell me," I said. "Whose bed is this?"
+
+"It is hers."
+
+The candle-flame glimmered before my wide-open eyes once more, and--
+
+"Oh, you are all right," he muttered, then leaned heavily against the
+bedside, dropping his arms on the coverlet.
+
+"It was a close call--a close call!" he said, hoarsely. "We thought
+it was ended.... They were all over you--Empress dragged you; but they
+all crowded in too close--they blocked each other, you see;... and we
+used the irons.... Your left arm lay close to the cage door and ... we
+got you away from them, and ... it's all right now--it's all right--"
+
+He broke down, head buried in his arms. I moved my left hand across
+the sheets so that it rested on his elbow. He lay there, gulping for a
+while; I could not see him very clearly, for the muscles that
+controlled my eyes were still slightly paralyzed from the shock of the
+blow that Empress Khatoun had dealt me.
+
+"It's all very well," he stammered, with a trace of resentment in his
+quavering voice--"it's all very well for people who are used to the
+filthy beasts; but I tell you, Scarlett, it sickened me. I'm no
+coward, as men go, but I was afraid--I was terrified!"
+
+"Yet you dragged me out," I said.
+
+"Who told you that? How could you know--"
+
+"It was not necessary to tell me. You said, '_We_ got you away'; but
+I know it was you, Speed, because it was like you. Look at me! Am I
+well enough to dress?"
+
+He raised a haggard face to mine. "You know best," he said. "They
+tore your coat off, and one of them ripped your riding-boot from top
+to sole; but the blow Empress struck you is your only hurt, and she
+all but missed you at that. Had she hit you fairly--but, oh, hell! Do
+you want to get up?"
+
+I said I would in a moment,... and that is all I remember that night,
+all I remember clearly, though it seems to me that once I heard drums
+beating in the distance; and perhaps I did.
+
+Dawn was breaking when I awoke. Speed, partly dressed, lay beside me,
+sleeping heavily. I looked around at the pretty boudoir where I lay,
+at the silken curtains of the bed, at the clouds of cupids on the
+painted ceiling, flying through a haze of vermilion flecked with
+gold.
+
+Raising one hand, I touched with tentative fingers my tightly bandaged
+head, then turned over on my side.
+
+There were my torn clothes, filthy and smeared with sawdust, flung
+over a delicate, gilded chair; there sprawled my battered boots,
+soiling the polished, inlaid floor; a candle lay in a pool of hardened
+wax on a golden rococo table, and I saw where the smouldering wick had
+blistered the glazed top. And this was her room! Vandalism
+unspeakable! I turned on my snoring comrade.
+
+"Idiot, get up!" I cried, hitting him feebly.
+
+He was very angry when he found out why I had awakened him; perhaps
+the sight of my bandaged head restrained him from violence.
+
+"Look here," he said, "I've been up all night, and you might as well
+know it. If you hit me again--" He hesitated, stared around, yawned,
+and rubbed his eyes.
+
+"You're right," he said, "I must get up."
+
+He stumbled to the floor, bathed, grumbling all the while, and then,
+to my surprise, walked over to a flat trunk which stood under the
+window and which I recognized as mine.
+
+"I'll borrow some underwear," he remarked, viciously.
+
+"What's my trunk doing here?" I demanded.
+
+"Madame de Vassart had them bring it."
+
+"Had _who_ bring it?"
+
+"Horan and McCadger--before they left."
+
+"Before they left? Have they gone?"
+
+"I forgot," he said, soberly; "you don't know what's been going
+on."
+
+He began to dress, raising his head now and then to gaze out across
+the ocean towards Groix, where the cruiser once lay at anchor.
+
+"Of course you don't know that the circus has gone," he remarked.
+
+"Gone!" I echoed, astonished.
+
+"Gone to Lorient."
+
+He came and sat down on the edge of the gilded bedstead, buttoning his
+collar thoughtfully.
+
+"Buckhurst is in town again with a raft of picturesque ruffians," he
+said. "They marched in last night, drums beating, colors
+unfurled--the red rag, you know--and the first thing they did was to
+order Byram to decamp."
+
+He began to tie his cravat, with a meditative glance at the gilded
+mirror.
+
+"I was here with you. Kelly Eyre came for me--Madame de Vassart took
+my place to watch you--"
+
+A sudden heart-beat choked me.
+
+"--So I," he continued, "posted off to the tent, to find a rabble of
+communist soldiers stealing my balloon-car, ropes, bag, and all. I
+tell you I did what I could, but they said the balloon was contraband
+of war, and a military necessity; and they took it, the thieving
+whelps! Then I saw how matters were going to end, and I told the
+governor that he'd better go to Lorient as fast as he could travel
+before they stole the buttons off his shirt.
+
+"Scarlett, it was a weird sight. I never saw tents struck so quickly.
+Kelly Eyre, Horan, and I harnessed up; Grigg stood guard over the
+props with a horse-pistol. The ladies worked like Trojans, loading the
+wagons; Byram raged up and down under the bayonets of those bandits,
+cursing them as only a man who never swears can curse, invoking the
+Stars and Stripes, metaphorically placing himself, his company, his
+money-box, and his camuel under the shadow of the broad eagle of the
+United States.
+
+"Oh, those were gay times, Scarlett. And we frightened them, too,
+because nobody attempted to touch anything."
+
+Speed laughed grimly, and began to pace the floor, casting sharp
+glances at me.
+
+"Byram's people, elephant and all, struck the road a little after
+three o'clock this morning, in good order, not a tent-peg nor a
+frying-pan missing. They ought to be in Lorient by early afternoon."
+
+"Gone!" I repeated, blankly.
+
+"Gone. Curious how it hurt me to say good-bye. They're good
+people--good, kindly folk. I've grown to care for them in these few
+months ... I may go back to them ... some day ... if they want a
+balloonist ... or any kind of a thing."
+
+"You stayed to take care of me?" I said.
+
+"Partly.... You need care, especially when you don't need it." He
+began to laugh. "It's only when you're well that I worry."
+
+I lay looking at him, striving to realize the change that had occurred
+in so brief a time--trying to understand the abrupt severing of ties
+and conditions to which, already, I had become accustomed--perhaps
+attached.
+
+"They all sent their love to you," he said. "They knew you were out
+of danger--I told them there was no fracture, only a slight
+concussion. Byram came to look at you; he brought your back
+salary--all of it. I've got it."
+
+"Byram came here?"
+
+"Yes. He stood over there beside you, snivelling into his red
+bandanna. And Miss Crystal and Jacqueline stood here.... Jacqueline
+kissed you."
+
+After a moment I said: "Has Jacqueline gone with them?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+There was another pause, longer this time.
+
+"Of course," I said, "Byram knows that my usefulness as a lion-tamer
+is at an end."
+
+"Of course," said Speed, simply.
+
+I sighed.
+
+"He wants you for the horses," added Speed. "But you can do better
+than that."
+
+"I don't know,... perhaps."
+
+"Besides, they sail to-day from Lorient. The governor made money
+yesterday--enough to start again. Poor Byram! He's frantic to get back
+to America; and, oh, Scarlett, how that good old man can swear!"
+
+"Help me to sit up in bed," I said; "there--that's it! Just wedge
+those pillows behind my shoulders."
+
+"All right?"
+
+"Of course. I'm going to dress. Speed, did you say that little
+Jacqueline went with Byram?"
+
+He looked at me miserably.
+
+"Yes," he said.
+
+I was silent.
+
+"Yes," he repeated, "she went, lugging her pet cat in her arms. She
+would go; the life has fascinated her. I begged her not to--I felt I
+was disloyal to Byram, too, but what could I do? I tell you, Scarlett,
+I wish I had never seen her, never persuaded her to try that foolish
+dive. She'll miss some day--like the other one."
+
+"It's my fault more than yours," I said. "Couldn't you persuade her
+to give it up?"
+
+"I offered to educate her, to send her to school, to work for her,"
+he said. "She only looked at me out of those sea-blue eyes--you know
+how the little witch can look you through and through--and then--and
+then she walked away into the torch-glare, clasping her cat to her
+breast, and I saw her strike a fool of a soldier who pretended to stop
+her! Scarlett, she was a strange child--proud and dainty, too, with
+all her rags--you remember--a strange, sweet child--almost a woman, at
+times, and--I thought her loyal--"
+
+He walked to the window and stared moodily at the sea.
+
+"Meanwhile," I said, quietly, "I am going to get up."
+
+He gave me a look which I interpreted as, "Get up and be damned!" I
+complied--in part.
+
+"Oh, help me into these things, will you?" I said, at length; and
+instantly he was at my side, gentle and patient, lacing my shoes,
+because it made my head ache to bend over, buttoning collar and
+cravat, and slipping my coat on while I leaned against the tumbled
+bed.
+
+"Well!" I said, with a grimace, and stood up, shakily.
+
+"Well," he echoed, "here we are again, as poor little Grigg says."
+
+"With our salaries in our pockets and our possessions on our backs."
+
+"And no prospects," he added, gayly.
+
+"Not a blessed one, unless we count a prospect of trouble with
+Buckhurst."
+
+"He won't trouble us unless we interfere with him," observed Speed,
+drumming nervously on the window.
+
+"But I'm going to," I said, surprised.
+
+"Going to interfere?" he asked, wheeling to scowl at me.
+
+"Certainly."
+
+"Why? We're not in government employ. What do we care about this row?
+If these Frenchmen are tired of battering the Germans they'll batter
+each other, and we can't help it, can we?"
+
+"We can help Buckhurst's annoying Madame de Vassart."
+
+"Only by getting her to leave the country," said Speed. "She will
+understand that, too." He paused, rubbing his nose reflectively.
+"Scarlett, what do you suppose Buckhurst is up to?"
+
+"I haven't an idea," I replied. "All I know is that, in all
+probability, he came here to attempt to rob the treasure-trains--and
+that was your theory, too, you remember?"
+
+And I continued, reminding Speed that Buckhurst had collected his
+ruffianly franc company in the forest; that the day the cruiser sailed
+he had appeared in Paradise to proclaim the commune; that doubtless he
+had signalled, from the semaphore, orders for the cruiser's departure;
+that a few hours later his red battalion had marched into Paradise.
+
+"Yes, that's all logical," said Speed, "but how could Buckhurst know
+the secret-code signals which the cruiser must have received before
+she sailed? To hoist them on the semaphore, he must have had a
+code-book."
+
+I thought a moment. "Suppose Mornac is with him?"
+
+Speed fairly jumped. "That's it! That's the link we were hunting for!
+It's Mornac--it must be Mornac! He is the only man; he had access to
+everything. And now that his Emperor is a prisoner and his Empress a
+fugitive, the miserable hound has nothing to lose by the anarchy he
+once hoped to profit by. Tell me, Scarlett, does the tail wag the dog,
+after all? And which is the dog, Buckhurst or Mornac?"
+
+"I once thought it was Buckhurst," I said.
+
+"So did I, but--I don't know now. I don't know what to do, either. I
+don't know anything!"
+
+I began to walk about the room, carefully, for my knees were weak,
+though I had no headache.
+
+"It's a shame for a pair of hulking brutes like you and me to
+desecrate this bedroom," I muttered. "Mud on the floor--look at it!
+Sawdust and candle-wax over everything! What's that--all that on the
+lounge? Has a dog or a cat been rolling over it? It's plastered with
+tan-colored hairs!"
+
+"Lion's hairs from your coat," he observed, grimly.
+
+I looked at them for a moment rather soberly. They glistened like gold
+in the early sunshine.
+
+Speed opened his mouth to say something, but closed it abruptly as a
+very faint tapping sounded on our door.
+
+I opened it; Sylvia Elven stood in the hallway.
+
+"Oh," she said, in ungracious astonishment, "then you are not on the
+grave's awful verge,... are you?"
+
+"I hope you didn't expect to discover me there?" I replied,
+laughing.
+
+"Expect it? Indeed I did, monsieur,... or I shouldn't be here at
+sunrise, scratching at your door for news of you. This," she said,
+petulantly, "is enough to vex any saint!"
+
+"Any other saint," I corrected, gravely. "I admit it, mademoiselle,
+I am a nuisance; so is my comrade. We have only to express our deep
+gratitude and go."
+
+"Go? Do you think we will let you go, with all those bandits roaming
+the moors outside our windows? And you call that gratitude?"
+
+"Does Madame de Vassart desire us to stay?" I asked, trying not to
+speak too eagerly.
+
+Sylvia Elven gave me a scornful glance.
+
+"Must we implore you, monsieur, to protect us? We will, if you wish
+it. I know I'm ill-humored, but it's scarcely daybreak, and we've sat
+up all night on your account--Madame de Vassart would not allow me to
+go to bed--and if I am brusque with you, remember I was obliged to
+sleep in a chair--and I hope you feel that you have put me to very
+great inconvenience."
+
+"I feel that way ... about Madame de Vassart," I said, laughing at
+the pretty, pouting mouth and sleepy eyes of this amusingly
+exasperated young girl, who resembled a rumpled Dresden shepherdess
+more than anything else. I added that we would be glad to stay until
+the communist free-rifles took themselves off. For which she thanked
+me with an exaggerated courtesy and retired, furiously conscious that
+she had not only slept in her clothes, but that she looked it.
+
+"That was Madame de Vassart's companion, wasn't it?" asked Speed.
+
+"Yes, Sylvia Elven ... I don't know what she is--I know what she
+was--no, I don't, either. I only know what Jarras says she was."
+
+Speed raised his eyebrows. "And what was that?"
+
+"Actress, at the Odéon."
+
+"Never heard of her being at the Odéon," he said.
+
+"You heard of her as one of that group at La Trappe?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, when I was looking for Buckhurst in Morsbronn, Jarras
+telegraphed me descriptions of the people I was to arrest at La
+Trappe, and he mentioned her as Mademoiselle Sylvia Elven, lately of
+the Odéon."
+
+"That was a mistake," said Speed. "What he meant to say was that she
+was lately a resident of the Odeonsplatz. He knew that. It must have
+been a telegraphic error."
+
+"How do you know?" I asked, surprised.
+
+"Because I furnished Jarras with the data. It's in her dossier."
+
+"Odeon--Odeonsplatz," I muttered, trying to understand. "What is the
+Odeonsplatz? A square in some German city, isn't it?"
+
+"It's a square in the capital of Bavaria--Munich."
+
+"But--but she isn't a German, is she? _Is she_?" I repeated, staring
+at Speed, who was looking keenly at me, with eyes partly closed.
+
+There was a long silence.
+
+"Well, upon my soul!" I said, slowly, emphasizing every word with a
+noiseless blow on the table.
+
+"Didn't you know it? Wait! Hold on," he said, "let's go
+slowly--let's go very slowly. She is partly German by birth. That
+proves nothing. Granted that Jarras suspected her, not as a social
+agitator, but as a German agent. Granted he did not tell you what he
+suspected, but merely ordered her arrest with the others--perhaps
+under cover of Buckhurst's arrest--you know what a secret man, the
+Emperor was--how, if he wanted a man, he'd never chase him, but run in
+the opposite direction and head him off half-way around the world. So,
+granted all this, I say, what's to prove Jarras was right?"
+
+"Does her dossier prove it? You have read it."
+
+"Well, her dossier was rather incomplete. We knew that she went about
+a good deal in Paris--went to the Tuileries, too. She was married
+once. Didn't you know even _that_?"
+
+"Married!" I exclaimed.
+
+"To a Russian brute--I've forgotten his name, but I've seen him--one
+of the kind with high cheek-bones and black eyes. She got her divorce
+in England; that's on record, and we have it in her dossier. Then,
+going back still further, we know that her father was a Bavarian, a
+petty noble of some sort--baron, I believe. Her mother's name was
+Elven, a Breton peasant; it was a mésalliance--trouble of all sorts--I
+forget, but I believe her uncle brought her up. Her uncle was military
+attaché of the German embassy to Paris.... You see how she slipped
+into society--and you know what society under the Empire was."
+
+"Speed," I said, "why on earth didn't you tell me all this before?"
+
+"My dear fellow, I supposed Jarras had told you; or that, if you
+didn't know it, it did not concern us at all."
+
+"But it does concern--a person I know," I said, quickly, thinking of
+poor Kelly Eyre. "And it explains a lot of things--or, rather, places
+them under a new light."
+
+"What light?"
+
+"Well, for one thing, she has consistently lied to me. For another, I
+believe her to be hand-in-glove with Karl Marx and the French
+leaders--not Buckhurst, but the real leaders of the social revolt;
+_not as a genuine disciple, but as a German agent_, with orders to
+foment disorder of any kind which might tend to embarrass and weaken
+the French government in this crisis."
+
+"You're inclined to believe that?" he asked, much interested.
+
+"Yes, I am. France is full of German agents; the Tuileries was not
+exempt--you know it as well as I. Paris swarmed with spies of every
+kind, high and low in the social scale. The embassies were nests of
+spies; every salon a breeding spot of intrigue; the foreign
+governments employed the grande dame as well as the grisette. Do you
+remember the military-balloon scandal?"
+
+"Indistinctly.... Some poor devil gave a woman government papers."
+
+"Technically they were government papers, but he considered them his
+own. Well, the woman who received those papers is down-stairs."
+
+He gave a short whistle of astonishment.
+
+"You are sure, Scarlett?"
+
+"Perfectly certain."
+
+"Then, if you are certain, that settles the question of Mademoiselle
+Elven's present occupation."
+
+I rose and began to move around the room restlessly.
+
+"But, after all," I said, "that concerns us no longer."
+
+"How can it concern two Americans out of a job?" he observed, with a
+shrug. "The whole fabric of French politics is rotten to the
+foundation. It's tottering; a shake will bring it down. Let it tumble.
+I tell you this nation needs the purification of fire. Our own country
+has just gone through it; France can do it, too. She's got to, or
+she's lost!"
+
+He looked at me earnestly. "I love the country," he said; "it's fed
+me and harbored me. But I wouldn't lift a finger to put a single patch
+on this makeshift of a government; I wouldn't stave off the crash if I
+could. And it's coming! You and I have seen something of the
+rottenness of the underpinning which props up empires. You and I,
+Scarlett, have learned a few of the shameful secrets which even an
+enemy to France would not drag out into the daylight."
+
+I had never seen him so deeply moved.
+
+"Is there hope--is there a glimmer of hope to incite anybody while
+these conditions endure?" he continued, bitterly.
+
+"No. France must suffer, France must stand alone in terrible
+humiliation, France must offer the self-sacrifice of fire and mount
+the altar herself!
+
+"Then, and only then, shall the nation, purified, reborn, rise and
+live, and build again, setting a beacon of civilized freedom high as
+the beacon we Americans are raising,... slowly yet surely raising, to
+the glory of God, Scarlett--to the glory of God. No other dedication
+can be justified in this world."
+
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+TRÉCOURT GARDEN
+
+
+About nine o'clock we were summoned by a Breton maid to the pretty
+breakfast-room below, and I was ashamed to go with my shabby clothes,
+bandaged head, and face the color of clay.
+
+The young countess was not present; Sylvia Elven offered us a
+supercilious welcome to a breakfast the counterpart of which I had not
+seen in years--one of those American breakfasts which even we, since
+the Paris Exposition, are beginning to discard for the simpler French
+breakfast of coffee and rolls.
+
+"This is all in your honor," observed Sylvia, turning up her nose at
+the array of poached eggs, fragrant sausages, crisp potatoes, piles of
+buttered toast, muffins, marmalade, and fruit.
+
+"It was very kind of you to think of it," said Speed.
+
+"It is Madame de Vassart's idea, not mine," she observed, looking
+across the table at me. "Will the gentleman with nine lives have
+coffee or chocolate?"
+
+The fruit consisted of grapes and those winy Breton cider-apples from
+Bannalec. We began with these in decorous silence.
+
+Speed ventured a few comments on the cultivation of fruit, of which he
+knew nothing; neither he nor his subject was encouraged.
+
+Presently, however, Sylvia glanced up at him with a malicious smile,
+saying: "I notice that you have been in the foreign division of the
+Imperial Military Police, monsieur."
+
+"Why do you think so?" asked Speed, calmly.
+
+"When you seated yourself in your chair," said Sylvia, "you made a
+gesture with your left hand as though to unhook the sabre--which was
+not there."
+
+Speed laughed. "But why the police? I might have been in the cavalry,
+mademoiselle; for that matter, I might have been an officer in any arm
+of the service. They all carry swords or sabres."
+
+"But only the military police and the gendarmerie wear aiguilettes,"
+she replied. "When you bend over your plate your fingers are ever
+unconsciously searching for those swinging, gold-tipped cords--to keep
+them out of your coffee-cup, monsieur."
+
+The muscles in Speed's lean, bronzed cheeks tightened; he looked at
+her keenly.
+
+"Might I not have been in the gendarmerie?" he asked. "How do you
+know I was not?"
+
+"Does the gendarmerie wear the sabre-tache?"
+
+"No, mademoiselle, but--"
+
+"Do the military police?"
+
+"No--that is, the foreign division did, when it existed."
+
+"You are sitting, monsieur," she said, placidly, "with your left
+foot so far under the table that it quite inadvertently presses my
+shoe-tip."
+
+Speed withdrew his leg with a jerk, asking pardon.
+
+"It is a habit perfectly pardonable in a man who is careful that his
+spur shall not scratch or tear a patent-leather sabre-tache," she
+said.
+
+I had absolutely nothing to say; we both laughed feebly, I believe.
+
+I saw temptation struggling with Speed's caution; I, too, was almost
+willing to drop a hint that might change her amusement to speculation,
+if not to alarm.
+
+So this was the woman for whose caprice Kelly Eyre had wrecked his
+prospects! Clever--oh, certainly clever. But she had made the
+inevitable slip that such clever people always make sooner or later.
+And in a bantering message to her victim she had completed the chain
+against herself--a chain of which I might have been left in absolute
+ignorance. Impulse probably did it--reasonless and perhaps malicious
+caprice--the instinct of a pretty woman to stir up memory in a
+discarded and long-forgotten victim--just to note the effect--just to
+see if there still remains one nerve, one pulse-beat to respond.
+
+"Will the pensive gentleman with nine lives have a little more
+nourishment to sustain him?" she asked.
+
+Looking up from my empty plate, I declined politely; and we followed
+her signal to rise.
+
+"There is a Mr. Kelly Eyre," she said to Speed, "connected with your
+circus. Has he gone with the others?"
+
+"Yes, mademoiselle."
+
+"Really?" she mused, amiably. "I knew him as a student in Paris,
+when he was very young--and I was younger. I should have liked to have
+seen him--once more."
+
+"Did you not see him?" I asked, abruptly.
+
+Her back was toward me; very deliberately she turned her pretty head
+and looked at me over her shoulder, studying my face a moment.
+
+"Yes, I saw him. I should have liked to have seen him--once more,"
+she said, as though she had first calculated the effect on me of a
+different reply.
+
+She led the way into that small room overlooking the garden where I
+had been twice received by Madame de Vassart. Here she took leave of
+us, abandoning us to our own designs. Mine was to find a large
+arm-chair and sit down in it, and give Speed a few instructions.
+Speed's was to prowl around Paradise for information, and, if
+possible, telegraph to Lorient for troops to catch Buckhurst
+red-handed.
+
+He left me turning over the leaves of the "Chanson de Roland," saying
+that he would return in a little while with any news he might pick up,
+and that he would do his best to catch Buckhurst in the foolish trap
+which that gentleman had set for others.
+
+Tiring of the poem, I turned my eyes toward the garden, where, in the
+sunshine, heaps of crisped leaves lay drifted along the base of the
+wall or scattered between the rows of herbs which were still ripely
+green. The apricots had lost their leaves, so had the grapevines and
+the fig-trees; but the peach-trees were in foliage; pansies and
+perpetual roses bloomed amid sere and seedy thickets of larkspurs,
+phlox, and dead delphinium.
+
+On the wall a cat sat, sunning her sleek flanks. Something about the
+animal seemed familiar to me, and after a while I made up my mind that
+this was Ange Pitou, Jacqueline's pet, abandoned by her mistress and
+now a feline derelict. Speed must have been mistaken when he told me
+that Jacqueline had taken her cat; or possibly the home-haunting
+instinct had brought the creature back, abandoning her mistress to her
+fortunes.
+
+If I had been in my own house I should have offered Ange Pitou
+hospitality; as it was, I walked out into the sunny garden and made
+courteous advances which were ignored. I watched the cat for a few
+moments, then sat down on the bench. The inertia which follows
+recovery from a shock, however light, left me with the lazy
+acquiescence of a convalescent, willing to let the world drift for an
+hour or two, contented to relax, apathetic, comfortable.
+
+Seaward the gulls sailed like white feathers floating; the rocky
+ramparts of Groix rose clear-cut against a horizon where no haze
+curtained the sea; the breakers had receded from the coast on a heavy
+ebb-tide, and I saw them in frothy outline, noiselessly churning the
+shallows beyond the outer bar.
+
+And then my reverie ended abruptly; a step on the gravel walk brought
+me to my feet.... There she stood, lovely in a fresh morning-gown
+deeply belted with turquoise-shells, her ruddy hair glistening, coiled
+low on a neck of snow.
+
+For the first time she showed embarrassment in her greeting, scarcely
+touching my hand, speaking with a new constraint in a voice which grew
+colder as she hesitated.
+
+"We were frightened; we are so glad that you were not badly hurt. I
+thought you might find it comfortable here--of course I could not know
+that you were not seriously injured."
+
+"That is fortunate for me," I said, pleasantly, "for I am afraid you
+would not have offered this shelter if you had known how little
+injured I really was."
+
+"Yes, I should have offered it--had I reason to believe you would
+have accepted. I have felt that perhaps you might think what I have
+done was unwarranted."
+
+"I think you did the most graciously unselfish thing a woman could
+do," I said, quickly. "You offered your best; and the man who took it
+cannot--dare not--express his gratitude."
+
+The emotion in my voice warned me to cease; the faintest color tinted
+her cheeks, and she looked at me with beautiful, grave eyes that
+slowly grew inscrutable, leaving me standing diffident and silent
+before her.
+
+The breeze shifted, bringing with it the hollow sea-thunder. She
+turned her head and glanced out across the ocean, hands behind her,
+fingers linked.
+
+"I have come here into your garden uninvited," I said.
+
+"Shall we sit here--a moment?" she suggested, without turning.
+
+Presently she seated herself in one corner of the bench; her gaze
+wandered over the partly blighted garden, then once more centred on
+the seaward skyline.
+
+The color of her hands, her neck, fascinated me. That flesh texture of
+snow and roses, firmly and delicately modelled, which sometimes is
+seen with red hair, I had seen once before in a picture by a Spanish
+master, but never, until now, in real life.
+
+And she was life incarnate in her wholesome beauty--a beauty of which
+I had perceived only the sad shadow at La Trappe--a sweet, healthy,
+exquisite woman, moulded, fashioned, colored by a greater Master than
+the Spanish painter dreaming of perfection centuries ago.
+
+In the sun a fragrance grew--the subtle incense from her gown--perhaps
+from her hair.
+
+"Autumn is already gone; we are close to winter," she said, under her
+breath. "See, there is nothing left--scarcely a blossom--a rose or
+two; but the first frost will scatter the petals. Look at the pinks;
+look at the dead leaves. Ah, tristesse, tristesse! The life of summer
+is too short; the life of flowers is too short; so are our lives,
+Monsieur Scarlett. Do you believe it?"
+
+"Yes--now."
+
+She was very still for a while, her head bent toward the sea. Then,
+without turning: "Have you not always believed it?"
+
+"No, madame."
+
+"Then ... why do you believe it ... now?"
+
+"Because, since we have become friends, life seems pitiably short for
+such a friendship."
+
+She smiled without moving.
+
+"That is a ... very beautiful ... compliment, monsieur."
+
+"It owes its beauty to its truth, madame."
+
+"And that reply is illogical," she said, turning to look at me with
+brilliant eyes and a gay smile which emphasized the sensitive mouth's
+faint droop. "Illogical, because truth is not always beautiful. As
+example: you were very near to death yesterday. That is the truth, but
+it is not beautiful at all."
+
+"Ah, madame, it is you who are illogical," I said, laughing.
+
+"I?" she cried. "Prove it!"
+
+But I would not, spite of her challenge and bright mockery.
+
+In that flash all of our comradeship returned, bringing with it
+something new, which I dared not think was intimacy.
+
+Yet constraint fell away like a curtain between us, and though she
+dominated, and I was afraid lest I overstep limits which I myself had
+set, the charm of her careless confidence, her pretty, undissembled
+caprices, her pleasure in a delicately intimate badinage, gave me
+something of a self-reliance, a freedom that I had not known in a
+woman's presence for many years.
+
+"We brought you here because we thought it was good for you," she
+said, reverting maliciously to the theme that had at first embarrassed
+her. "We were perfectly certain that you have always been unfit to
+take care of yourself. Now we have the proofs."
+
+"Mademoiselle Elven said that you harbored us only because you were
+afraid of those bandits who have arrived in Paradise," I observed.
+
+"Afraid!" she said, scornfully. "Oh, you are making fun of me now.
+Indeed, when Mr. Buckhurst came last night I had my men conduct him to
+the outer gate!"
+
+"Did he come last night?" I asked, troubled.
+
+"Yes." She shrugged her pretty shoulders.
+
+"Alone?"
+
+"That unspeakable creature, Mornac, was with him. I had no idea he
+was here; had you?"
+
+I was silent. Did Mornac mean trouble for me? Yet how could he, shorn
+now of all authority?
+
+The thought seemed to occur to her, too, and she looked up quickly,
+asking if I had anything to fear.
+
+"Only for you," I said.
+
+"For me? Why? I am not afraid of such men. I have servants on whom I
+can call to disembarrass me of such people." She hesitated; the memory
+of her deception, of what she had suffered at Buckhurst's hands,
+brought a glint of anger into her beautiful eyes.
+
+"My innocence shames me," she said. "I merited what I received in
+such company. It was you who saved me from myself."
+
+"A noble mind thinks nobly," I said. "Theirs is the shame, not
+yours, that you could not understand treachery--that you never can
+understand it. As for me, I was an accident, which warned you in time
+that all the world was not as good and true as you desired to believe
+it."
+
+She sat looking at me curiously. "I wonder," she said, "why it is
+that you do not know your own value?"
+
+"My value--to whom?"
+
+"To ... everybody--to the world--to people."
+
+"Am I of any value to you, madame?"
+
+The pulsing moments passed and she did not answer, and I bit my lip
+and waited. At last she said, coolly: "A man must appraise himself.
+If he chooses, he is valuable. But values are comparative, and depend
+on individual taste.... Yes, you are of some value to me,... or I
+should not be here with you,... or I should not find it my pleasure to
+be here--or I should not trust you, come to you with my petty
+troubles, ask your experience to help me, perhaps protect me."
+
+She bent her head with adorable diffidence. "Monsieur Scarlett, I
+have never before had a friend who thought first of me and last of
+himself."
+
+I leaned on the back of the bench, resting my bandaged forehead on my
+hand.
+
+She looked up after a moment, and her face grew serious.
+
+"Are you suffering?" she asked. "Your face is white as my sleeve."
+
+"I feel curiously tired," I said, smiling.
+
+"Then you must have some tea, and I will brew it myself. You shall
+not object! No--it is useless, because I am determined. And you shall
+lie down in the little tea-room, where I found you that day when you
+first came to Trécourt."
+
+"I shall be very happy to do anything--if you are there."
+
+"Even drink tea when you abhor it? Then I certainly ought to reward
+you with my presence at the rite.... Are you dizzy? You are terribly
+pale.... Would you lean on my arm?"
+
+I was not dizzy, but I did so; and if such deceit is not pardonable,
+there is no justice in this world or in the next.
+
+The tea was hot and harmless; I lay thinking while she sat in the
+sunny window-corner, nibbling biscuit and marmalade, and watching me
+gravely.
+
+"My appetite is dreadful in these days," she said; "age increases
+it; I have just had my chocolate, yet here am I, eating like a
+school-girl.... I have a strange idea that I am exceedingly young,...
+that I am just beginning to live. That tired, thin, shabby girl you
+saw at La Trappe was certainly not I.... And long before that, before
+I knew you, there was another impersonal, half--awakened creature, who
+watched the world surging and receding around her, who grew tired even
+of violets and bonbons, tired of the companionship of the indifferent,
+hurt by the intimacy of the unfriendly; and I cannot believe that she
+was I.... Can you?"
+
+"I can believe it; I once saw you then," I said.
+
+She looked up quickly. "Where?"
+
+"In Paris."
+
+"When?"
+
+"The day that they received the news from Mexico. You sat in your
+carriage before the gates of the war office."
+
+"I remember," she said, staring at me. Then a slight shudder passed
+over her.
+
+Presently she said: "Did you recognize me afterward at La Trappe?"
+
+"Yes,... you had grown more beautiful."
+
+She colored and bent her head.
+
+"You remembered me all that time?... But why didn't you--didn't
+you--" She laughed nervously. "Why didn't we know each other in those
+years? Truly, Monsieur Scarlett, I needed a friend then, if ever;... a
+friend who thought first of me and last of himself."
+
+I did not answer.
+
+"Fancy," she continued, "your passing me so long ago,... and I
+totally unconscious, sitting there in my carriage,... never dreaming
+of this friendship which I ... care for so much!... Do you remember at
+La Trappe what I told you, there on the staircase?--how sometimes the
+impulse used to come to me when I saw a kindly face in the street to
+cry out, 'Be friends with me!' Do you remember?... It is strange that
+I did not feel that impulse when you passed me that day in Paris--feel
+it even though I did not see you--for I sorely needed kindness then,
+kindness and wisdom; and both passed by, at my elbow,... and I did not
+know." She bent her head, smiling with an effort. "You should have
+thrown yourself astride the horse and galloped away with me.... They
+did those things once, Monsieur Scarlett--on this very spot, too, in
+the days of the Saxon pirates."
+
+The whirring monotone of the spinning-wheel suddenly filled the house;
+Sylvia was singing at her wheel:
+
+ "Woe to the maids of Paradise!
+ Yvonne!
+ Twice have the Saxons landed; twice!
+ Yvonne!
+ Yet shall Paradise see them thrice,
+ Yvonne! Yvonne! Marivonik!"
+
+"The prophecy of that Breton spinning song is being fulfilled," I
+said. "For the third time we Saxons have come to Paradise, you see."
+
+"But this time our Saxons are not very formidable," she said, raising
+her beautiful gray eyes; "and the gwerz says, 'Woe to the maids of
+Paradise!' Do you intend to bring woe upon us maids of Paradise--do
+you come to carry us off, monsieur?"
+
+"If you will go with--me," I said, smiling.
+
+"All of us?"
+
+"Only one, madame."
+
+She started to speak, then her eyes fell. She laughed uncertainly.
+"Which one among us, if you please--mizilour skler ha brillant deuz
+ar fidelite?"
+
+"Met na varwin Ket Kontant, ma na varwan fidel," I said, slowly, as
+the words of the song came back to me. "I shall choose only the
+fairest and loveliest, madame. You know it is always that way in the
+story." My voice was not perfectly steady, nor was hers when she
+smiled and wished me happiness and a long life with the maid of
+Paradise I had chosen, even though I took her by force.
+
+Then constraint crept in between us, and I was grimly weighing the
+friendship this woman had given me--weighing it in the balance against
+a single hope.
+
+Once she looked across at me with questioning eyes in which I thought
+I read dawning disappointment. It almost terrified me.... I could not
+lose her confidence,... I could not, and go through life without
+it.... But I could live a hopeless life to its end with that
+confidence.... And I must do so,... and be content.
+
+"I suppose," said I, thinking aloud, "that I had better go to
+England."
+
+"When?" she asked, without raising her head.
+
+"In a day or two. I can find employment there, I think."
+
+"Is it necessary that you find employment ... so soon?"
+
+"Yes," I said, with a meaningless laugh, "I fear it is."
+
+"What will you do?"
+
+"Oh, the army--horses--something of that kind. Riding-master,
+perhaps--perhaps Scotland Yard. I may not be able to pick and
+choose.... If I ever save enough money for the voyage, perhaps you
+would let me come, once in a long while, to pay my respects, madame?"
+
+"Yes,... come, if you wish."
+
+She said no more, nor did I. Presently Sylvia appeared with a peasant
+woman, and the young countess went away, followed by the housekeeper
+with her keys at her girdle.
+
+I rose and walked to the window; then, nerveless and depressed, I went
+out into the garden again to smoke a cigar.
+
+The cat had disappeared; I traversed the garden, passed through the
+side wicket, and found myself on the cliffs. Almost immediately I was
+aware of a young girl, a child, seated on the rocks, her chin propped
+on her hands, the sea-wind blowing her curly elf-locks across her
+cheeks and eyes. A bundle tied in a handkerchief lay beside her; a cat
+dozed in her lap, its sleek fur stirring in the wind.
+
+"Jacqueline!" I said, gently.
+
+She raised her head; the movement awakened the cat, who stood up in
+her lap, stretching and yawning vigorously.
+
+"I thought you were to sail from Lorient to-day?"
+
+The cat stopped purring from her knees; the child rose, pushing back
+her hair from her eyes with both hands.
+
+"Where is Speed?" she asked, drowsily.
+
+"Did you want to see him, Jacqueline?"
+
+"That is why I returned."
+
+"To see Speed?"
+
+"Parbleu."
+
+"And you are going to let the others sail without you?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And give up the circus forever, Jacqueline?"
+
+"Y-es."
+
+"Just because you want to see Speed?"
+
+"Only for that."
+
+She stood rubbing her eyes with her small fists, as though just
+awakened.
+
+"Oui," she said, without emotion, "c'est comme ça, m'sieu. Where
+the heart is, happiness lies. I left the others at the city gate; I
+said, 'Voyons, let us be reasonable, gentlemen. I am happy in your
+circus; I am happy with Speed; I can be contented without your circus,
+but I cannot be contented without Speed. Voilà!'... and then I went."
+
+"You walked back all the way from Lorient?"
+
+"Bien sûr! I have no carriage--I, Jacqueline." She stretched her slim
+figure, raised her arms slowly, and yawned. "Pardon," she murmured,
+"I have slept in the gorse--badly."
+
+"Come into the garden," I said; "we can talk while you rest."
+
+She thanked me tranquilly, picked up her bundle, and followed me with
+a slight limp. The cat, tail up, came behind.
+
+The young countess was standing at the window as we approached in
+solemn single file along the path, and when she caught sight of us she
+opened the door and stepped out on the tiny porch.
+
+"Why, this is our little Jacqueline," she said, quickly. "They have
+taken your father for the conscription, have they not, my child? And
+now you are homeless!"
+
+"I think so, madame."
+
+"Then you will stay with me until he returns, won't you, little
+one?"
+
+There was a moment's pause; Jacqueline made a grave gesture. "This is
+my cat, madame--Ange Pitou."
+
+The countess stared at the cat, then broke out into the prettiest peal
+of laughter. "Of course you must bring your cat! My invitation is
+also for Ange Pitou, you understand."
+
+"Then we thank you, and permit ourselves to accept, madame," said
+Jacqueline. "We are very glad because we are quite hungry, and we
+have thorns from the gorse in our feet--" She broke off with a joyous
+little cry: "There is Speed!" And Speed, entering the garden
+hurriedly, stopped short in his tracks.
+
+The child ran to him and threw both arms around his neck. "Oh, Speed!
+Speed!" she stammered, over and over again. "I was too lonely; I will
+do what you wish; I will be instructed in the graces of
+education--truly I will. I am glad to come back--and I am so tired,
+Speed. I will never go away from you again.... Oh, Speed, I am
+contented!... Do you love me?"
+
+"Dearly, little sweetheart," he said, huskily, trying to steady his
+voice. "There! Madame the countess is waiting. All will be well now."
+He turned, smiling, toward the young countess, and lifted his hat,
+then stepped back and fixed me with a blank look of dismay, which said
+perfectly plainly that he had unpleasant news to communicate. The
+countess, I think, saw that look, too, for she gave me an almost
+imperceptible nod and took Jacqueline's hand in hers.
+
+"If there are thorns in your feet we must find them," she said,
+sweetly. "Will you come, Jacqueline?"
+
+"Yes, madame," said the child, with an adoring smile at Speed, who
+bent and kissed her upturned face as she passed.
+
+They went into the house, the countess holding Jacqueline's
+thorn-scratched hand, the cat following, perfectly self-possessed, to
+the porch, where she halted and sat down, surveying the landscape with
+dignified indifference.
+
+"Well," said I, turning to Speed, "what new deviltry is going on in
+Paradise now?"
+
+"Preparations for train-wrecking, I should say," he replied, bluntly.
+"They are tinkering with the trestle. Buckhurst's ragamuffins have
+just seized the railroad station at Rose-Sainte-Anne, where the main
+line crosses, you know, near the ravine at Lammerin. I was sure there
+was something extraordinary going to happen, so I went down to the
+river, hailed Jeanne Rolland, the passeuse, and had her ferry me over
+to Bois-Gilbert. Then I made for the telegraph, gave the operator ten
+francs to let me work the keys, and called up the arsenal at Lorient.
+But it was no use, Scarlett, the governor of Lorient can't spare a
+soldier--not a single gendarme. It seems that Uhlans have been
+signalled north of Quimper, and Lorient is frantic, and the garrison
+is preparing to stand siege."
+
+"You mean," I said, indignantly, "that they're not going to try to
+catch Buckhurst and Mornac?"
+
+"That's what I mean; they're scared as rabbits over these rumors of
+Uhlans in the west and north."
+
+"Well," said I, disgusted, "it appears to me that Buckhurst is going
+to get off scot-free this time--and Mornac, too! Did you know that
+Mornac was here?"
+
+"Know it? I saw him an hour ago, marshalling a new company of
+malcontents in the square--a bad lot, Scarlett--deserters from
+Chanzy's army, from Bourbaki, from Garibaldi--a hundred or more line
+soldiers, dragoons without horses, francs-tireurs, Garibaldians, even
+a Turco, from Heaven knows where--bad soldiers who disgrace
+France--marauders, cowardly, skulking mobiles--a sweet lot, Scarlett,
+to be let loose in Madame de Vassart's vicinity."
+
+"I think so, too," I said, seriously.
+
+"And I earnestly agree with you," muttered Speed. "That's all _I_
+have to report, except that your friend, Robert the Lizard, is out
+yonder flat on his belly under a gorse-bush, and he wants to see
+you."
+
+"The Lizard!" I exclaimed. "Come on, Speed. Where is he?"
+
+"Yonder, clothed in somebody's line uniform. He's one of them.
+Scarlett, do you trust him? He has a rifle."
+
+"Yes, yes," I said, impatiently. "Come on, man! It's all right; the
+fellow is watching Buckhurst for me." And I gave Speed a nervous push
+toward the moors. We started, Speed ostentatiously placing his
+revolver in his side-pocket so that he could shoot through his coat if
+necessary. I walked beside him, closely scanning the stretch of open
+moor for a sign of life, knowing all the while that it is easier to
+catch moon-beams in a net than to find a poacher in the bracken. But
+Speed had marked him down as he might mark a squatting quail, and
+suddenly we flushed him, rifle clapped to his shoulder.
+
+"None of that, my friend," growled Speed; but the poacher at sight of
+me had already lowered the weapon.
+
+I greeted him frankly, offering my hand; he took it, then his hard
+fist fell away and he touched his cap.
+
+"I have done what you wanted," he said, sullenly. "I have the
+company's rolls--here they are." He dragged from his baggy trousers
+pockets a mass of filthy papers, closely covered with smeared writing.
+"Here is the money, too," he said, fishing in the other pocket; and,
+to my astonishment, he produced a flattened, soiled mass of
+bank-notes. "Count it," he added, calmly.
+
+"What money is that?" I asked, taking it reluctantly.
+
+"Didn't you warn me to get that box--the steel box that Tric-Trac sat
+down on when he saw me?"
+
+"Is that money from the box?" I exclaimed.
+
+"Yes, m'sieu. I could not bring the box, and there had been enough
+blood shed over it already. Besides, when Buckhurst broke it open
+there was only a bit of iron for the scrap-heap left."
+
+I touched Speed's arm to call his attention; the poacher shrugged his
+shoulders and continued: "Tric-Trac made no ceremony with me; he
+told me that he and Buckhurst had settled this Dr. Delmont, and the
+other--the professor--Tavernier."
+
+"Murdered them?" muttered Speed.
+
+"Dame!--the coup du Père François is murder, I suppose."
+
+Speed turned to me. "That's the argot for strangling," he said,
+grimly.
+
+"Go on," I motioned to the poacher. "How did you get the money?"
+
+"Oh, pour ça--in my turn I turned sonneur," he replied, with a savage
+smile.
+
+A _sonneur_, in thieves' slang, is a creature of the footpad type who,
+tripping his victim flat, seizes him by the shoulders and beats his
+head against the pavement until he renders him unconscious--if he
+doesn't kill him.
+
+"It was pay-day," continued the Lizard. "Buckhurst opened the box
+and I heard him--he hammered it open with a cold chisel. I was
+standing guard on the forest's edge; I crept back, hearing the
+hammering and the little bell ringing the Angelus of Tric-Trac. It was
+close to dusk; by the time he got into the box it was dark in the
+woods, and it was easy to jump on his back and strike--not very hard,
+m'sieu--but, I tell you, Buckhurst lay for two days with eyes like a
+sick owl's! He knew one of his own men had done it. He never said a
+word, but I know he thinks it was Tric-Trac.... And when he is
+ready--bon soir, Tric-Trac!"
+
+He drew his right hand across his corded throat with a horridly
+suggestive motion. Speed watched him narrowly.
+
+I asked the poacher why Buckhurst had come to Paradise, and why his
+banditti had seized the railroad at Rose-Sainte-Anne.
+
+"Ah," cried the Lizard, with a ferocious leer, "that is the kernel
+under the limpet's tent! And I have uncovered it--I, Robert Garenne,
+bon sang de Jésu!"
+
+He stretched out his powerful arm toward the sea. "Where is that
+cruiser, m'sieu? Gone? Yes, but who sent her off? Buckhurst, with his
+new signal-book! Where? In chase of a sea-swallow, or a frigate
+(bird). Who knows? Listen, messieurs! We are to wreck the train for
+Brest to-night. Do you comprehend?"
+
+"Where?" I asked, quietly.
+
+"Just where the trestle at Lammerin crosses the ravine below the
+house of Josephine Tanguy."
+
+Speed looked around at me. "It's the treasure-train from Lorient.
+They're probably sending the crown diamonds back to Brest in view of
+the Uhlans being seen near Quimper."
+
+"On a false order?"
+
+"I believe so. I believe that Buckhurst sent the cruiser to Brest,
+and now he's started the treasure-trains back to Brest in a panic."
+
+"That is the truth," said the Lizard; "Tric-Trac told me. They have
+the code-book of Mornac." His eyes began to light up with that
+terrible anger as the name of his blood enemy fell from his lips; his
+nose twitched; his upper lip wrinkled into a snarl.
+
+I thought quietly for a moment, then asked the poacher whether there
+was a guard at the semaphore of Saint-Yssel.
+
+"Yes, the soldier Rolland, who says he understands the telegraph--a
+sot from Morlaix." He hesitated and looked across the open moor toward
+Paradise. "I must go," he muttered; "I am on guard yonder."
+
+I offered him my hand again; he took it, looking me sincerely in the
+eyes.
+
+"Let your private wrongs wait a little longer," I said. "I think we
+can catch Buckhurst and Mornac alive. Do you promise?"
+
+"Y-es," he replied.
+
+"Strike, then, like a Breton!"
+
+We struck palms heavily. Then he turned to Speed and motioned him to
+retire.
+
+Speed walked slowly toward a half-buried bowlder and sat down out of
+ear-shot.
+
+"For your sake," said the poacher, clutching my hand in a tightening
+grip--"for your sake I have let Mornac go--let him pass me at
+arm's-length, and did not strike. You have dealt openly by me--and
+justly. No man can say I betrayed friendship. But I swear to you that
+if you miss him this time, I shall not miss--I, Robert the Lizard!"
+
+"You mean to kill Mornac?" I asked.
+
+His eyes blazed.
+
+"Ami," he said, "I once spoke of '_a little red deer_,' and you half
+understood me, for you are wise in strange ways, as I am."
+
+"I remember," I said.
+
+His strong fingers closed tighter on my hand. "Woman--or doe--it's
+all one now; and I am out of prison--the prison _he_ sent me to! Do
+you understand that he wronged me--me, the soldier Garenne, in
+garrison at Vincennes; he, the officer, the aristocrat?"
+
+He choked, crushing my hand in a spasmodic grip. "Ami, the little red
+deer was beautiful--to me. He took her--the doe--a silly maid of
+Paradise--and I was in irons, m'sieu, for three years."
+
+He glared at vacancy, tears falling from his staring eyes.
+
+"Your wife?" I asked, quietly.
+
+"Yes, ami."
+
+He dropped my numbed fingers and rubbed his eyes with the back of his
+big hand.
+
+"Then Jacqueline is not your little daughter?" I asked, gravely.
+
+"Hers--not mine. That has been the most terrible of all for me--since
+she died--died so young, too, m'sieu--and all alone--in Paris. If he
+had not done that--if he had been kind to her. And she was only a
+child, ami, yet he left her."
+
+All the ferocity in his eyes was gone; he raised a vacant, grief-lined
+visage to meet mine, and stood stupidly, heavy hands hanging.
+
+Then, shoulders sloping, he shambled off into the thicket, trailing
+his battered rifle.
+
+When he was very far away I motioned to Speed.
+
+"I think," said I, "that we had better try to do something at the
+semaphore if we are going to stop that train in time."
+
+
+
+
+XX
+
+THE SEMAPHORE
+
+
+The telegraph station at the semaphore was a little, square, stone
+hut, roofed with slate, perched high on the cliffs. A sun-scorched,
+wooden signal-tower rose in front of it; behind it a line of telegraph
+poles stretched away into perspective across the moors. Beyond the
+horizon somewhere lay the war-port of Lorient, with its arsenal, armed
+redoubts, and heavy bastions; beyond that was war.
+
+While we plodded on, hip deep, through gorse and thorn and heath, we
+cautiously watched a spot of red moving to and fro in front of the
+station; and as we drew nearer we could see the sentry very
+distinctly, rifle slung muzzle down, slouching his beat in the
+sunshine.
+
+He was a slovenly specimen, doubtless a deserter from one of the three
+provincial armies now forming for the hopeless dash at Belfort and the
+German eastern communications.
+
+When Speed and I emerged from the golden gorse into plain view the
+sentinel stopped in his tracks, shoved his big, red hands into his
+trousers pockets, and regarded us sulkily.
+
+"What are you going to do with this gentleman?" whispered Speed.
+
+"Reason with him, first," I said; "a louis is worth a dozen
+kicks."
+
+The soldier left his post as we started toward him, and advanced,
+blinking in the strong sunshine, meeting us half-way.
+
+"Now, bourgeois," he said, shaking his unkempt head, "this won't do,
+you know. Orders are to keep off. And," he added, in a bantering tone,
+"I'm here to enforce them. Allons! En route, mes amis!"
+
+"Are you the soldier Rolland?" I asked.
+
+He admitted that he was with prompt profanity, adding that if we
+didn't like his name we had only to tell him so and he would arrange
+the matter.
+
+I told him that we approved not only his name but his personal
+appearance; indeed, so great was our admiration for him that we had
+come clear across the Saint-Yssel moor expressly to pay our
+compliments to him in the shape of a hundred-franc note. I drew it
+from the soiled roll the Lizard had intrusted to me, and displayed it
+for the sentinel's inspection.
+
+"Is that for me?" he demanded, unconvinced, plainly suspicious of
+being ridiculed.
+
+"Under certain conditions," I said, "these five louis are for you."
+
+The soldier winked. "I know what you want; you want to go in yonder
+and use the telegraph. What the devil," he burst out, "do all you
+bourgeois want with that telegraph in there?"
+
+"Has anybody else asked to use it?" I inquired, disturbed.
+
+"Anybody else?" he mimicked. "Well, I think so; there's somebody in
+there now--here, give your hundred francs or I tell you nothing, you
+understand!"
+
+I handed him the soiled note. He scanned it with the inborn distrust
+of the true malefactor, turned it over and over, and finally,
+pronouncing it "en règle," shoved it cheerfully into the lining of
+his red forage cap.
+
+"A hundred more if you answer my questions truthfully," I said,
+amiably.
+
+"'Cré cochon!" he blurted out; "fire at will, comrade! I'll sell you
+the whole cursed semaphore for a hundred more! What can I do for you,
+captain?"
+
+"Who is in that hut?"
+
+"A lady--she comes often--she gives ten francs each time. Zut!--what
+is ten francs when a gentleman gives a hundred! She pays me for my
+complaisance--bon! Place aux dames! You pay me better--bon! I'm yours,
+gentlemen. War is war, but money pulls the trigger!"
+
+The miserable creature cocked his forage-cap with a toothless smirk
+and twisted his scant mustache.
+
+"Who is this lady who pays you ten francs?" I asked.
+
+"I do not know her name--but," he added, with an offensive leer,
+"she's worth looking over by gentlemen like you. Do you want to see
+her? She's in there click-clicking away on the key with her pretty
+little fingers--bon sang! A morsel for a king, gentlemen."
+
+"Wait here," I said, disgusted, and walked toward the stone station.
+The treacherous cur came running after me. "There's a side door," he
+whispered; "step in there behind the partition and take a look at
+her. She'll be done directly: she never stays more than fifteen
+minutes. Then you can use the telegraph at your pleasure, captain."
+
+The side door was partly open; I stepped in noiselessly and found
+myself in a small, dusky closet, partitioned from the telegraph
+office. Immediately the rapid clicking of the Morse instrument came to
+my ears, and mechanically I read the message by the sound as it
+rattled on under the fingers of an expert:
+
+"--Must have already found out that the signals were not authorized
+by the government. Before the _Fer-de-Lance_ returns to her station
+the German cruiser ought to intercept her off Groix. Did you arrange
+for this?"
+
+There was a moment's silence, then back came rattling the reply in the
+Morse code, but in German:
+
+"Yes, all is arranged. The _Augusta_ took a French merchant vessel
+off Pont Aven yesterday. The _Augusta_ ought to pass Groix this
+evening. You are to burn three white lights from Point Paradise if a
+landing-party is needed. It rests with you entirely."
+
+Another silence, then the operator in the next room began:
+
+"You say that Lorient is alarmed by rumors of Uhlans, and therefore
+sends the treasure-train back to Brest. The train, you assure me,
+carries the diamonds of the crown, bar-silver, gold, the Venus of
+Milo, and ten battle-flags from the Invalides. Am I correct?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"The insurgents here, under an individual in our pay, one John
+Buckhurst, are preparing to wreck the train at the Lammerin trestle.
+
+"If the _Augusta_ can reach Point Paradise to-night, a landing-party
+could easily scatter these insurgents, seize the treasures, and
+re-embark in safety.
+
+"There is, you declare, nothing to fear from Lorient; the only thing,
+then, to be dreaded is the appearance of the _Fer-de-Lance_ off Groix.
+She is not now in sight; I will notify you if she appears. If she does
+not come I will burn three white lights in triangle on Paradise
+headland."
+
+A short pause, then:
+
+"Are there any Prussian cavalry near enough to help us?"
+
+And the answer:
+
+"Prussian dragoons are scouting toward Bannalec. I will send a
+messenger to them if I can. This is all. Be careful. Good-bye."
+
+"Good-bye," clicked the instrument in the next room. There was a
+rustle of skirts, a tap of small shoes on the stone floor. I leaned
+forward and looked through the little partition window; Sylvia Elven
+stood by the table, quietly drawing on her gloves. Her face was
+flushed and thoughtful.
+
+Slowly she walked toward the door, hesitated, turned, hurried back to
+the instrument, and set the switch. Then, without seating herself, she
+leaned over and gave the station call, three _S's_.
+
+"I forgot to say that the two Yankee officers of military police,
+Scarlett and Speed, are a harmless pair. You have nothing to fear from
+them. Good-bye."
+
+And the reply:
+
+"Watch them all the same. Be careful, madame, they are Yankees.
+Good-bye."
+
+When she had gone, closing the outer door behind her, I sprang to the
+key, switched on, rattled out the three S's and got my man, probably
+before he had taken three steps from his table.
+
+"I forgot to say," I telegraphed, using a light, rapid touch to
+imitate Sylvia's--"I forgot to say that, in case the treasure-train
+is held back to-night, the Augusta must run for the English Channel."
+
+"What's that?" came back the jerky reply.
+
+I repeated.
+
+"Donnerwetter!" rattled the wires. "The entire French iron-clad
+fleet is looking for her."
+
+"And I hope they catch her," I telegraphed.
+
+"Are you crazy?" came the frantic reply. "Who are you?"
+
+"A Yankee, idiot!" I replied. "Run for your life, you hopeless
+ass!"
+
+There was, of course, no reply, though I sent a few jocular remarks
+flying after what must have been the most horrified German spy south
+of Metz.
+
+Then, at a venture, I set the switch on the arsenal line, got a quick
+reply, and succeeded in alarming them sufficiently, I think, for in a
+few moments I was telegraphing directly to the governor of Lorient,
+and the wires grew hot with an interchange of observations, which
+resulted in my running to the locker, tumbling out all the signal
+bunting, cones, and balls, sorting five flags, two red cones, and a
+ball, and hastening out to the semaphore.
+
+Speed and the soldier Rolland saw me set the cones, hoist away, break
+out the flags on the halyards, and finally drop the white arm of the
+semaphore.
+
+I had set the signal for the _Fer-de-Lance_ to land in force and wipe
+Buckhurst and his grotesque crew from the face of the earth.
+
+"Rolland," I said, "here is another hundred francs. Watch that
+halyard and guard it. To-night you will string seven of those little
+lamps on this other halyard, light them, hoist them, and then go up
+that tower and light the three red lamps on the left."
+
+"'Tendu," he said, promptly.
+
+"If you do it I will give you two hundred francs to-morrow. Is it a
+bargain?"
+
+The soldier broke out into a torrent of promises which I cut short.
+
+"That lady will never come here again, I think. If she does, she must
+not touch those halyards. Do you hear? If she offers you money,
+remember I will double it. But, Rolland, if you lie to _me_ I will
+have you killed as the Bretons kill pigs; you understand how that is
+done?"
+
+He said that he understood, and followed us, fawning and whining his
+cowardly promises of fidelity until we ordered the wretch back to the
+post which he had already twice betrayed, and would certainly betray
+again if the opportunity offered.
+
+Walking fast over the springy heath, I told Speed briefly what I had
+done--that the treasure-train would not now leave Lorient, that as
+soon as the _Fer-de-Lance_ came in sight of the semaphore Buckhurst's
+game must come to an end.
+
+Far ahead of us we saw the flutter of a light dress on the moor;
+Sylvia Elven, the spy, was going home; and from the distance, across
+the yellow-flowered gorse, her gay song floated back to us:
+
+ "Those who die for a maid
+ Are paid;
+ Those who die for a creed
+ God-speed;
+ Those who die for their own dear land
+ Shall stand forever on God's right hand!--"
+
+"A spy!" muttered Speed.
+
+"I think," said I, "that she had better leave Paradise at once. Oh,
+the little fool, to risk all for a caprice--for a word to the poor
+fellow she ruined! Vanity does it every time, Speed."
+
+"I don't understand what you mean," he said.
+
+"No, and I can't explain," I replied, thinking of Kelly Eyre. "But
+Sylvia Elven is running a fearful risk here. Mornac knows her record.
+Buckhurst would betray her in a moment if he thought it might save his
+own skin. She ought to leave before the _Fer-de-Lance_ sights the
+semaphore and reads the signal to land in force."
+
+"Then you'll have to tell her," he said, gloomily.
+
+"I suppose so," I replied, not at all pleased. For the prospect of
+humiliating her, of proving to this woman that I was not as stupid as
+she believed me, gave me no pleasure. Rather was I sorry for her,
+sorry for the truly pitiable condition in which she must now find
+herself.
+
+As we reached the gates of Trécourt, dusty and tired from our moorland
+tramp, I turned and looked back. My signal was still set; the white
+arm of the semaphore glistened like silver against a brilliant sky of
+sapphire. Seaward I could see no sign of the _Fer-de-Lance_.
+
+"The guns I heard at sea must have been fired from the German cruiser
+_Augusta_," I suggested to Speed. "She's been hovering off the coast,
+catching French merchant craft. I wish to goodness the _Fer-de-Lance_
+would come in and give her a drubbing."
+
+"Oh, rubbish!" he said. "What the deuce do we care?"
+
+"It's human to take sides in this war, isn't it?" I insisted.
+
+"Considering the fashion in which France has treated us individually,
+it seems to me that we may as well take the German side," he said.
+
+"Are you going to?" I asked.
+
+He hesitated. "Oh, hang it all, no! There's something about France
+that holds us poor devils--I don't know what. Barring England, she's
+the only human nation in the whole snarling pack. Here's to her--damn
+her impudence! If she wants me she can have me--empire, kingdom, or
+republic. Vive anything--as long as it's French!"
+
+I was laughing when we entered the court; Jacqueline, her big, furry
+cat in her arms, came to the door and greeted Speed with:
+
+"You have been away a very long time, and the thorns are all out of
+my arms and my legs, and I have been desiring to see you. Come into
+the house and read--shall we?"
+
+Speed turned to me with an explanatory smile. "I've been reading the
+'Idyls' aloud to her in English," he said, rather shyly. "She seems
+to like them; it's the noble music that attracts her; she can't
+understand ten words."
+
+"I can understand nearly twenty," she said, flushing painfully.
+
+Speed, who had no thought of hurting her, colored up, too.
+
+"You don't comprehend, little one," he said, quickly. "It was in
+praise, not in blame, that I spoke."
+
+"I knew it--I am silly," she said, with quick tears trembling in her
+eyes. "You know I adore you, Speed. Forgive me."
+
+She turned away into the house, saying that she would get the book.
+
+"Look here, Speed," I said, troubled, "Jacqueline is very much like
+the traditional maid of romance, which I never believed existed--all
+unspoiled, frankly human, innocently daring, utterly ignorant of
+convention. She's only a child now, but another year or two will bring
+something else to her."
+
+"Don't you suppose I've thought of that?" he said, frowning.
+
+"I hope you have."
+
+"Well, I have. When I find enough to do to keep soul and body
+friendly I'm going to send her to school, if that old ruffian, her
+father, allows it."
+
+"I think he will," I said, gravely; "but after that?"
+
+"After what?"
+
+"After she's educated and--unhappy?"
+
+"She isn't any too happy now," he retorted.
+
+"Granted. But after you have spent all your money on her, what
+then?"
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"I mean that you'll have no child to deal with, but a woman in full
+bloom, a woman fairly aquiver with life and intelligence, a
+high-strung, sensitive, fine-grained creature, whose educated
+ignorance will not be educated innocence, remember that! And I tell
+you, Speed, it's the heaviest responsibility a man can assume."
+
+"I know it," he replied.
+
+"Then it's all right, if you do know it," I said, cheerfully. "All I
+can say is, I am thankful she isn't to spend her life in the circus."
+
+"Or meet death there," he added. "It's not to our credit that she
+escapes it."
+
+Jacqueline came dancing back to the porch, cat under one arm, book
+under the other, so frankly happy, so charmingly grateful for Speed's
+society, that the tragedy of the lonely child touched me very deeply.
+I strove to discover any trace of the bar sinister in her, but could
+not, though now I understood, from her parentage, how it was possible
+for a poacher's child to have such finely sculptured hands and feet.
+Perhaps her dark, silky lashes and hair were Mornac's, but if this was
+so, I trusted that there the aristocratic blood had spent its force in
+the frail body of this child of chance.
+
+I went into the house, leaving them seated on the porch, heads
+together, while in a low monotone Speed read the deathless "Morte
+d'Arthur."
+
+Daylight was waning.
+
+Out of the west a clear, greenish sky, tinged with saffron tints,
+promised a sea-wind. But the mild land-breeze was still blowing and
+the ebb-tide flowing as I entered the corridor and glanced at the
+corner where the spinning-wheel stood. Sylvia sat beside it, reading
+in the Lutheran Bible by the failing light.
+
+She raised her dreamy eyes as I passed; I had never seen her piquantly
+expressive face so grave.
+
+"May I speak to you alone a moment, after dinner?" I asked.
+
+"If you wish," she replied.
+
+I bowed and started on, but she called me back.
+
+"Did you know that Monsieur Eyre is here?"
+
+"Kelly Eyre?"
+
+"Oui, monsieur. He returns with an order from the governor of Lorient
+for the balloon."
+
+I was astonished, and asked where Eyre had gone.
+
+"He is in your room," she said, "loading your revolver. I hope you
+will not permit him to go alone to Paradise."
+
+"I'll see about that," I muttered, and hurried up the stairs and down
+the hallway to my bedchamber.
+
+He sprang to the door as I entered, giving me both hands in boyish
+greeting, saying how delighted they all were to know that my injury
+had proved so slight.
+
+"That balloon robbery worried me," he continued. "I knew that Speed
+depended on his balloon for a living; so as soon as we entered Lorient
+I went to our consul, and he and I made such a row that the governor
+of Lorient gave me an order for the balloon. Here it is, Mr.
+Scarlett."
+
+His heightened color and excitement, his nervous impetuosity, were not
+characteristic of this quiet and rather indifferent young countryman
+of mine.
+
+I looked at him keenly but pleasantly.
+
+"You are going to load my revolver, and go over to Paradise and take
+that balloon from these bandits?" I asked, smiling.
+
+"An order is all right, but it is the more formal when backed by a
+bullet," he said.
+
+"Do you mean to tell me that you were preparing to go over into that
+hornet's nest alone?"
+
+He shrugged his shoulders with a reckless laugh.
+
+"Give me my revolver," I said, coldly.
+
+His face fell. "Let me take it, Mr. Scarlett," he pleaded; but I
+refused, and made him hand me the weapon.
+
+"Now," I said, sternly, "I want to know what the devil you mean by
+attempting suicide? Do you suppose that those ruffians care a straw
+for you and your order? Kelly, what's the matter with you? Is life as
+unattractive as all that?"
+
+His flushed and sullen face darkened.
+
+"If you want to risk your life," I said, "you have plenty of chances
+in your profession. Did you ever hear of an aged aëronaut? Kelly, go
+back to America and break your neck like a gentleman."
+
+He darted a menacing glance at me, but there was nothing of irony in
+my sober visage.
+
+"You appear here," I said, "after the others have sailed from
+Lorient. Why? To do Speed this generous favor? Yes--and to do yourself
+the pleasure of ending an embittered life under the eyes of the woman
+who ruined you."
+
+The boy flinched as though I had struck him in the face. For a moment
+I expected a blow; his hands clinched convulsively, and he focussed me
+with blazing eyes.
+
+"Don't," I said, quietly. "I am trying to be your friend; I am
+trying to save you from yourself, Kelly. Don't throw away your
+life--as I have done. Life is a good thing, Kelly, a good thing. Can
+we not be friends though I tell you the truth?"
+
+The color throbbed and throbbed in his face. There was a chair near
+him; he groped for it, and sat down heavily.
+
+"Life is a good thing," I said again, "but, Kelly, truth is better.
+And I must tell you the--well, something of the truth--as much as you
+need know ... now. My friend, _she is not worth it_."
+
+"Do you think that makes any difference?" he said, harshly. "Let me
+alone, Scarlett. I know!... _I know_, I tell you!"
+
+"Do you mean to tell me that you know she deliberately betrayed you?"
+I demanded.
+
+"Yes, I know it--I tell you I know it!"
+
+"And ... you love her?"
+
+"Yes." He dropped his haggard face on his arms a moment, then sat
+bolt upright. "Truth is better than life," he said, slowly. "I lied
+to you and to myself when I came back. I did come to get Speed's
+balloon, but I came ... for her sake,... to be near her,... to see her
+once more before I--"
+
+"Yes, I understand, Kelly."
+
+He winced and leaned wearily back.
+
+"You are right," he said; "I wanted to end it,... I am tired."
+
+I sat thinking for a moment; the light in the room faded to a glimmer
+on the panes.
+
+"Kelly," I said, "there remains another way to risk your neck, and,
+I think, a nobler way. There is in this house a woman who is running a
+terrible risk--a German spy whose operations have been discovered.
+This woman believes that she has in her pay the communist leader of
+the revolt, a man called Buckhurst. She is in error. And she must
+leave this house to-night."
+
+Eyre's face had paled. He bent forward, clasped hands between his
+knees, eyes fastened on me.
+
+"There will be trouble here to-night--or, in all probability, within
+the next twenty-four hours. I expect to see Buckhurst a prisoner. And
+when that happens it will go hard with Mademoiselle Elven, for he will
+turn on her to save himself.... And you know what that means;... a
+blank wall, Kelly, and a firing-squad. There is but one sex for
+spies."
+
+A deadly fear was stamped on his bloodless face. I saw it, tense and
+quivering, in the gray light of the window.
+
+"She must leave to-night, Kelly. She must try to cross into Spain.
+Will you help her?"
+
+He nodded, striving to say "yes."
+
+"You know your own risk?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Her company is death for you both if you are taken."
+
+He stood up very straight. In what strange forms comes happiness to
+man!
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+LIKE HER ANCESTORS
+
+
+A sense of insecurity, of impending trouble, seemed to weigh upon us
+all that evening--a physical depression, which the sea-wind brought
+with its flying scud, wetting the window-panes like fine rain.
+
+At intervals from across the moors came the deadened rolling of
+insurgent drums, and in the sky a ruddy reflection of a fire
+brightened and waned as the fog thickened or blew inland--an ominous
+sign of disorder, possibly even a reflection from that unseen war
+raging somewhere beyond the obscured horizon.
+
+It may have been this indefinable foreboding that drew our little
+company into a temporary intimacy; it may have been the immense
+loneliness of the sea, thundering in thickening darkness, that stilled
+our voices to whispers.
+
+Eyre, ill at ease, walked from window to window, looking at the
+luminous tints on the ragged edges of the clouds; Sylvia, over her
+heavy embroidery, lifted her head gravely at moments, to glance after
+him when he halted listless, preoccupied, staring at Speed and
+Jacqueline, who were drawing pictures of Arthur and his knights by the
+lamp-lit table.
+
+I leaned in the embrasure of the southern window, gazing at my lighted
+lanterns, which dangled from the halyards at Saint-Yssel. The soldier
+Rolland had so far kept his word--three red lamps glimmered through a
+driving mist; the white lanterns hung above, faintly shining.
+
+Full in the firelight of the room sat the young Countess, lost in
+reverie, hands clasping the gilt arms of her chair. At her feet dozed
+Ange Pitou.
+
+The dignity of a parvenu cat admitted for the first time to unknown
+luxury is a lesson. I said this to the young Countess, who smiled
+dreamily, watching the play of color over the drift-wood fire. A
+ship's plank was burning there, tufted with golden-green flames.
+Presently a blaze of purest carmine threw a deeper light into the
+room.
+
+"I wonder," she said, "what people sailed in that ship--and when?
+Did they perish on this coast when their ship perished? A drift-wood
+fire is beautiful, but a little sad, too." She looked up pensively
+over her shoulder. "Will you bring a chair to the fire?" she asked.
+"We are burning part of a great ship--for our pleasure, monsieur.
+Tell me what ship it was; tell me a story to amuse me--not a
+melancholy one, if you please."
+
+I drew a chair to the blaze; the drift-wood burned gold and violet,
+with scarcely a whisper of its velvet flames.
+
+"I am afraid my story is not going to be very cheerful," I said,
+"and I am also afraid that I must ask you to listen to it."
+
+She met my eyes with composure, leaned a little toward me, and
+waited.
+
+And so, sitting there in the tinted glare, I told her of the death of
+Delmont and of Tavernier, and of Buckhurst's share in the miserable
+work.
+
+I spoke in a whisper scarcely louder than the rustle of the flames,
+watching the horror growing in her face.
+
+I told her that the money she had intrusted to them for the Red Cross
+was in my possession, and would be forwarded at the first chance; that
+I hoped to bring Buckhurst to justice that very night.
+
+"Madame, I am paining you," I said; "but I am going to cause you
+even greater unhappiness."
+
+"Tell me what is necessary," she said, forming the words with
+tightened lips.
+
+"Then I must tell you that it is necessary for Mademoiselle Elven to
+leave Trécourt to-night."
+
+She looked at me as though she had not heard.
+
+"It is absolutely necessary," I repeated. "She must go secretly. She
+must leave her effects; she must go in peasant's dress, on foot."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"It is better that I do not tell you, madame."
+
+"Tell me. It is my right to know."
+
+"Not now; later, if you insist."
+
+The young Countess passed one hand over her eyes as though dazed.
+
+"Does Sylvia know this?" she asked, in a shocked voice.
+
+"Not yet."
+
+"And you are going to tell her?"
+
+"Yes, madame."
+
+"This is dreadful," she muttered.... "If I did not know you,... if I
+did not trust you so perfectly,... trust you with all my heart!... Oh,
+are you certain she must go? It frightens me; it is so strange! I have
+grown fond of her.... And now you say that she must go. I cannot
+understand--I cannot."
+
+"No, you cannot understand," I repeated, gently; "but she can. It is
+a serious matter for Mademoiselle Elven; it could not easily be more
+serious. It is even perhaps a question of life or death, madame."
+
+"In Heaven's name, help her, then!" she said, scarcely controlling
+the alarm that brought a pitiful break in her voice.
+
+"I am trying to," I said. "And now I must consult Mademoiselle
+Elven. Will you help me?"
+
+"What can I do?" she asked, piteously.
+
+"Stand by that window. Look, madame, can you see the lights on the
+semaphore?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Count them aloud."
+
+She counted the white lights for me, then the red ones.
+
+"Now," I said, "if those lights change in number or color or
+position, come instantly to me. I shall be with Mademoiselle Elven in
+the little tea-room. But," I added, "I do not expect any change in
+the lights; it is only a precaution."
+
+I left her in the shadow of the curtains, and passed through the room
+to Sylvia's side. She looked up quietly from her embroidery frame,
+then, dropping the tinted silks and needles on the cloth, rose and
+walked beside me past Eyre, who stood up as we came abreast of him.
+
+Sylvia paused. "Monsieur Eyre," she said, "I have a question to ask
+you ... some day," and passed on with a smile and a slight inclination
+of her head, leaving Eyre looking after her with heavy eyes.
+
+When we entered the little tea-room she passed on to the lounge and
+seated herself on the padded arm; I turned, closed the door, and
+walked straight toward her.
+
+She glanced up at me curiously; something in my face appeared to sober
+her, for the amused smile on her lips faded before I spoke.
+
+"What is it?" she asked.
+
+"I am sorry to tell you," I said--"sorry from my heart. You are not
+very friendly to me, and that makes it harder for me to say what I
+have to say."
+
+She was watching me intently out of her pretty, intelligent eyes.
+
+"What do you mean?" she asked, guardedly.
+
+"I mean that you cannot stay here," I said. "And you know why."
+
+The color flooded her face, and she stood up, confronting me,
+exasperated, defiant.
+
+"Will you explain this insult?" she asked, hotly.
+
+"Yes. You are a German spy," I said, under my breath.
+
+There was no color in her face now--nothing but a glitter in her blue
+eyes and a glint from the small, white teeth biting her lower lip.
+
+"French troops will land here to-night or to-morrow," I went on,
+calmly. "You will see how dangerous your situation is certain to
+become when Buckhurst is taken, and when it is understood _what use
+you have made of the semaphore_."
+
+She winced, then straightened and bent her steady gaze on me. Her
+courage was admirable.
+
+"I thank you for telling me," she said, simply. "Have I a chance to
+reach the Spanish frontier?"
+
+"I think you have," I replied. "Kelly Eyre is going with you
+when--"
+
+"He? No, no, he must not! Does he know what I am?" she broke in,
+impetuously.
+
+"Yes, mademoiselle; and he knows what happens to spies."
+
+"Did he offer to go?" she asked, incredulously.
+
+"Mademoiselle, he insists."
+
+Her lip began to tremble. She turned toward the window, where the
+sea-fog flew past in the rising wind, and stared out across the
+immeasurable blackness of the ocean.
+
+Without turning her head she said: "Does he know that it may mean his
+death?"
+
+"He has suffered worse for your sake!" I said, bitterly.
+
+"What?" she flashed out, confronting me in an instant.
+
+"You must know that," I said--"three years of hell--prison--utter
+ruin! Do you dare deny you have been ignorant of this?"
+
+For a space she stood there, struck speechless; then, "Call him!" she
+cried. "Call him, I tell you! Bring him here--I want him here--here
+before us both!" She sprang to the door, but I blocked her way.
+
+"I will not have Madame de Vassart know what you did to him!" I said.
+"If you want Kelly Eyre, I will call him." And I stepped into the
+hallway.
+
+Eyre, passing the long stone corridor, looked up as I beckoned; and
+when he entered the tea-room, Sylvia, white as a ghost, met him face
+to face.
+
+"Monsieur," she said, harshly, "why did you not come to that
+book-store?"
+
+He was silent. His face was answer enough--a terrible answer.
+
+"Monsieur Eyre, speak to me! Is it true? Did they--did you not know
+that I made an error--that I _did_ go on Monday at the same hour?"
+
+His haggard face lighted up; she saw it, and caught his hands in
+hers.
+
+"Did you think I knew?" she stammered. "Did you think I could do
+that? They told me at the _usine_ that you had gone away--I thought
+you had forgotten--that you did not care--"
+
+"Care!" he groaned, and bowed his head, crushing her hands over his
+face.
+
+Then she broke down, breathless with terror and grief.
+
+"I was not a spy then--truly I was not, Kelly. There was no harm in
+me--I only--only asked for the sketches because--because--I cared for
+you. I have them now; no soul save myself has ever seen them--even
+afterward, when I drifted into intrigue at the Embassy--when everybody
+knew that Bismarck meant to force war--everybody except the French
+people--I never showed those little sketches! They were--were mine!
+Kelly, they were all I had left when you went away--to a
+fortress!--and I did not know!--I did not know!"
+
+"Hush!" he groaned. "It is all right--it is all right now."
+
+"Do you believe me?"
+
+"Yes, yes. Don't cry--don't be unhappy--now."
+
+She raised her head and fumbled in her corsage with shaking fingers,
+and drew from her bosom a packet of papers.
+
+"Here are the sketches," she sobbed; "they have cost you dear! Now
+leave me--hate me! Let them come and take me--I do not want to live
+any more. Oh, what punishment on earth!"
+
+Her suffering was unendurable to the man who had suffered through her;
+he turned on me, quivering in every limb.
+
+"We must start," he said, hoarsely. "Give me your revolver."
+
+I drew it from my hip-pocket and passed it to him.
+
+"Scarlett," he began, "if we don't reach--"
+
+A quick rapping at the door silenced him; the young Countess stood in
+the hallway, bright-eyed, but composed, asking for me.
+
+"The red and the white lights are gone," she said. "There are four
+green lights on the tower and four blue lights on the halyards."
+
+I turned to Eyre. "This is interesting," I said, grimly. "I set
+signals for the _Fer-de-Lance_ to land in force. Somebody has changed
+them. You had better get ready to go."
+
+Sylvia had shrunk away from Eyre. The Countess looked at her blankly,
+then at me.
+
+"Madame," I said, "there is little enough of happiness in the
+world--so little that when it comes it should be welcomed, even by
+those who may not share in it."
+
+And I bent nearer and whispered the truth.
+
+Then I went to Sylvia, who stood there tremulous, pallid.
+
+"You serve your country at a greater risk than do the soldiers of
+your King," I said. "There is no courage like that which discounts a
+sordid, unhonored death. You have my respect, mademoiselle."
+
+"Sylvia!" murmured the young Countess, incredulously; "you a
+spy?--here--under my roof?"
+
+Sylvia unconsciously stretched out one hand toward her.
+
+Eyre stepped to her side, with an angry glance at Madame de Vassart.
+
+"I--I love you, madame," whispered Sylvia. "I only place my own
+country first. Can you forgive me?"
+
+The Countess stood as though stunned; Eyre passed her slowly,
+supporting Sylvia to the door.
+
+"Madame," I said, "will you speak to her? Your countries, not your
+hearts, are at war. She did her duty."
+
+"A spy!" repeated the Countess, in a dull voice. "A spy! And she
+brings this--this shame on me!"
+
+Sylvia turned, standing unsteadily. For a long time they looked at
+each other in silence, their eyes wet with tears. Then Eyre lifted
+Sylvia's hand and kissed it, and led her away, closing the door
+behind.
+
+The Countess still stood in the centre of the room, transfixed, rigid,
+staring through her tears at the closed door. With a deep-drawn breath
+she straightened her shoulders; her head drooped; she covered her face
+with clasped hands.
+
+Standing there, did she remember those who, one by one, had betrayed
+her? Those who first whispered to her that love of country was a
+narrow creed; those who taught her to abhor violence, and then failed
+at the test--Bazard, firing to kill, going down to death under the
+merciless lance of an Uhlan; Buckhurst, guilty of every crime that
+attracted him; and now Sylvia, her friend, false to the salt she had
+eaten, false to the roof above her, false, utterly false to all save
+the land of her nativity.
+
+And she, Éline de Trécourt, a soldier's daughter and a Frenchwoman,
+had been used as a shield by those who were striking her own
+mother-land--the country she once had denied; the country whose
+frontiers she knew not in her zeal for limitless brotherhood; the
+blackened, wasted country she had seen at Strasbourg; the land for
+which the cuirassiers of Morsbronn had died!
+
+"What have I done?" she cried, brokenly--"what have I done that this
+shame should come upon me?"
+
+"You have done nothing," I said, "neither for good nor evil in this
+crisis. But Sylvia has; Sylvia the spy. That a man should give up his
+life for a friend is good; that a woman offer hers for her country is
+better. What has it cost her? The friendship of the woman she
+worships--you, madame! It has cost her that already, and the price may
+include her life and the life of the man she loves. She has done her
+duty; the sacrifice is still burning; I pray it may spare her and
+spare him."
+
+I walked to the door and laid my hand on the brass knob.
+
+"The world is merciless to failures," I said. "Yet even a successful
+spy is scarcely tolerated among the Philistines; a captured spy is a
+horror for friends to forget and for enemies to destroy in righteous
+indignation. Madame, I know, for I have served your country in Algiers
+as a spy,... not from patriotism, for I am an alien, but because I was
+fitted for it in my line of duty. Had I been caught I should have
+looked for nothing but contempt from France; from the Kabyle, for
+neither admiration nor mercy. I tell you this that you may understand
+my respect for this woman, whose motives are worthy of it."
+
+The Countess looked at me scornfully. "It is well," she said, "for
+those who understand and tolerate treachery to condone it. It is well
+that the accused be judged by their peers. We of Trécourt know only
+one tongue. But that is the language of truth, monsieur. All else is
+foreign."
+
+"Where did the nobility learn this tongue--to our exclusion?" I
+asked, bluntly.
+
+"When our forefathers faced the tribunals!" she flashed out. "Did
+you ever hear of a spy among us? Did you ever hear of a lie among
+us?"
+
+"You have been taught history by your peers, madame," I said, with a
+bow; "I have been taught history by mine."
+
+"The sorry romance!" she said, bitterly. "It has brought me to
+this!"
+
+"It has brought others to their senses," I said, sharply.
+
+"To their knees, you mean!"
+
+"Yes--to their knees at last."
+
+"To the guillotine--yes!"
+
+"No, madame, to pray for their native land--too late!"
+
+"I think," she said, "that we are not fitted to understand each
+other."
+
+"It remains," I said, "for me to thank you for your kindness to us
+all, and for your generosity to me in my time of need.... It is quite
+useless for me to dream of repaying it.... I shall never forget it....
+I ask leave to make my adieux, madame."
+
+She flushed to her temples, but did not answer.
+
+As I stood looking at her, a vivid flare of light flashed through the
+window behind me, crimsoning the walls, playing over the ceiling with
+an infernal radiance. At the same instant the gate outside crashed
+open, a hubbub of voices swelled into a roar; then the outer doors
+were flung back and a score of men sprang into the hallway, soldiers
+with the red torch-light dancing on rifle-barrels and bayonets.
+
+And before them, revolver swinging in his slender hand, strode
+Buckhurst, a red sash tied across his breast, his colorless eyes like
+diamonds.
+
+Speed and Jacqueline came hurrying through the hall to where I stood;
+Buckhurst's smile was awful as his eyes flashed from Speed to me.
+
+Behind him, close to his shoulder, the torch-light fell on Mornac's
+smooth, false face, stretched now into a ferocious grimace; behind him
+crowded the soldiers of the commune, rifles slung, craning their
+unshaven faces to catch a glimpse of us.
+
+"Demi-battalion, halt!" shouted an officer, and flung up his naked
+sabre.
+
+"Halt," repeated Buckhurst, quietly.
+
+Madame de Vassart's servants had come running from kitchen and stable
+at the first alarm, and now stood huddled in the court-yard,
+bewildered, cowed by the bayonets which had checked them.
+
+"Buckhurst," I said, "what the devil do you mean by this foolery?"
+and I started for him, shouldering my way among his grotesque escort.
+
+For an instant I looked into his deadly eyes; then he silently
+motioned me back; a dozen bayonets were levelled, forcing me to
+retire, inch by inch, until I felt Speed's grip on my arm.
+
+"That fellow means mischief," he whispered. "Have you a pistol?"
+
+"I gave mine to Eyre," I said, under my breath. "If he means us
+harm, don't resist or they may take revenge on the Countess. Speed,
+keep her in the room there! Don't let her come out."
+
+But the Countess de Vassart was already in the hall, facing Buckhurst
+with perfect composure.
+
+Twice she ordered him to leave; he looked up from his whispered
+consultation with Mornac and coolly motioned her to be silent.
+
+Once she spoke to Mornac, quietly demanding a reason for the outrage,
+and Mornac silenced her with a brutal gesture.
+
+"Madame," I said, "it is I they want. I beg you to retire."
+
+"You are my guest," she said. "My place is here."
+
+"Your place is where I please to put you!" broke in Mornac; and to
+Buckhurst: "I tell you she's as guilty as the others. Let me attend
+to this and make a clean sweep!"
+
+"Citizen Mornac will endeavor to restrain his zeal," observed
+Buckhurst, with a sneer. And then, as I looked at this slender, pallid
+man, I understood who was the dominant power behind the curtain; and
+so did Speed, for I felt him press my elbow significantly.
+
+He turned and addressed us, suavely, bowing with a horrid, mock
+deference to the Countess:
+
+"In the name of the commune! The ci-devant Countess de Vassart is
+accused of sheltering the individual Scarlett, late inspector of
+Imperial Police; the individual Speed, ex-inspector of Imperial
+Gendarmes; the individual Eyre, under general suspicion; the woman
+called Sylvia Elven, a German spy. As war-delegate of the commune, I
+am here to accuse!"
+
+There was a silence, then a low, angry murmur from the soldiers, which
+grew louder until Buckhurst turned on them. He did not utter a word,
+but the sullen roar died out, a bayonet rattled, then all was still in
+the dancing torch-light.
+
+"I accuse," continued Buckhurst, in a passionless voice, "the
+individual Scarlett of treachery to the commune; of using the
+telegraph for treacherous ends; of hoisting signals with the purpose
+of attracting government troops to destroy us. I accuse the individual
+Speed of aiding his companion in using the telegraph to stop the
+government train, thus depriving the commune of the funds which
+rightfully belong to it--the treasures wrung from wretched peasants by
+the aristocrats of an accursed monarchy and a thrice-accursed
+empire!"
+
+A roaring cheer burst from the excited soldiers, drowning the voice of
+Buckhurst.
+
+"Silence!" shouted Mornac, savagely. And as the angry voices were
+stilled, one by one, above the banging of rifle-stocks and the rattle
+of bayonets, Buckhurst's calm voice rose in a sinister monotone.
+
+"I accuse the woman Sylvia Elven of communication with Prussian
+agents; of attempted corruption of soldiers under my command. I accuse
+the citoyenne Éline Trécourt, lately known as the Countess de Vassart,
+of aiding, encouraging, and abetting these enemies of France!"
+
+He waited until the short, fierce yell of approval had died away.
+Then:
+
+"Call the soldier Rolland!" he said.
+
+My heart began to hammer in my throat. "I believe it's going hard
+with us," I muttered to Speed.
+
+"Listen," he motioned.
+
+I listened to the wretched creature Rolland while he told what had
+happened at the semaphore. In his eagerness he pushed close to where I
+stood, menacing me with every gesture, cursing and lashing himself
+into a rage, ignoring all pretence of respect and discipline for his
+own superiors.
+
+"What are you waiting for?" he shouted, insolently, turning on
+Buckhurst. "I tell the truth; and if this man can afford to pay
+hundreds of francs for a telegram, he must be rich enough to pluck, I
+tell you!"
+
+"You say he bribed you?" asked Buckhurst, gently.
+
+"Yes; I've said it twenty times, haven't I?"
+
+"And you took the bribes?"
+
+"Parbleu!"
+
+"And you thought if you admitted it and denounced the man who bribed
+you that you would help divide a few millions with us, you rogue?"
+suggested Buckhurst, admiringly.
+
+The wretch laughed outright.
+
+"And you believe that you deserve well of the commune?" smiled
+Buckhurst.
+
+The soldier grinned and opened his mouth to answer, and Buckhurst shot
+him through the face; and, as he fell, shot him again, standing
+wreathed in the smoke of his own weapon.
+
+The deafening racket of the revolver, the smoke, the spectacle of the
+dusty, inert thing on the floor over which Buckhurst stood and shot,
+seemed to stun us all.
+
+"I think," said Buckhurst, in a pleasantly persuasive voice, "that
+there will be no more bribery in this battalion." He deliberately
+opened the smoking weapon; the spent shells dropped one by one from
+the cylinder, clinking on the stone floor.
+
+"No--no more bribery," he mused, touching the dead man with the
+carefully polished toe of his shoe. "Because," he added, reloading
+his revolver, "I do not like it."
+
+He turned quietly to Mornac and ordered the corpse to be buried, and
+Mornac, plainly unnerved at the murderous act of his superior,
+repeated the order, cursing his men to cover the quaver in his voice.
+
+"As for you," observed Buckhurst, glancing up at us where we stood
+speechless together, "you will be judged and sentenced when this
+drum-head court decides. Go into that room!"
+
+The Countess did not move.
+
+Speed touched her arm; she looked up quietly, smiled, and stepped
+across the threshold. Speed followed; Jacqueline slipped in beside
+him, and then I turned on Buckhurst, who had just ordered his soldiers
+to surround the house outside.
+
+"As a matter of fact," I said, when the last armed ruffian had
+departed, "I am the only person in this house who has interfered with
+your affairs. The others have done nothing to harm you."
+
+"The court will decide that," he replied, balancing his revolver in
+his palm.
+
+I eyed him for an instant. "Do you mean harm to this unfortunate
+woman?" I asked.
+
+"My friend," he replied, in a low voice, "you have very stupidly
+upset plans that have cost me months to perfect. You have, by stopping
+that train, robbed me of something less than twenty millions of
+francs. I have my labor for my pains; I have this mob of fools on my
+hands; I may lose my life through this whim of yours; and if I don't,
+I have it all to begin again. And you ask me what I am going to do!"
+
+His eyes glittered.
+
+"If I strike her I strike you. Ask yourself whether or not I will
+strike."
+
+All the blood seemed to leave my heart; I straightened up with an
+effort.
+
+"There are some murders," I said, "that even you must recoil at."
+
+"I don't think you appreciate me," he replied, with a deathly smile.
+
+He motioned toward the door with levelled weapon. I turned and entered
+the tea-room, and he locked the door from the outside.
+
+The Countess, seated on the sofa, looked up as I appeared. She was
+terribly pale, but she smiled as my heavy eyes met hers.
+
+"Is it to be farce or tragedy, monsieur?" she asked, without a tremor
+in her clear voice.
+
+I could not have uttered a word to save my life. Speed, pacing the
+room, turned to read my face; and I think he read it, for he stopped
+short in his tracks. Jacqueline, watching him with blue, inscrutable
+eyes, turned sharply toward the window and peered out into the
+darkness.
+
+Beyond the wall of the garden the fog, made luminous by the torches of
+the insurgents, surrounded the house with a circle of bright, ruddy
+vapor.
+
+Speed came slowly across the room with me.
+
+"Do they mean to shoot us?" he asked, bluntly.
+
+"Messieurs," said the Countess, with a faint smile, "your whispers
+are no compliment to my race. Pray honor me by plain speaking. Are we
+to die?"
+
+We stood absolutely speechless before her.
+
+"Ah, Monsieur Scarlett," she said, gravely, "do you also fail me ...
+at the end?... You, too--even you?... Must I tell you that we of
+Trécourt fear nothing in this world?"
+
+She made a little gesture, exquisitely imperious.
+
+I stepped toward her; she waited for me to seat myself beside her.
+
+"Are we to die?" she asked.
+
+"Yes, madame."
+
+"Thank you," she said, softly.
+
+I looked up. My head was swimming so that I could scarcely see her,
+scarcely perceive the deep, steady tenderness in her clear eyes.
+
+"Do you not understand?" she asked. "You are my friend. I wished to
+know my fate from you."
+
+"Madame," I said, hoarsely, "how can you call me friend when you
+know to what I have brought you?"
+
+"You have brought me to know myself," she said, simply. "Why should
+I not be grateful? Why do you look at me so sadly, Monsieur Scarlett?
+Truly, you must know that my life has been long enough to prove its
+uselessness."
+
+"It is not true!" I cried, stung by remorse for all I had said.
+"Such women as you are the hope of France! Such women as you are the
+hope of the world! Ah, that you should consider the bitterness and
+folly of such a man as I am--that you should consider and listen to
+the sorry wisdom of a homeless mountebank--a wandering fool--a
+preacher of empty platitudes, who has brought you to this with his
+cursed meddling!"
+
+"You taught me truth," she said, calmly; "you make the last days of
+my life the only ones worth living. I said to you but an hour
+since--when I was angry--that we were unfitted to comprehend each
+other. It is not true. We are fitted for that. I had rather die with
+you than live without the friendship which I believe--which I know--is
+mine. Monsieur Scarlett, it is not love. If it were, I could not say
+this to you--even in death's presence. It is something better;
+something untroubled, confident, serene.... You see it is not love....
+And perhaps it has no name.... For I have never before known such
+happiness, such peace, as I know now, here with you, talking of our
+death. If we could live,... you would go away.... I should be
+alone.... And I have been alone all my life,... and I am tired. You
+see I have nothing to regret in a death that brings me to you
+again.... Do you regret life?"
+
+"Not now," I said.
+
+"You are kind to say so. I do believe--yes, I know that you truly
+care for me.... Do you?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then it will not be hard.... Perhaps not even very painful."
+
+The key turning in the door startled us. Buckhurst entered, and
+through the hallway I saw his dishevelled soldiers running, flinging
+open doors, tearing, trampling, pillaging, wrecking everything in
+their path.
+
+"Your business will be attended to in the garden at dawn," he
+observed, blinking about the room, for the bright lamp-light dazzled
+him.
+
+Speed, who had been standing by the window with Jacqueline, wheeled
+sharply, took a few steps into the room, then sank into a chair,
+clasping his lank hands between his knees.
+
+The Countess did not even glance up as the sentence was pronounced;
+she looked at me and laid her left hand on mine, smiling, as though
+waiting for the moment to resume an interrupted conversation.
+
+"Do you hear?" demanded Buckhurst, raising his voice.
+
+There was no answer for a moment; then Jacqueline stepped from the
+window and said: "Am I free to go?"
+
+"You!" said Buckhurst, contemptuously; "who in hell are you?"
+
+"I am Jacqueline."
+
+"Really," sneered Buckhurst.
+
+He went away, slamming and locking the door; and I heard Mornac
+complaining that the signals had gone out on the semaphore and that
+there was more treachery abroad.
+
+"Get me a horse!" said Buckhurst. "There are plenty of them in the
+stables. Mornac, you stay here; I'll ride over to the semaphore. Gut
+this house and fire it after you've finished that business in the
+garden to-morrow morning."
+
+"Where are you going?" demanded Mornac's angry voice. "Do you expect
+me to stay here while you start for Paris?"
+
+"You have your orders," said Buckhurst, menacingly.
+
+"Oh, have I? What are they? To stay here when the country is
+roused--stay here and perhaps be shelled by that damned cruiser out
+there--"
+
+His voice was stifled as though a hand had clutched his throat; there
+came the swift sound of a struggle, the banging of scabbards and
+spurs, the scuffle of heavy boots.
+
+"Are you mad?" burst out Mornac's strangled voice.
+
+"Are you?" breathed Buckhurst. "Silence, you fool. Do you obey
+orders or not?"
+
+Their voices receded. Speed sprang to the door to listen, then ran
+back to the window.
+
+"Scarlett," he whispered, "there are the lights of a vessel at
+anchor off Groix."
+
+I was beside him in an instant. "It's the cruiser," I said. "Oh,
+Speed, for a chance to signal!"
+
+We looked at each other desperately.
+
+"We could set the room afire," he said; "they might land to see what
+had happened."
+
+"And find us all shot."
+
+Jacqueline, standing beside Speed, said, quietly: "I could swim it.
+Wait. Raise the window a little."
+
+"You cannot dive from that cliff!" I said.
+
+She cautiously unlocked the window and peered out into the dark
+garden.
+
+"The cliff falls sheer from the wall yonder," she whispered. "I
+shall try to drop. I learned much in the circus. I am not afraid,
+Speed. I shall drop into the sea."
+
+"To your death," I said.
+
+"Possibly, m'sieu. It is a good death, however. I am not afraid."
+
+"Close the window," muttered Speed. "They'd shoot her from the wall,
+anyway."
+
+Again the child gravely asked permission to try.
+
+"No," said Speed, harshly, and turned away. But in that instant
+Jacqueline flung open the window and vaulted into the garden. Before I
+could realize what had happened she was only a glimmering spot in the
+darkness. Then Speed and I followed her, running swiftly toward the
+foot of the garden, but we were too late; a slim, white shape rose
+from the top of the wall and leaped blindly out through the ruddy
+torch glare into the blackness beyond.
+
+We heard a soldier's startled cry, a commotion, curses, and astonished
+exclamations from the other side of the wall.
+
+"It was something, I tell you!" roared a soldier. "Something that
+jumped over the cliff!"
+
+"It was an owl, idiot!" retorted his comrade.
+
+"I tell you I saw it!" protested the other, in a shaking voice.
+
+"Then you saw a witch of Ker-Ys," bawled another. "Look out for your
+skin in the first battle. It's death to see such things."
+
+I looked at Speed. He stood wide-eyed, staring at vacancy.
+
+"Could she do it?" I asked, horrified.
+
+"God knows," he whispered.
+
+Soldiers were beginning to clamber up the garden wall from the
+outside; torches were raised to investigate. As we shrank back
+into the shadow of the shrubbery I stumbled over something
+soft--Jacqueline's clothes, lying in a circle as she had stepped out
+of them.
+
+Speed took them. I followed him, creeping back to the window, where we
+entered in time to avoid discovery by a wretch who had succeeded in
+mounting the wall, torch in hand.
+
+One or two soldiers climbed over and dropped into the garden, prowling
+around, prodding the bushes with their bayonets, even coming to press
+their dirty faces and hands against our window.
+
+"They're all here!" sang out one. "It was an owl, I tell you!" And
+he menaced us with his rifle in pantomime and retired, calling his
+companions to follow.
+
+"Where is Jacqueline?" asked the Countess, looking anxiously at the
+little blue skirt on Speed's knees. "Have they harmed that child?"
+
+I told her.
+
+A beautiful light grew in her eyes as she listened. "Did I not warn
+you that we Bretons know how to die?" she said.
+
+I looked dully at Speed, who sat by the window, brooding over the
+little woollen skirt on his knees, stroking it, touching the torn hem,
+and at last folding it with unaccustomed and shaky hands.
+
+There were noises outside our door, loud voices, hammering, the sound
+of furniture being dragged over stone floors, and I scarcely noticed
+it when our door was opened again.
+
+Then somebody called out our names; a file of half-drunken soldiers
+grounded arms in the passageway with a bang that brought us to our
+feet, as Mornac, flushed with wine, entered unsteadily, drawn sword in
+hand.
+
+"I'm damned if I stay here any longer," he broke out, angrily. "I'll
+see whether my rascals can't shoot straight by torch-light. Here, you!
+Scarlett, I mean! And you, Speed; and you, too, madame; patter your
+prayers, for you'll get no priest. Lieutenant, withdraw the guard at
+the wall. Here, captain, march the battalion back to Paradise and take
+the servants!"
+
+A second later the drums began to beat, but Mornac, furious, silenced
+them.
+
+"They can hear you at sea!" he shouted. "Do you want a boat-load of
+marines at your heels? Strike out those torches! Four will do for the
+garden. March!"
+
+The shuffling tread of the insurgent infantry echoed across the gravel
+court-yard; torches behind the walls were extinguished; blackness
+enveloped the cliffs.
+
+"Well," broke out Speed, hoarsely, "good-bye, Scarlett."
+
+He held out his hand.
+
+"Good-bye," I said, stunned.
+
+I dropped my hand as two soldiers placed themselves on either side of
+him.
+
+"Well, good-bye," he repeated, aimlessly; and then, remembering, he
+went to the Countess and offered his hand.
+
+"I am so sorry for you," she said, with a pallid smile. "You have
+much to live for. But you must not feel lonely, monsieur; you will be
+with us--we shall be close to you."
+
+She turned to me, and her hands fell to her side.
+
+"Are you contented?" she asked.
+
+"Yes," I answered.
+
+"I, too," she said, sweetly, and offered her hands.
+
+I held them very tightly. "You say," I whispered, "that it is
+not--love. But you do not speak for me. I love you."
+
+A bright blush spread over brow and neck.
+
+"So--it was love--after all," she said, under her breath. "God be
+with us to-day--I love you."
+
+"March!" cried Mornac, as two soldiers took station beside me.
+
+"I beg you will be gentle with this lady," I said, angrily, as two
+more soldiers pushed up beside the young Countess and laid their hands
+on her shoulders.
+
+"Who the devil are you giving orders to?" shouted Mornac, savagely.
+"March!"
+
+Speed passed out first; I followed; the Countess came behind me.
+
+"Courage," I stammered, looking back at her as we stumbled out into
+the torch-lit garden.
+
+She smiled adorably. Her forefathers had mounted the guillotine
+smiling.
+
+Mornac pointed to the garden wall near the bench where we had sat
+together. A soldier dressed like a Turco lifted a torch and set it in
+the flower-bed under the wall, illuminating the spot where we were to
+stand. As this soldier turned to come back I saw his face.
+
+"Salah Ben-Ahmed!" I cried, hoarsely. "Do Marabouts do this
+butcher's work?"
+
+The Turco stared at me as though stunned.
+
+"Salah Ben-Ahmed is a disgraced soldier!" I said, in a ringing
+voice.
+
+"It's a lie!" he shouted, in Arabic--"it's a lie, O my inspector!
+Speak! Have these men tricked me? Are you not Prussians?"
+
+"Silence! Silence!" bawled Mornac. "Turco, fall in! Fall in, I say!
+What! You menace me?" he snarled, cocking his revolver.
+
+Then a man darted out of the red shadows of the torch-light and fell
+upon Mornac with a knife, and dragged him down and rolled on him,
+stabbing him through and through, while the mutilated wretch screamed
+and screamed until his soul struggled out through the flame-shot
+darkness and fled to its last dreadful abode.
+
+The Lizard rose, shaking his fagot knife; they fell upon him, clubbing
+and stabbing with stock and bayonet, but he swung his smeared and
+sticky blade, clearing a circle around him. And I think he could have
+cut his way free had not Tric-Trac shot him in the back of the head.
+
+Then a frightful tumult broke loose. Three of the torches were knocked
+to the ground and trampled out as the insurgents, doubly drunken with
+wine and the taste of blood, seized me and tried to force me against
+the wall; but the Turco, with his shrill, wolf-like battle yelp,
+attacked them, sabre-bayonet in hand. Speed, too, had wrested a rifle
+from a half-stupefied ruffian, and now stood at bay before the
+Countess; I saw him wielding his heavy weapon like a flail; then in
+the darkness Tric-Trac shot at me, so close that the powder-flame
+scorched my leg. He dropped his rifle to spring for my throat,
+knocking me flat, and, crouching on me, strove to strangle me; and I
+heard him whining with eagerness while I twisted and writhed to free
+my windpipe from his thin fingers.
+
+At last I tore him from my body and struggled to my feet. He, too, was
+on his legs with a bound, running, doubling, dodging; and at his heels
+I saw a dozen sailors, broadaxes glittering, chasing him from tree to
+shrub.
+
+"Speed!" I shouted--"the sailors from the _Fer-de-Lance_!"
+
+The curtains of the house were on fire; through the hallway poured the
+insurgent soldiery, stampeding in frantic flight across the court out
+into the moors; and the marines, swarming along the cliffs, shot at
+them as they ran, and laughed savagely when a man fell into the gorse,
+kicking like a wounded rabbit.
+
+Speed marked their flight, advancing coolly, pistol flashing; the
+Turco, Ben-Ahmed, dark arms naked to the shoulder, bounded behind the
+frightened wretches, cornering, hunting them through flower-beds and
+bushes, stealthily, keenly, now creeping among the shadows, now
+springing like a panther on his prey, until his blue jacket reeked and
+his elbows dripped.
+
+I had picked up a rifle with a broken bayonet; the Countess, clasping
+my left arm, stood swaying in the rifle-smoke, eyes closed; and, when
+a horrid screeching arose from the depths of the garden where they
+were destroying Tric-Trac, she fell to shuddering, hiding her face on
+my shoulder.
+
+Suddenly Speed appeared, carrying a drenched little figure, partly
+wrapped in a sailor's pea-jacket, slim limbs drooping, blue with
+cold.
+
+"Put out that fire in there," he said, hoarsely; "we must get her
+into bed. Hurry, for God's sake, Scarlett! There's nobody in the
+house!"
+
+"Jacqueline! Jacqueline! brave little Bretonne," murmured the
+Countess, bending forward and gathering the unconscious child into her
+strong, young arms.
+
+Through the dim dawn, through smoke and fading torch-light, we carried
+Jacqueline into the house, now lighted up with an infernal red from
+the burning dining-room.
+
+"The house is stone; we can keep the flames to one room if we work
+hard," I said. A sailor stood by the door wiping the stained blade of
+his broadaxe, and I called on him to aid us.
+
+A fresh company of sailors passed on the double, rifles trailing,
+their officer shouting encouragement, And as we came in view of the
+semaphore, I saw the signal tower on fire from base to top.
+
+The gray moorland was all flickering with flashes where the bulk of
+the insurgent infantry began firing in retreat; the marines' fusillade
+broke out from Paradise village; rifle after rifle cracked along the
+river-bank. Suddenly the deep report of a cannon came echoing landward
+from the sea; a shell, with lighted fuse trailing sparks, flew over us
+with a rushing whistle and exploded on the moors.
+
+All this I saw from the house where I stood with Speed and a sailor,
+buried in smoke, chopping out blazing woodwork, tearing the burning
+curtains from the windows. The marines fired steadily from the windows
+above us.
+
+"They want the Red Terror!" laughed the sailors. "They shall have
+it!"
+
+"Hunt them out! Hunt them out!" cried an officer, briskly. "Fire!"
+rang out a voice, and the volley broke crashing, followed by the
+clear, penetrating boatswain's whistle sounding the assault.
+
+Blackened, scorched, almost suffocated, I staggered back to the
+tea-room, where the Countess stood clasping Jacqueline, huddled in a
+blanket, and smoothing the child's wet curls away from a face as white
+as death.
+
+Together we carried her back through the smoking hallway, up the
+stairs to my bedroom, and laid her in the bed.
+
+The child opened her eyes as we drew the blankets.
+
+"Where is Speed?" she asked, dreamily.
+
+A moment later he came in, and she turned her head languidly and
+smiled.
+
+"Jacqueline! Jacqueline!" he whispered, bending close above her.
+
+"Do you love me, Speed?"
+
+"Ah, Jacqueline," he stammered, "more than you can understand."
+
+Suddenly a step sounded on the stairs, a rifle-stock grounded,
+clanging, and a sonorous voice rang out:
+
+"Salute, O my brother of the toug! The enemies of France are dead!"
+
+And in the silence around him Salah Ben-Ahmed the Marabout recited the
+fatha, bearing witness to the eternal unity of God.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Late that night the light cavalry from Lorient rode into Paradise. At
+dawn the colonel, established in the mayory, from whence its foolish
+occupant had fled, sent for Speed and me, and when we reported he drew
+from his heavy dolman our commissions, restoring us to rank and pay in
+the regiment _de marche_ which he commanded.
+
+At sunrise I had bade good-bye to the sweetest woman on earth; at noon
+we were miles to the westward, riding like demons on Buckhurst's heavy
+trail.
+
+I am not sure that we ever saw him again, though once, weeks later,
+Speed and I and a dozen hussars gave chase to a mounted man near St.
+Brieuc, and that man might have been Buckhurst. He led us a
+magnificent chase straight to the coast, where we rode plump into a
+covey of Prussian hussars, who were standing on their saddles, hacking
+away at the telegraph-wires with their heavy, curved sabres.
+
+That was our first and last sight of the enemy in either Prussian or
+communistic guise, though in the long, terrible days and nights of
+that winter of '71, when three French armies froze, and the white
+death, not the Prussians, ended all for France, rumors of insurrection
+came to us from the starving capital, and we heard of the red flag
+flying on the Hôtel-de-Ville, and the rising of the carbineers under
+Flourens; and some spoke of the leader of the insurrection and called
+him John Buckhurst.
+
+That Buckhurst could have penetrated Paris neither Speed nor I
+believed; but, as all now know, we were wrong, though the testimony
+concerning his death[A] at the hands of his terrible colleague,
+Mortier, was not in evidence until a young ruffian, known as "The
+Mouse," confessed before he expiated his crimes on Sartory Plain in
+1872.
+
+Thus, for three blank, bitter months, freezing and starving, the 1st
+Regiment _de marche_ of Lorient Hussars stood guard at Brest over the
+diamonds of the crown of France.
+
+-----
+
+[A] This affair is dealt with in _Ashes of Empire_.
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+THE SECRET
+
+
+The news of the collapse of the army of the East found our wretchedly
+clothed and half-starved hussars still patrolling the environs of
+Brest from Belair to the Pont Tournant, and from the banks of the
+Elorn clear around the ramparts to Lannion Bay, where the ice-sheathed
+iron-clads lay with banked fires off the Port Militaire, and the
+goulet guard-boats patrolled the Port de Commerce from the Passe de
+l'Ouest to the hook on the Digue and clear around to Cap Espagnol.
+
+All Brest, from the battlements of the Château of St. Martin, in
+Belair, was on watch, so wrought up was the governor over the attempt
+on the treasure-train. For three months our troopers scarcely left
+their saddles, except to be taken to the hospital in Recouvrance.
+
+The rigor of the constant alert wore us to shadows; rockets from the
+goulet, the tocsin, the warning boom of a gun from the castle, found
+us spurring our jaded horses through ice and snow to scour the
+landward banlieue and purge it of a dreaded revolt. The names of Marx,
+of Flourens, of Buckhurst, were constantly repeated; news of troubles
+at Bordeaux, rumors of the red flag at Marseilles, only served to
+increase the rigid system of patrol, which brought death to those in
+the trenches as well as to our sleet-soaked videttes.
+
+Suddenly the nightmare ended with a telegram. Paris had surrendered.
+
+Immediately the craze to go beset us all; our improvised squadrons
+became clamoring mobs of peasants, wild to go home. Deserters left us
+every night; they shot some in full flight; some were shot after
+drum-head séances in which Speed and I voted in vain for acquittal.
+But affairs grew worse; our men neglected their horses; bands of
+fugitives robbed the suburbs, roving about, pillaging, murdering, even
+burning the wretched hovels where nothing save the four walls remained
+even for the miserable inmates.
+
+Our hussars were sent on patrol again, but they deserted with horses
+and arms in scores, until, when we rode into the Rue du Bois d'Amour,
+scarce a squadron clattered into the smoky gateway, and the infantry
+of the line across the street jeered and cursed us from their
+barracks.
+
+On the last day of February our regiment was disbanded, and the
+officers ordered to hold themselves in readiness to recruit the débris
+of a dragoon regiment, one squadron of which at once took possession
+of our miserable barracks.
+
+On the first day of March, by papers from London, we learned that the
+war was at an end, and that the preliminary treaty of Sunday, the
+26th, had been signed at Versailles.
+
+The same mail brought to me an astonishing offer from Cairo, to assist
+in the reorganization and accept a commission in the Egyptian military
+police. Speed and I, shivering in our ragged uniforms by the barrack
+stove, discussed the matter over a loaf of bread and a few sardines,
+until we fell asleep in our greasy chairs and dreamed of hot sunshine,
+and of palms, and of a crimson sunset against which a colossal basking
+monster, half woman, half lion, crouched, wallowing to her stone
+breasts in a hot sea of sand.
+
+When I awoke in the black morning hours I knew that I should go. All
+the roaming instinct in me was roused. I, a nomad, had stayed too long
+in one stale place; I must be moving on. A feverish longing seized me;
+inertia became unbearable; the restless sea called me louder and
+louder, thundering on the breakwater; the gulls, wheeling above the
+arsenal at dawn, screamed a challenge.
+
+Leave of absence, and permission to travel pending acceptance of my
+resignation, I asked for and obtained before the stable trumpets awoke
+my comrade from his heavy slumber by the barrack stove.
+
+I made my packet--not much--a few threadbare garments folded around
+her letters, one to mark each miserable day that had passed since I
+spurred my horse out of Trécourt on the track of the wickedest man I
+ever knew.
+
+Speed awoke with the trumpets, and stared at me where I knelt before
+the stove in my civilian clothes, strapping up my little packet.
+
+"Oh," he said, briefly, "I knew you were going."
+
+"So did I," I replied. "Will you ride to Trécourt with me? I have
+two weeks' permission for you."
+
+He had no clothing but the uniform he wore, and no baggage except a
+razor, a shirt, a tooth-brush, and a bundle of letters, all written on
+Madame de Vassart's crested paper, but not signed by her.
+
+We bolted our breakfast of soup and black bread, and bawled for our
+horses, almost crazed with impatience, now that the moment had come at
+last.
+
+"Good-bye!" shouted the shivering dragoon officers, wistfully, as we
+wheeled our horses and spurred, clattering, towards the black gates.
+"Good-bye and good luck! We drink to those you love, comrades!"
+
+"And they shall drink to you! Good-bye! Good-bye!" we cried, till the
+salt sea-wind tore the words from our teeth and bowed our heads as we
+galloped through the suburbs and out into the icy high-road, where,
+above us, the telegraph-wires sang their whirring dirge, and the wind
+in the gorse whistled, and the distant forest sounded and resounded
+with the gale's wailing.
+
+On, on, hammering the flinty road with steel-shod hoofs, racing with
+the racing clouds, thundering across the pontoon, where benumbed
+soldiers huddled to stare, then bounding forward through the narrow
+lanes of hamlets, where pinched faces peered out at us from hovels,
+and gaunt dogs fled from us into the frozen hedge.
+
+Far ahead we caught sight of the smoke of a locomotive.
+
+"Landerneau!" gasped Speed. "Ride hard, Scarlett!"
+
+The station-master saw us and halted the moving train at a frantic
+signal from Speed, whose uniform was to be reckoned with by all
+station-masters, and ten minutes later we stood swaying in a
+cattle-car, huddled close to our horses to keep warm, while the
+locomotive tore eastward, whistling frantically, and an ocean of black
+smoke poured past, swarming with sparks. Crossing the Aune trestle
+with a ripping roar, the train rushed through Châteaulin, south, then
+east, then south.
+
+Toward noon, Speed, clinging to the stall-bars, called out to me that
+he could see Quimper, and in a few moments we rolled into the station,
+dropped two cars, and steamed out again into the beautiful Breton
+country, where the winter wheat was green as new grass and the gorse
+glimmered, and the clear streams rushed seaward between their thickets
+of golden willows and green briers, already flushing with the promise
+of new buds.
+
+Rosporden we passed at full speed; scarcely a patch of melting snow
+remained at Bannalec; and when we steamed slowly into Quimperlé, the
+Laïta ran crystal-clear as a summer stream, and I saw the faint blue
+of violets on the southern slope of the beech-woods.
+
+Some gendarmes aided us to disembark our horses, and a sub-officer
+respectfully offered us hospitality at the barracks across the square;
+but we were in our saddles the moment our horses' hoofs struck the
+pavement, galloping for Paradise, with a sweet, keen wind blowing,
+hinting already of the sea.
+
+This was that same road which led me into Paradise on that autumn day
+which seemed years and years ago. The forests were leafless but
+beautiful; the blackthorns already promised their scented snow to
+follow the last melting drift which still glimmered among the trees in
+deep woodland gullies. A violet here and there looked up at us with
+blue eyes; in sheltered spots, fresh, reddish sprouts pricked the
+moist earth, here a whorl of delicate green, there a tender spike,
+guarding some imprisoned loveliness; buds on the beeches were
+brightening under a new varnish; naked thickets, no longer dead gray,
+softened into harmonies of pink and gold and palest purple.
+
+Once, halting at a bridge, above the quick music of the stream we
+heard an English robin singing all alone.
+
+"I never longed for spring as I do now," broke out Speed. "The
+horror of this black winter has scarred me forever--the deathly
+whiteness, month after month; the freezing filth of that ghastly city;
+the sea, all slime and ice!"
+
+"Gallop," I said, shuddering. "I can smell the moors of Paradise
+already. The winds will cleanse us."
+
+We spoke no more; and at last the road turned to the east, down among
+the trees, and we were traversing the square of Paradise village,
+where white-capped women turned to look after us, and children stared
+at us from their playground around the fountain, and the sleek magpies
+fluttered out of our path as we galloped over the bridge and breasted
+the sweet, strong moor wind, spicy with bay and gorse.
+
+Speed flung out his arm, pointing. "The circus camp was there," he
+said. "They have ploughed the clover under."
+
+A moment later I saw the tower of Trécourt, touched with a ray of
+sunshine, and the sea beyond, glittering under a clearing sky.
+
+As we dismounted in the court-yard the sun flashed out from the
+fringes of a huge, snowy cloud.
+
+"There is Jacqueline!" cried Speed, tossing his bridle to me in his
+excitement, and left me planted there until a servant came from the
+stable.
+
+Then I followed, every nerve quivering, almost dreading to set foot
+within, lest happiness awake me and I find myself in the freezing
+barracks once more, my brief dream ended.
+
+In the hallway a curious blindness came over me. I heard Jacqueline
+call my name, and I felt her hands in mine, but scarcely saw her; then
+she slipped away from me, and I found myself seated in the little
+tea-room, listening to the dull, double beat of my own heart,
+trembling at distant sounds in the house--waiting, endlessly waiting.
+
+After a while a glimmer of common-sense returned to me. I squared my
+shoulders and breathed deeply, then rose and walked to the window.
+
+The twigs on the peach-trees had turned wine-color; around the roots
+of the larkspurs delicate little palmated leaves clustered; crocus
+spikes pricked the grass everywhere, and the tall, polished shoots of
+the peonies glistened, glowing crimson in the sun. A heavy cat sunned
+its sleek flanks on the wall, brilliant eyes half closed, tail tucked
+under. Ange Pitou had grown very fat in three months.
+
+A step at the door, and I wheeled, trembling. But it was only a Breton
+maid, who bore some letters on a salver of silver.
+
+"For me?" I asked.
+
+"If you please," she said, demurely.
+
+Two letters, and I knew the writing on one. The first I read
+standing:
+
+ "Buffalo, N. Y., Feb. 3, 1871.
+
+ "Mr. Scarlett, Dear Sir and Friend,--Trusting you're
+ well I am pleased to admit the same, the blind Goddess
+ having smiled on me and the circus since we quit that
+ damn terra firma for a more peeceful climb.
+
+ "We are enjoying winter quarters near to the majestic
+ phenomena of Niagara, fodder is cheap and vittles
+ bountiful.
+
+ "Would be pleased to have you entertain idees of
+ joining us, and the same to Mr. Speed--you can take the
+ horses. I have a lion man from Jersey City. We open in
+ Charleston S. C. next week no more of La continong for
+ me, _savvy voo_! home is good enough for me. That
+ little Jacqueline left me I got a girl and am training
+ her but she ain't Jacqueline. Annimals are well Mrs.
+ Grigg sends her love and is joined by all especially
+ the ladies and others too numerous to mention. Hoping
+ to hear from you soon about the horses I remain yours
+ truly and courteously,
+
+ "H. Byram Esq."
+
+The second letter I opened carelessly, smiling a little:
+
+ "New York, Feb. 1, 1871.
+
+ "Dear Mr. Scarlett,--We were married yesterday. We have
+ life before us, but are not afraid. I shall never
+ forget you; my wife can never forget the woman you
+ love. We have both passed through hell--but _we have
+ passed through alive_. And we pray for the happiness of
+ you and yours.
+
+ "Kelly Eyre."
+
+Sobered, I laid this letter beside the first, turned thoughtfully away
+into the room, then stood stock-still.
+
+The Countess de Vassart stood in the doorway, a smile trembling on her
+lips. In her gray eyes I read hope; and I took her hands in mine. She
+stood silent with bent head, exquisite in her silent shyness; and I
+told her I loved her, and that I asked for her love; that I had found
+employment in Egypt, and that it was sufficient to justify my asking
+her to wed me.
+
+"As for my name," I said, "you know that is not the name I bear;
+yet, knowing that, you have given me your love. You read my dossier in
+Paris; you know _why_ I am alone, without kin, without a family,
+without a home. Yet you believe that I am not tainted with dishonor.
+And I am not. Listen, this is what happened; this is why I gave up
+all; and ... this is my name!" ...
+
+And I bent my head and whispered the truth for the first time in my
+life to any living creature.
+
+When I had ended I stood still, waiting, head still bowed beside
+hers.
+
+She laid her hand on my hot face and slowly drew it close beside
+hers.
+
+"What shall I promise you?" she whispered.
+
+"Yourself, Éline."
+
+"Take me.... Is that all?"
+
+"Your love."
+
+She turned in my arms and clasped her hands behind my head, pressing
+her mouth to mine.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MAIDS OF PARADISE***
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+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Maids of Paradise, by Robert W. (Robert William) Chambers</title>
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+<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Maids of Paradise, by Robert W. (Robert
+William) Chambers</h1>
+<pre>
+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 <a href = "http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: The Maids of Paradise</p>
+<p>Author: Robert W. (Robert William) Chambers</p>
+<p>Release Date: March 9, 2009 [eBook #28295]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MAIDS OF PARADISE***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3 class="pg">E-text prepared by Roger Frank<br />
+ and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Canada Team<br />
+ (http://www.pgdpcanada.net)</h3>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_1' id='linki_1'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-fpc.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 529px; height: 358px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 529px;'>
+&#8220;&#8216;LOOK THERE!&#8217; SHE CRIED, IN TERROR&#8221; [See p. 81]<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<table width="380" cellpadding="5" summary="" style='border:1px solid black;'>
+<tr><td>
+<table width="370" summary="" style='border:1px solid black'>
+<tr><td align="center">
+
+<table width="350" cellpadding="10" cellspacing="0" summary="" style='border:1px solid black; margin: 10px auto'>
+<tr><td class='title'><span style='font-size:2em'>THE MAIDS OF<br />PARADISE</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='title'><span style='font-style:normal'>A Novel</span></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<table width="350" cellpadding="10" cellspacing="0" summary="" style='border:1px solid black; margin: 10px auto'>
+<tr><td class='title'>By</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='title'><span style='font-size:1.4em'>Robert W. Chambers</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='title'><span style='font-size:0.8em'>Author of "Cardigan" "The Conspirators"<br />"Maid-at-Arms" etc.</span></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<table width="350" cellpadding="10" cellspacing="0" summary="" style='border:1px solid black; margin: 10px auto'>
+<tr><td class='title'><span style='font-size:0.8em'>Illustrated</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='title'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<table width="350" cellpadding="10" cellspacing="0" summary="" style='border:1px solid black; margin: 10px auto'>
+<tr><td class='title'>New York and London</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='title'><span style='font-size:1.2em;'>Harper &amp; Brothers</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='title'>Publishers&nbsp;&nbsp;1903</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<p style='text-align:center'>Copyright, 1902, by <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Robert W. Chambers</span>.</p>
+<hr class='mini' />
+<p style='text-align:center'><i>All rights reserved.</i><br />
+Published September, 1903.</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_v' name='page_v'></a>v</span></div>
+<h2>PREFACE</h2>
+<p>As far as the writer knows, no treasure-trains were
+actually sent to the port of Lorient from the
+arsenal at Brest. The treasures remained at Brest.</p>
+<p>Concerning the German armored cruiser <i>Augusta</i>, the
+following are the facts: About the middle of December
+she forced the blockade at Wilhelmshafen and ran for
+Ireland, where, owing to the complaisance of the British
+authorities, she was permitted to coal.</p>
+<p>From there she steamed towards Brest, capturing
+a French merchant craft off that port, another near
+Rochefort, and finally a third. That ended her active
+career during the war; a French frigate chased her
+into the port of Vigo and kept her there.</p>
+<p>To conclude, certain localities and certain characters
+have been sufficiently disguised to render recognition
+improbable. This is proper because &#8220;The Lizard&#8221;
+is possibly alive to-day, as are also the mayor of Paradise,
+Sylvia Elven, Jacqueline, and Speed, the latter
+having barely escaped death in the <i>Virginius</i> expedition.
+The original of Buckhurst now lives in New York,
+and remains a type whose rarity is its only recommendation.</p>
+<p>Those who believe they recognize the Countess de
+Vassart are doubtless in error. Mornac, long dead,
+is safe in his disguise; Tric-Trac was executed on the
+Place de la Roquette, and celebrated in doggerel by
+an unspeakable ballad writer. There remains Scarlett;
+dead or alive, I wish him well.</p>
+<p style='margin-left:0.0em; margin-right:0.0em; text-align:right'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Robert W. Chambers.</span><br /></p>
+<p><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Ormond, Florida</span>, <i>Feb. 7, 1902</i>.</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-hrt.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 152px; height: 159px;' /><br />
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h3>CONTENTS</h3>
+<table border='0' width='400' cellpadding='2' cellspacing='0' summary='Contents' style='margin:1em auto;'>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>I.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>At the Telegraph</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#I_AT_THE_TELEGRAPH'>3</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>II.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>The Government Interferes</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#II_THE_GOVERNMENT_INTERFERES'>21</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>III.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>La Trappe</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#III_LA_TRAPPE'>34</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>IV.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Prisoners</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#IV_PRISONERS'>50</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>V.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>The Immortals</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#V_THE_IMMORTALS'>65</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>VI.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>The Game Begins</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#VI_THE_GAME_BEGINS'>87</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>VII.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>A Struggle Foreshadowed</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#VII_A_STRUGGLE_FORESHADOWED'>110</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>VIII.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>A Man to Let</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#VIII_A_MAN_TO_LET'>136</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>IX.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>The Road to Paradise</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#IX_THE_ROAD_TO_PARADISE'>159</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>X.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>The Town-Crier</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#X_THE_TOWNCRIER'>171</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XI.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>In Camp</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#XI_IN_CAMP'>180</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XII.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Jacqueline</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#XII_JACQUELINE'>195</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XIII.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Friends</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#XIII_FRIENDS'>207</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XIV.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>The Path of the Lizard</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#XIV_THE_PATH_OF_THE_LIZARD'>229</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XV.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Forewarned</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#XV_FOREWARNED'>253</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XVI.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>A Restless Man</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#XVI_A_RESTLESS_MAN'>265</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XVII.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>The Circus</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#XVII_THE_CIRCUS'>280</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XVIII.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>A Guest-Chamber</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#XVIII_A_GUESTCHAMBER'>303</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XIX.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Trécourt Garden</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#XIX_TRCOURT_GARDEN'>318</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XX.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>The Semaphore</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#XX_THE_SEMAPHORE'>339</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XXI.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Like Her Ancestors</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#XXI_LIKE_HER_ANCESTORS'>353</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='right' style='padding-right:1em;'>XXII.</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>The Secret</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#XXII_THE_SECRET'>381</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h3>ILLUSTRATIONS</h3>
+<table border='0' width='500' cellpadding='2' cellspacing='0' summary='Illustrations' style='margin:1em auto'>
+<col style='width:80%;' />
+<col style='width:20%;' />
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-size:smaller'>&#8220;&#8216;LOOK THERE!' SHE CRIED, IN TERROR&#8221;</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_1'><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-size:smaller'>&#8220;&#8216;ACROSS THAT MEADOW,' SAID THE YOUNG GIRL&#8221;</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_2'><i>Facing p.</i>&nbsp;&nbsp;22</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-size:smaller'>&#8220;TO RIGHT AND LEFT, PRUSSIAN LANCERS WERE RIDING&#8221;</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_3'><i>Facing p.</i>&nbsp;&nbsp;62</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-size:smaller'>&#8220;A COMPANY OF TURCOS CAME UP&#8221;</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_4'><i>Facing p.</i>&nbsp;&nbsp;74</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-size:smaller'>&#8220;&#8216;HALT! HALT!' HE SHOUTED&#8221;</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_5'><i>Facing p.</i>&nbsp;&nbsp;84</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-size:smaller'>&#8220;EVERY BRIDGE WAS GUARDED&#8221;</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_6'><i>Facing p.</i>&nbsp;124</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-size:smaller'>&#8220;SISTERS OF CHARITY WERE GIVING FIRST AID&#8221;</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_7'><i>Facing p.</i>&nbsp;132</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'><span style='font-size:smaller'>&#8220;I WAS ON MY KNEES&#8221;</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_8'><i>Facing p.</i>&nbsp;298</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h3>PART FIRST</h3>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_3' name='page_3'></a>3</span></div>
+<h2>THE MAIDS OF PARADISE</h2>
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<a name='I_AT_THE_TELEGRAPH' id='I_AT_THE_TELEGRAPH'></a>
+<h2>I</h2>
+<h3>AT THE TELEGRAPH</h3>
+</div>
+<p>On the third day of August, 1870, I left Paris in
+search of John Buckhurst.</p>
+<p>On the 4th of August I lost all traces of Mr. Buckhurst
+near the frontier, in the village of Morsbronn.
+The remainder of the day I spent in acquiring that
+&#8220;general information&#8221; so dear to the officials in Paris
+whose flimsy systems of intelligence had already begun
+to break down.</p>
+<p>On August 5th, about eight o&#8217;clock in the morning,
+the military telegraph instrument in the operator&#8217;s
+room over the temporary barracks of the Third Hussars
+clicked out the call for urgency, not the usual
+military signal, but a secret sequence understood only
+by certain officers of the Imperial Military Police. The
+operator on duty therefore stepped into my room and
+waited while I took his place at the wire.</p>
+<p>I had been using the code-book that morning, preparing
+despatches for Paris, and now, at the first
+series of significant clicks, I dropped my left middle
+finger on the key and repeated the signal to Paris,
+using the required variations. Then I rose, locked the
+door, and returned to the table.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_4' name='page_4'></a>4</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Who is this?&#8221; came over the wire in the secret
+code; and I answered at once: &#8220;Inspector of Foreign
+Division, Imperial Military Police, on duty at Morsbronn,
+Alsace.&#8221;</p>
+<p>After considerable delay the next message arrived
+in the Morse code: &#8220;Is that you, Scarlett?&#8221;</p>
+<p>And I replied: &#8220;Yes. Who are you? Why do
+you not use the code? Repeat the code signal and
+your number.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The signal was repeated, then came the message:
+&#8220;This is the Tuileries. You have my authority to
+use the Morse code for the sake of brevity. Do you
+understand? I am Jarras. The Empress is here.&#8221;
+Instantly reassured by the message from Colonel
+Jarras, head of the bureau to which I was attached,
+I answered that I understood. Then the telegrams began
+to fly, all in the Morse code:</p>
+<p><i>Jarras.</i> &#8220;Have you caught Buckhurst?&#8221;</p>
+<p><i>I.</i> &#8220;No.&#8221;</p>
+<p><i>Jarras.</i> &#8220;How did he get away?&#8221;</p>
+<p><i>I.</i> &#8220;There&#8217;s confusion enough on the frontier to cover
+the escape of a hundred thieves.&#8221;</p>
+<p><i>Jarras.</i> &#8220;Your reply alarms the Empress. State
+briefly the present position of the First Corps.&#8221;</p>
+<p><i>I.</i> &#8220;The First Corps still occupies the heights in a
+straight line about seven kilometres long; the plateau
+is covered with vineyards. Two small rivers are in
+front of us; the Vosges are behind us; the right flank
+pivots on Morsbronn, the left on Neehwiller; the centre
+covers W&ouml;rth. We have had forty-eight hours&#8217; heavy
+rain.&#8221;</p>
+<p><i>Jarras.</i> &#8220;Where are the Germans?&#8221;</p>
+<p><i>I.</i> &#8220;Precise information not obtainable at headquarters
+of the First Corps.&#8221;</p>
+<p><i>Jarras.</i> &#8220;Does the Marshal not know where the Germans
+are?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_5' name='page_5'></a>5</span></p>
+<p><i>I.</i> &#8220;Marshal MacMahon does not know definitely.&#8221;</p>
+<p><i>Jarras.</i> &#8220;Does the Marshal not employ his cavalry?
+Where are they?&#8221;</p>
+<p><i>I.</i> &#8220;Septeuil&#8217;s cavalry of the second division lie between
+Elsasshausen and the Grosserwald; Michel&#8217;s
+brigade of heavy cavalry camps at Eberbach; the
+second division of cavalry of the reserve, General Vicomte
+de Bonnemain, should arrive to-night and go
+into bivouac between Reichshofen and the Grosserwald.&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was a long pause; I lighted a cigar and waited.
+After a while the instrument began again:</p>
+<p><i>Jarras.</i> &#8220;The Empress desires to know where the
+ch&acirc;teau called La Trappe is.&#8221;</p>
+<p><i>I.</i> &#8220;La Trappe is about four kilometres from Morsbronn,
+near the hamlet of Trois-Feuilles.&#8221;</p>
+<p><i>Jarras.</i> &#8220;It is understood that Madame de Vassart&#8217;s
+group of socialists are about to leave La Trappe for
+Paradise, in Morbihan. It is possible that Buckhurst
+has taken refuge among them. Therefore you will
+proceed to La Trappe. Do you understand?&#8221;</p>
+<p><i>I.</i> &#8220;Perfectly.&#8221;</p>
+<p><i>Jarras.</i> &#8220;If Buckhurst is found you will bring him
+to Paris at once. Shoot him if he resists arrest. If
+the community at La Trappe has not been warned of
+a possible visit from us, you will find and arrest the
+following individuals:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Claude Tavernier, late professor of law, Paris
+School of Law;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Achille Bazard, ex-instructor in mathematics, Fontainebleau
+Artillery School;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dr. Leo Delmont, ex-interne, Charity Hospital,
+Paris;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mlle. Sylvia Elven, lately of the Od&eacute;on;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The Countess de Vassart, well known for her
+eccentricities.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_6' name='page_6'></a>6</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;You will affix the government seals to the house
+as usual; you will then escort the people named to
+the nearest point on the Belgian frontier. The Countess
+de Vassart usually dresses like a common peasant.
+Look out that she does not slip through your fingers.
+Repeat your instructions.&#8221; I repeated them from my
+memoranda.</p>
+<p>There was a pause, then click! click! the instrument
+gave the code signal that the matter was ended, and
+I repeated the signal, opened my code-book, and began
+to translate the instructions into cipher for safety&#8217;s
+sake.</p>
+<p>When I had finished and had carefully destroyed
+my first pencilled memoranda, the steady bumping
+of artillery passing through the street under the windows
+drew my attention.</p>
+<p>It proved to be the expected batteries of the reserve
+going into park, between the two brigades of Raoult&#8217;s
+division of infantry. I telegraphed the news to the
+observatory on the Col du Pigeonnier, then walked
+back to the window and looked out.</p>
+<p>It had begun to rain again; down the solitary street
+of Morsbronn the artillery rolled, jolting; cannoneers,
+wrapped in their wet, gray overcoats, limbers, caissons,
+and horses plastered with mud. The slim cannon,
+with canvas-wrapped breeches uptilted, dripped from
+their depressed muzzles, like lank monsters slavering
+and discouraged.</p>
+<p>A battery of Montigny mitrailleuses passed, grotesque,
+hump-backed little engines of destruction.
+To me there was always something repulsive in the
+shape of these stunted cannon, these malicious metal
+cripples with their heavy bodies and sinister, filthy
+mouths.</p>
+<p>Before the drenched artillery had rattled out of
+Morsbronn the rain once more fell in floods, pouring
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_7' name='page_7'></a>7</span>
+a perpendicular torrent from the transparent, gray
+heavens, and the roar of the downpour on slate roofs
+and ancient gables drowned the pounding of the passing
+cannon.</p>
+<p>Where the Vosges mountains towered in obscurity a
+curtain of rain joined earth and sky. The rivers ran
+yellow, brimful, foaming at the fords. The semaphore
+on the mountain of the Pigeonnier was not visible;
+but across the bridge, where the Gunstett highway
+spanned the Sauer, gray masses of the Niederwald
+loomed through the rain.</p>
+<p>Somewhere in that spectral forest Prussian cavalry
+were hidden, watching the heights where our drenched
+divisions lay. Behind that forest a German army was
+massing, fresh from the combat in the north, where
+the tragedy of Wissembourg had been enacted only
+the day before, in the presence of the entire French
+army&mdash;the awful spectacle of a single division of seven
+thousand men suddenly enveloped and crushed by
+seventy thousand Germans.</p>
+<p>The rain fell steadily but less heavily. I went back
+to my instrument and called up the station on the
+Col du Pigeonnier, asking for information, but got no
+reply, the storm doubtless interfering.</p>
+<p>Officers of the Third Hussars were continually tramping
+up and down the muddy stairway, laughing, joking,
+swearing at the rain, or shouting for their horses,
+when the trumpets sounded in the street below.</p>
+<p>I watched the departing squadron, splashing away
+down the street, which was now running water like a
+river; then I changed my civilian clothes for a hussar
+uniform, sent a trooper to find me a horse, and sat
+down by the window to stare at the downpour and
+think how best I might carry out my instructions to
+a successful finish.</p>
+<p>The colony at La Trappe was, as far as I could judge,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_8' name='page_8'></a>8</span>
+a product of conditions which had, a hundred years
+before, culminated in the French Revolution. Now,
+in 1870, but under different circumstances, all France
+was once more disintegrating socially. Opposition to
+the Empire, to the dynasty, to the government, had
+been seething for years; now the separate crystals
+which formed on the edges of the boiling under-currents
+began to grow into masses which, adhering to
+other masses, interfered with the healthy functions of
+national life.</p>
+<p>Until recently, however, while among the dissatisfied
+there existed a certain tendency towards cohesion,
+and while, moreover, adhesive forces mutually impelled
+separate groups of malcontents to closer union,
+the government found nothing alarming in the menaces
+of individuals or of isolated groups. The Emperor
+always counted on such opposition in Paris; the palace
+of the Tuileries was practically a besieged place,
+menaced always by the faubourgs&mdash;a castle before
+which lay eternally the sullen, unorganized multitude
+over which the municipal police kept watch.</p>
+<p>That opposition, hatred, and treason existed never
+worried the government, but that this opposition
+should remain unorganized occupied the authorities
+constantly.</p>
+<p>Groups of individuals who proclaimed themselves
+devotees of social theories interested us only when
+the groups grew large or exhibited tendencies to unite
+with similar groups.</p>
+<p>Clubs formed to discuss social questions were usually
+watched by the police; violent organizations were
+not observed very closely, but clubs founded upon moderate
+principles were always closely surveyed.</p>
+<p>In the faubourgs, where every street had its bawling
+orator, and where the red flag was waved when the
+community had become sufficiently drunk, the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_9' name='page_9'></a>9</span>
+government was quietly content to ignore proceedings,
+wisely understanding that the mouths of street orators
+were the safety-valves of the faubourgs, and that
+through them the ebullitions of the under-world escaped
+with nothing more serious than a few vinous shrieks.
+There were, however, certain secret and semi-secret
+organizations which caused the government concern.
+First among these came the International Society of
+Workingmen, with all its affiliations&mdash;the &#8220;Internationale,&#8221;
+as it was called. In its wake trailed minor societies,
+some mild and harmless, some dangerous and
+secret, some violent, advocating openly the destruction
+of all existing conditions. Small groups of anarchists
+had already attracted groups of moderate socialistic
+tendencies to them, and had absorbed them or tainted
+them with doctrines dangerous to the state.</p>
+<p>In time these groups began to adhere even more
+closely to the large bodies of the people; a party was
+born, small at first, embodying conflicting communistic
+principles.</p>
+<p>The government watched it. Presently it split, as
+do all parties; yet here the paradox was revealed of
+a small party splitting into two larger halves. To
+one of these halves adhered the Red Republicans,
+the government opposition of the Extreme Left, the
+Opportunists, the Anarchists, certain Socialists, the
+so-called Communards, and finally the vast mass
+of the sullen, teeming faubourgs. It became a party
+closely affiliated with the Internationale, a colossal,
+restless, unorganized menace, harmless only because
+unorganized.</p>
+<p>And the police were expected to keep it harmless.
+The other remaining half of the original party began
+to dwindle almost immediately, until it became only
+a group. <i>With one exception</i>, all those whom the
+police and the government regarded as inclined to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_10' name='page_10'></a>10</span>
+violence left the group. There remained, <i>with this
+one exception</i>, a nucleus of earnest, thoughtful people
+whose creed was in part the creed of the Internationale,
+the creed of universal brotherhood, equality before
+the law, purity of individual living as an example
+and an incentive to a national purity.</p>
+<p>To this inoffensive group came one day a young
+widow, the Countess de Vassart, placing at their disposal
+her great wealth, asking only to be received
+among them as a comrade.</p>
+<p>Her history, as known to the police, was peculiar
+and rather sad: at sixteen she had been betrothed
+to an elderly, bull-necked colonel of cavalry, the notorious
+Count de Vassart, who needed what money
+she might bring him to maintain his reputation as
+the most brilliantly dissolute old rake in Paris.</p>
+<p>At sixteen, &Eacute;line de Tr&eacute;court was a thin, red-haired
+girl, with rather large, grayish eyes. Speed and I saw
+her once, sitting in her carriage before the Ministry
+of War a year after her marriage. There had been
+bad news from Mexico, and there were many handsome
+equipages standing at the gates of the war office, where
+lists of killed and wounded were posted every day.</p>
+<p>I noticed her particularly because of her reputed
+wealth and the evil reputation of her husband, who,
+it was said, was so open in his contempt for her that
+the very afternoon of their marriage he was seen publicly
+driving on the Champs-&Eacute;lys&eacute;es with a pretty and
+popular actress of the Od&eacute;on.</p>
+<p>As I passed, glancing up at her, the sadness of her
+face impressed me, and I remember wondering how
+much the death of her husband had to do with it&mdash;for
+his name had appeared in the evening papers under
+the heading, &#8220;Killed in Action.&#8221;</p>
+<p>It was several years later before the police began
+to take an interest in the Comtesse &Eacute;line de Vassart.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_11' name='page_11'></a>11</span>
+She had withdrawn entirely from society, had founded
+a non-sectarian free school in Passy, was interested
+in certain charities and refuges for young working-girls,
+when on a visit to England, she met Karl Marx,
+then a fugitive and under sentence of death.</p>
+<p>From that moment social questions occupied her,
+and her doings interested the police, especially when
+she returned to Paris and took her place once more
+in Royalist circles, where every baby was bred from
+the cradle to renounce the Tuileries, the Emperor,
+and all his works.</p>
+<p>Serious, tender-hearted, charitable, and intensely
+interested in all social reforms, she shocked the conservative
+society of the noble faubourg, aroused the
+distrust of the government, offended the Tuileries, and
+finally committed the mistake of receiving at her own
+house that notorious group of malcontents headed by
+Henri Rochefort, whose revolutionary newspaper, <i>La
+Marseillaise</i>, doubtless needed pecuniary support.</p>
+<p>Her dossier&mdash;for, alas! the young girl already had a
+dossier&mdash;was interesting, particularly in its summing-up
+of her personal character:</p>
+<p>&#8220;To the naive ignorance of a convent pensionnaire,
+she adds an innocence of mind, a purity of conduct,
+and a credulity which render her an easy prey to the
+adroit, who play upon her sympathies. She is dangerous
+only as a source of revenue for dangerous men.&#8221;</p>
+<p>It was from her salon that young Victor Noir went
+to his death at Auteuil on the 10th of January; and
+possibly the shock of the murder and the almost universal
+conviction that justice under the Empire was
+hopeless drove the young Countess to seek a refuge
+in the country where, at her house of La Trappe, she
+could quietly devote her life to helping the desperately
+wretched, and where she could, in security, hold council
+with those who also had chosen to give their lives to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_12' name='page_12'></a>12</span>
+the noblest of all works&mdash;charity and the propaganda
+of universal brotherhood.</p>
+<p>And here, at La Trappe, the young aristocrat first
+donned the robe of democracy, dedicated her life and
+fortune to the cause, and worked with her own delicate
+hands for every morsel of bread that passed her lips.</p>
+<p>Now this was all very well while it lasted, for her
+father, the choleric old Comte de Tr&eacute;court, had died
+rich, and the young girl&#8217;s charities were doubled,
+and there was nobody to stay her hand or draw the
+generous purse-strings; nobody to advise her or to stop
+her. On the contrary, there were plenty of people
+standing around with outstretched, itching, and sometimes
+dirty hands, ready to snatch at the last centime.</p>
+<p>Who was there to administer her affairs, who among
+the generous, impetuous, ill-balanced friends that
+surrounded her? Not the noble-minded geographer,
+Elis&eacute;e R&eacute;clus; not the fiery citizen-count, Rochefort;
+not the handsome, cultivated Gustave Flourens, already
+&#8220;fey&#8221; with the doom to which he had been born;
+not that kindly visionary, the Vicomte de Coursay-Delmont,
+now discarding his ancient title to be known
+only among his grateful, penniless patients as Doctor
+Delmont; and surely not Professor Tavernier, nor yet
+that militant hermit, the young Chevalier de Gray,
+calling himself plain Monsieur Bazard, who chose democracy
+instead of the brilliant career to which Grammont
+had destined him, and whose sensitive and perhaps
+diseased mind had never recovered from the
+shock of the murder of his comrade, Victor Noir.</p>
+<p>But the simple life at La Trappe, the negative protest
+against the Empire and all existing social conditions,
+the purity of motive, the serene and inspired
+self-abnegation, could not save the colony at La Trappe
+nor the young ch&acirc;telaine from the claws of those who
+prey upon the innocence of the generous.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_13' name='page_13'></a>13</span></p>
+<p>And so came to this ideal community one John
+Buckhurst, a stranger, quiet, suave, deadly pale, a
+finely moulded man, with delicately fashioned hands
+and feet, and two eyes so colorless that in some lights
+they appeared to be almost sightless.</p>
+<p>In a month from that time he was the power that
+moved that community even in its most insignificant
+machinery. With marvellous skill he constructed out
+of that simple republic of protestants an absolute despotism.
+And he was the despot.</p>
+<p>The avowed object of the society was the advancement
+of universal brotherhood, of liberty and equality,
+the annihilation of those arbitrary barriers called national
+frontiers&mdash;in short, a society for the encouragement
+of the millennium, which, however, appeared to
+be coy.</p>
+<p>And before the eyes of his brother dreamers John
+Buckhurst quietly cancelled the entire programme at
+one stroke, and nobody understood that it was cancelled
+when, in a community founded upon equality
+and fraternity, he raised another edifice to crown it,
+a sort of working model as an example to the world,
+but <i>limited</i>. And down went democracy without a
+sound.</p>
+<p>This working model was a superior community
+which was established at the Breton home of the Countess
+de Vassart, a large stone house in the hamlet of
+Paradise, in Morbihan.</p>
+<p>An intimation from the Tuileries interrupted a meeting
+of the council at the house in Paradise; an arrest
+was threatened&mdash;that of Professor R&eacute;clus&mdash;and the
+indignant young Countess was requested to retire to
+her ch&acirc;teau of La Trappe. She obeyed, but invited
+her guests to accompany her. Among those who accepted
+was Buckhurst.</p>
+<p>About this time the government began to take a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_14' name='page_14'></a>14</span>
+serious interest in John Buckhurst. On the secret
+staff of the Imperial Military Police were always certain
+foreigners&mdash;among others, myself and a young
+man named James Speed; and Colonel Jarras had
+already decided to employ us in watching Buckhurst,
+when war came on France like a bolt from the blue,
+giving the men of the Secret Service all they could attend
+to.</p>
+<p>In the shameful indecision and confusion attending
+the first few days after the declaration of war against
+Prussia, Buckhurst slipped through our fingers, and
+I, for one, did not expect to hear of him again. But
+I did not begin to know John Buckhurst, for, within
+three days after he had avoided an encounter with
+us, Buckhurst was believed to have committed one
+of the most celebrated crimes of the century.</p>
+<p>The secret history of that unhappy war will never
+be fully written. Prince Bismarck has let the only
+remaining cat out of the bag; the other cats are dead.
+Nor will all the strange secrets of the Tuileries ever
+be brought to light, fortunately.</p>
+<p>Still, at this time, there is no reason why it should
+not be generally known that the crown jewels of France
+were menaced from the very first by a conspiracy so
+alarming and apparently so irresistible that the Emperor
+himself believed, even in the beginning of the
+fatal campaign, that it might be necessary to send
+the crown jewels of France to the Bank of England
+for safety.</p>
+<p>On the 19th of July, the day that war was declared,
+certain of the crown jewels, kept temporarily at the
+palace of the Tuileries, were sent under heavy guards
+to the Bank of France. Every precaution was taken;
+yet the great diamond crucifix of Louis XI. was missing
+when the guard under Captain Siebert turned over the
+treasures to the governor of the Bank of France.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_15' name='page_15'></a>15</span></p>
+<p>Instantly absolute secrecy was ordered, which I, for
+one, believed to be a great mistake. Yet the Emperor
+desired it, doubtless for the same reasons which always
+led him to suppress any affair which might give
+the public an idea that the opposition to the government
+was worthy of the government&#8217;s attention.</p>
+<p>So the news of the robbery never became public
+property, but from one end of France to the other the
+gendarmerie, the police, local, municipal, and secret,
+were stirred up to activity.</p>
+<p>Within forty-eight hours, an individual answering
+Buckhurst&#8217;s description had sold a single enormous
+diamond for two hundred and fifty thousand francs
+to a dealer in Strasbourg, a Jew named Fishel Cohen,
+who, counting on the excitement produced by the
+war and the topsy-turvy condition of the city, supposed
+that such a transaction would create no interest.</p>
+<p>Mr. Cohen was wrong; an hour after he had recorded
+the transaction at the Strasbourg Diamond Exchange
+he and the diamond were on their way to Paris, in
+charge of a detective. A few hours later the stone
+was identified at the Tuileries as having been taken
+from the famous crucifix of Louis XI.</p>
+<p>From Fishel Cohen&#8217;s agonized description of the
+man who had sold him the diamond, Colonel Jarras
+believed he recognized John Buckhurst. But how on
+earth Buckhurst had obtained access to the jewels,
+or how he had managed to spirit away the cross from
+the very centre of the Tuileries, could only be explained
+through the theory of accomplices among the trusted
+intimates of the imperial entourage. And if there existed
+such a conspiracy, who was involved?</p>
+<p>It is violating no secret now to admit that every soul
+in the Tuileries, from highest to lowest, was watched.
+Even the governor of the Bank of France did not escape
+the attentions of the secret police. For it was certain
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_16' name='page_16'></a>16</span>
+that somebody in the imperial confidence had betrayed
+that confidence in a shocking manner, and nobody
+could know how far the conspiracy had spread, or who
+was involved in the most daring and shameless robbery
+that had been perpetrated in France since Cardinal
+de Rohan and his gang stole the celebrated necklace
+of Marie Antoinette.</p>
+<p>Nor was it at all certain that the remaining jewels
+of the French crown were safe in Paris. The precautions
+taken to insure their safety, and the result
+of those precautions, are matters of history, but nobody
+outside of a small, strangely assorted company
+of people could know what actually happened to the
+crown jewels of France in 1870, or what pieces, if any,
+are still missing.</p>
+<p>My chase after Buckhurst began as soon as Colonel
+Jarras could summon me; and as Buckhurst had last
+been heard of in Strasbourg, I went after him on a
+train loaded with red-legged, uproarious soldiers, who
+sang all day:</p>
+<table style='margin: auto' summary=''><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;Have&nbsp;you&nbsp;seen&nbsp;Bismarck<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Drinking&nbsp;in&nbsp;the&nbsp;gay&nbsp;caf&eacute;,<br />
+With&nbsp;that&nbsp;other&nbsp;brother&nbsp;spark&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Monsieur&nbsp;Badinguet?&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>and had drunk themselves into a shameful frenzy
+long before the train thundered into Avricourt.</p>
+<p>I tracked Buckhurst to Morsbronn, where I lost all
+traces of him; and now here I was with my orders
+concerning the unfortunate people at La Trappe, staring
+out at the dismal weather and wondering where
+my wild-goose chase would end.</p>
+<p>I went to the door and called for the military telegraph
+operator, whose instrument I had been permitted to
+monopolize. He came, a pleasant, jaunty young fellow,
+munching a crust of dry bread and brushing the
+crumbs from his scarlet trousers.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_17' name='page_17'></a>17</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;In case I want to communicate with you I&#8217;ll signal
+the tower on the Col du Pigeonnier,&#8221; I said. &#8220;Come
+up to the loft overhead.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The loft in the house which had now been turned
+into a cavalry barracks was just above my room, a
+large attic under the dripping gables, black with the
+stains of centuries, littered with broken furniture,
+discarded clothing, and the odds and ends cherished
+by the thrifty Alsatian peasant, who never throws
+away anything from the day of his birth to the day
+of his death. And, given a long line of forefathers
+equally thrifty, and an ancient high-gabled house
+where his ancestors first began collecting discarded
+refuse, the attic of necessity was a marvel of litter
+and decay, among which generations of pigeons had
+built nests and raised countless broods of squealing
+squabs.</p>
+<p>Into this attic we climbed, edged our way toward
+a high window out of which the leaded panes had
+long since tumbled earthward, and finally stood together,
+looking out over the mountains of the Alsatian
+frontier.</p>
+<p>The rain had ceased; behind the Col du Pigeonnier
+sunshine fell through a rift in the watery clouds. It
+touched the rushing river, shining on foaming fords
+where our cavalry pickets were riding in the valley
+mist.</p>
+<p>Somewhere up in the vineyards behind us an infantry
+band was playing; away among the wet hills
+to the left the strumming vibrations of wet drums
+marked the arrival of a regiment from goodness knows
+where; and presently we saw them, their gray overcoats
+and red trousers soaked almost black with rain,
+rifles en bandouli&egrave;re, trudging patiently up the muddy
+slope above the town. Something in the plodding
+steps of those wet little soldiers touched me. Bravely
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_18' name='page_18'></a>18</span>
+their soaked drums battered away, bravely they dragged
+their clumsy feet after them, brightly and gayly the
+breaking sun touched their crimson forage-caps and
+bayonets and the swords of mounted officers; but to
+me they were only a pathetic troop of perplexed peasants,
+dragged out of the bosom of France to be huddled
+and herded in a strange pasture, where death watched
+them from the forest yonder, marking them for slaughter
+with near-sighted Teutonic eyes.</p>
+<p>A column of white cloud suddenly capped the rocks
+on the vineyard above. Bang! and something came
+whistling with a curious, bird-like cry over the village
+of Morsbronn, flying far out across the valley: and
+among the pines of the Prussian forest a point of flame
+flashed, a distant explosion echoed.</p>
+<p>Down in the street below us an old man came tottering
+from his little shop, peering sideways up into the sky.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Il pleut, berger,&#8221; called out the operator beside me,
+in a bantering voice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It will rain&mdash;bullets,&#8221; said the old man, simply, and
+returned to his shop to drag out a chair on the doorsill
+and sit and listen to the shots which our cavalry
+outposts were exchanging with the Prussian scouts.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Poor old chap,&#8221; said the operator; &#8220;it will be hard
+for him. He was with the Grand Emperor at Jena.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You speak as though our army was already on
+the run,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; he replied, indifferently, &#8220;we&#8217;ll soon be on
+the run.&#8221;</p>
+<p>After a moment I said: &#8220;I&#8217;m going to ride to La
+Trappe. I wish you would send those messages to
+Paris.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right,&#8221; he said.</p>
+<p>Half an hour later I rode out of Morsbronn, clad
+in the uniform of the Third Hussars, a disguise supposed
+to convey the idea to those at La Trappe that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_19' name='page_19'></a>19</span>
+the army and not the police were responsible for their
+expulsion.</p>
+<p>The warm August sunshine slanted in my face as I
+galloped away up the vineyard road and out on to the
+long plateau where, on every hillock, a hussar picket
+sat his wiry horse, carbine poised, gazing steadily
+toward the east.</p>
+<p>Over the sombre Prussian forests mist hung; away
+to the north the sun glittered on the steel helmets
+and armor of the heavy cavalry, just arriving. And
+on the Col du Pigeonnier I saw tiny specks move,
+flags signalling the arrival of the Vicomte de Bonnemain
+with the &#8220;grosse cavalerie,&#8221; the splendid cuirassier
+regiments destined in a few hours to join the cuirassiers
+of Waterloo, riding into that bright Valhalla
+where all good soldiers shall hear the last trumpet
+call, &#8220;Dismount!&#8221;</p>
+<p>With a lingering glance at the rivers which separated
+us from German soil, I turned my horse and galloped
+away into the hills.</p>
+<p>A moist, fern-bordered wood road attracted me; I
+reasoned that it must lead, by a short cut, across the
+hills to the military highway which passed between
+Trois-Feuilles and La Trappe. So I took it, and presently
+came into four cross-roads unknown to me.</p>
+<p>This grassy carrefour was occupied by a flock of
+turkeys, busily engaged in catching grasshoppers;
+their keeper, a prettily shaped peasant girl, looked
+up at me as I drew bridle, then quietly resumed the
+book she had been reading.</p>
+<p>&#8220;My child,&#8221; said I, &#8220;if you are as intelligent as you
+are beautiful, you will not be tending other people&#8217;s
+turkeys this time next year.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Merci, beau sabreur!&#8221; said the turkey-girl, raising
+her blue eyes. Then the lashes veiled them; she
+bent her head a little, turning it so that the curve of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_20' name='page_20'></a>20</span>
+her cheeks gave to her profile that delicate contour
+which is so suggestive of innocence when the ears
+are small and the neck white.</p>
+<p>&#8220;My child,&#8221; said I, &#8220;will you kindly direct me,
+with appropriate gestures, to the military highway
+which passes the Ch&acirc;teau de la Trappe?&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_21' name='page_21'></a>21</span>
+<a name='II_THE_GOVERNMENT_INTERFERES' id='II_THE_GOVERNMENT_INTERFERES'></a>
+<h2>II</h2>
+<h3>THE GOVERNMENT INTERFERES</h3>
+</div>
+<p>&#8220;There is a short cut across that meadow,&#8221; said
+the young girl, raising a rounded, sun-tinted arm,
+bare to the shoulder.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are very kind,&#8221; said I, looking at her steadily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And, after that, you will come to a thicket of white
+birches.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thank you, mademoiselle.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And after that,&#8221; she said, idly following with her
+blue eyes the contour of her own lovely arm, &#8220;you
+must turn to the left, and there you will cross a hill.
+You can see it from where we stand&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>She glanced at me over her outstretched arm. &#8220;You
+are not listening,&#8221; she said.</p>
+<p>I shifted a troubled gaze to the meadow which stretched
+out all glittering with moist grasses and tufts of
+rain-drenched wild flowers.</p>
+<p>The girl&#8217;s arm slowly fell to her side, she looked up
+at me again, I felt her eyes on me for a moment, then
+she turned her head toward the meadow.</p>
+<p>A deadened report shook the summer air&mdash;the
+sound of a cannon fired very far away, perhaps on
+the citadel of Strasbourg. It was so distant, so indistinct,
+that here in this peaceful country it lingered
+only as a vibration; the humming of the clover bees
+was louder.</p>
+<p>Without turning my head I said: &#8220;It is difficult to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_22' name='page_22'></a>22</span>
+believe that there is war anywhere in the world&mdash;is it
+not, mademoiselle?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not if one knows the world,&#8221; she said, indifferently.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you know it, my child?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sufficiently,&#8221; she said.</p>
+<p>She had opened again the book which she had been
+reading when I first noticed her. From my saddle
+I saw that it was Moli&egrave;re. I examined her, in detail,
+from the tips of her small wooden shoes to the scarlet
+velvet-banded skirt, then slowly upward, noting the
+laced bodice of velvet, the bright hair under the butterfly
+coiffe of Alsace, the delicate outline of nose and
+brow and throat. The ensemble was theatrical.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why do you tend turkeys?&#8221; I asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Because it pleases me,&#8221; she replied, raising her
+eyebrows in faint displeasure.</p>
+<p>&#8220;For that same reason you read Monsieur Moli&egrave;re?&#8221;
+I suggested.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Doubtless, monsieur.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who are you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is a passport required in France?&#8221; she replied,
+languidly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are you what you pretend to be, an Alsatian turkey
+tender?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Parbleu! There are my turkeys, monsieur.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of course, and there is your peasant dress and
+there are your wooden shoes, and there also, mademoiselle,
+are your soft hands and your accented speech
+and your plays of Moli&egrave;re.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are very wise for a hussar,&#8221; she said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps,&#8221; said I, &#8220;but I have asked you a question
+which remains parried.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She balanced the hazel rod across her shoulders
+with a faintly malicious smile.</p>
+<p>&#8220;One might almost believe that you are not a hussar,
+but an officer of the Imperial Police,&#8221; she said.</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_2' id='linki_2'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-022.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 483px; height: 362px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 483px;'>
+&#8220;&#8216;ACROSS THAT MEADOW,&#8217; SAID THE YOUNG GIRL&#8221;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_23' name='page_23'></a>23</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;If you think that,&#8221; said I, &#8220;you should answer
+my question the sooner&mdash;unless you come from La
+Trappe. Do you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sometimes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh! And what do you do at the Ch&acirc;teau de la
+Trappe?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I tend poultry&mdash;sometimes,&#8221; she replied.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And at other times?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I do other things, monsieur.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What things?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What things? Mon Dieu, I read a little, as you
+perceive, monsieur.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who are you?&#8221; I demanded.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, a mere nobody in such learned company,&#8221;
+she said, shaking her head with a mock humility
+that annoyed me intensely.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Very well,&#8221; said I, conscious every moment of
+her pleasure in my discomfiture; &#8220;under the circumstances
+I am going to ask you to accept my escort to
+La Trappe; for I think you are Mademoiselle Elven,
+recently of the Od&eacute;on theatre.&#8221;</p>
+<p>At this her eyes widened and the smile on her face
+became less genuine. &#8220;Indeed, I shall not go with
+you,&#8221; she said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m afraid I&#8217;ll have to insist,&#8221; said I.</p>
+<p>She still balanced her hazel rod across her shoulders,
+a smile curving her mouth.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Monsieur,&#8221; she said, &#8220;do you ride through the
+world pressing every peasant girl you meet with such
+ardent entreaties? Truly, your fashion of wooing is
+not slow, but everybody knows that hussars are headlong
+gentlemen&mdash;&#8216;Nothing is sacred from a hussar,&#8217;&#8221;
+she hummed, deliberately, in a parody which made me
+writhe in my saddle.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mademoiselle,&#8221; said I, taking off my forage-cap,
+&#8220;your ridicule is not the most disagreeable incident
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_24' name='page_24'></a>24</span>
+that I expect to meet with to-day. I am attempting
+to do my duty, and I must ask you to do yours.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;By taking a walk with you, beau monsieur?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m afraid so.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And if I refuse?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then,&#8221; said I, amiably, &#8220;I shall be obliged to
+set you on my horse.&#8221; And I dismounted and went
+toward her.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Set me on&mdash;on that horse?&#8221; she repeated, with a
+disturbed smile.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Will you come on foot, then?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, I will not!&#8221; she said, with a click of her teeth.</p>
+<p>I looked at my watch&mdash;it lacked five minutes to one.</p>
+<p>&#8220;In five minutes we are going to start,&#8221; said I, cheerfully,
+and stood waiting, twisting the gilt hilt-tassels
+of my sabre with nervous fingers.</p>
+<p>After a silence she said, very seriously, &#8220;Monsieur,
+would you dare use violence toward me?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I shall not be very violent,&#8221; I replied, laughing.
+I held the opened watch in my hand so that she
+could see the dial if she chose.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is one o&#8217;clock,&#8221; I said, closing the hunting-case
+with a snap.</p>
+<p>She looked me steadily in the eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Will you come with me to La Trappe?&#8221;</p>
+<p>She did not stir.</p>
+<p>I stepped toward her; she gave me a breathless,
+defiant stare; then in an instant I caught her up and
+swung her high into my saddle, before either she or
+I knew exactly what had happened.</p>
+<p>Fury flashed up in her eyes and was gone, leaving
+them almost blank blue. As for me, amazed at what
+I had done, I stood at her stirrup, breathing very fast,
+with jaws set and chin squared.</p>
+<p>She was clever enough not to try to dismount, woman
+enough not to make an awkward struggle or do
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_25' name='page_25'></a>25</span>
+anything ungraceful. In her face I read an immense
+astonishment; fascination seemed to rivet her eyes
+on me, following my every movement as I shortened
+one stirrup for her, tightened the girths, and laid the
+bridle in her half-opened hand.</p>
+<p>Then, in silence, I led the horse forward through
+the open gate out into the wet meadow.</p>
+<p>Wading knee-deep through soaking foliage, I piloted
+my horse with its mute burden across the fields; and,
+after a few minutes a violent desire to laugh seized
+me and persisted, but I bit my lip and called up a few
+remaining sentiments of decency.</p>
+<p>As for my turkey-girl, she sat stiffly in the saddle,
+with a firmness and determination that proved her
+to be a stranger to horses. I scarcely dared look at
+her, so fearful was I of laughing.</p>
+<p>As we emerged from the meadow I heard the cannon
+sounding again at a great distance, and this perhaps
+sobered me, for presently all desire of laughter left
+me, and I turned into the road which led through the
+birch thicket, anxious to accomplish my mission and
+have done with it as soon as might be.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are we near La Trappe?&#8221; I asked, respectfully.</p>
+<p>Had she pouted, or sulked, or burst into reproaches,
+I should have cared little&mdash;in fact, an outburst might
+have relieved me.</p>
+<p>But she answered me so sweetly, and, too, with
+such composure, that my heart smote me for what I
+had done to her and what I was still to do.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Would you rather walk?&#8221; I asked, looking up at
+her.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, thank you,&#8221; she said, serenely.</p>
+<p>So we went on. The spectacle of a cavalryman
+in full uniform leading a cavalry horse on which was
+seated an Alsatian girl in bright peasant costume
+appeared to astonish the few people we passed. One
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_26' name='page_26'></a>26</span>
+of these foot-farers, a priest who was travelling in
+our direction, raised his pallid visage to meet my eyes.
+Then he stole a glance at the girl in the saddle, and
+I saw a tint of faded color settle under his transparent
+skin.</p>
+<p>The turkey-girl saluted the priest with a bright
+smile.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Fortune of war, father,&#8221; she said, gayly. &#8220;Behold!
+Alsace in chains.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is she a prisoner?&#8221; said the priest, turning directly
+on me. Of all the masks called faces, never had I
+set eyes on such a deathly one, nor on such pale eyes,
+all silvery surface without depth enough for a spark
+of light to make them seem alive.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What do you mean by a prisoner, father?&#8221; I asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I mean a prisoner,&#8221; he said, doggedly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;When the church cross-examines the government,
+the towers of Notre Dame shake,&#8221; I said, pleasantly.
+&#8220;I mean no discourtesy, father; it is a proverb in Paris.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;There is another proverb,&#8221; observed the turkey-girl,
+placidly. &#8220;Once a little inhabitant of hell stole
+the key to paradise. His punishment was dreadful.
+They locked him in.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I looked up at her, perplexed and irritated, conscious
+that she was ridiculing me, but unable to comprehend
+just how. And my irritation increased when the priest
+said, calmly, &#8220;Can I aid you, my child?&#8221;</p>
+<p>She shook her head with a cool smile.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am quite safe under the escort of an officer of the
+Imperial&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wait!&#8221; I said, hastily, but she continued, &#8220;of the
+Imperial Military Police.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Above all things I had not wanted it known that
+the Imperial Police were moving in this affair at La
+Trappe, and now this little fool had babbled to a strange
+priest&mdash;of all people in the world!
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_27' name='page_27'></a>27</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;What have the police to do with this harmless
+child?&#8221; demanded the priest, turning on me so suddenly
+that I involuntarily took a step backward.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is this the confessional, father?&#8221; I replied, sharply.
+&#8220;Go your way in peace, and leave to the police what
+alone concerns the police.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Render unto C&aelig;sar,&#8221; said the girl, quietly. &#8220;Good-bye,
+father.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Turning to look again at the priest, I was amazed
+to find him close to me, too close for a man with such
+eyes in his head, for a man who moved so swiftly and
+softly, and, in spite of me, a nervous movement of
+my hand left me with my fingers on the butt of my
+pistol.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What the devil is all this?&#8221; I blurted out. &#8220;Stand
+aside, father. Do you think the Holy Inquisition is
+back in France? Stand aside then! I salute your
+cloth!&#8221;</p>
+<p>And I passed on ahead, one hand on the horse&#8217;s
+neck, the other touching the visor of my scarlet forage-cap.
+Once I looked back. The priest was standing
+where I had passed him.</p>
+<p>We met a dozen people in all, I think, some of them
+peasants, one or two of the better class&mdash;a country
+doctor and a notary among them. None appeared to
+know my turkey-girl, nor did she even glance at them;
+moreover, all answered my inquiries civilly enough,
+directing me to La Trappe, and professing ignorance
+as to its inhabitants.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why do all the people I meet carry bundles?&#8221; I
+demanded of the notary.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mon Dieu, monsieur, they are too near the frontier
+to take risks,&#8221; he replied, blinking through his silver-rimmed
+spectacles at my turkey-girl.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You mean to say they are running away from
+their village of Trois-Feuilles?&#8221; I asked.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_28' name='page_28'></a>28</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Exactly,&#8221; he said. &#8220;War is a rude guest for
+poor folk.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Disgusted with the cowardice of the hamlet of Trois-Feuilles,
+I passed on without noticing the man&#8217;s sneer.
+In a moment, however, he repassed me swiftly, going
+in the same direction as were we, toward La
+Trappe.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wait a bit!&#8221; I called out. &#8220;What is your business
+in that direction, monsieur the notary?&#8221;</p>
+<p>He looked around, muttered indistinctly about having
+forgotten something, and started on ahead of us,
+but at a sharp &#8220;Stop!&#8221; from me he halted quickly
+enough.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Your road lies the other way,&#8221; I observed, and, as
+he began to protest, I cut him short.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You change your direction too quickly to suit me,&#8221;
+I said. &#8220;Come, my friend the weather-cock, turn your
+nose east and follow it or I may ask you some questions
+that might frighten you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And so I left him also staring after us, and I had
+half a mind to go back and examine his portfolio to
+see what a snipe-faced notary might be carrying about
+with him.</p>
+<p>When I looked up at my turkey-girl, she was sitting
+more easily in the saddle, head bent thoughtfully.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You see, mademoiselle, I take no chances of not
+finding my friends at home,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What friends, monsieur?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;My friends at La Trappe.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh! And ... you think that the notary we
+passed might have desired to prepare them for your
+visit, monsieur?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Possibly. The notary of Trois-Feuilles and the
+Ch&acirc;teau de la Trappe may not be unknown to each
+other. Perhaps even mademoiselle the turkey-girl
+may number the learned Trappists among her friends.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_29' name='page_29'></a>29</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps,&#8221; she said.</p>
+<p>Walking on along the muddy road beside her, arm
+resting on my horse&#8217;s neck, I thought over again of
+the chances of catching Buckhurst, and they seemed
+slim, especially as after my visit the house at La
+Trappe would be vacant and the colony scattered, or
+at least out of French jurisdiction, and probably settled
+across the Belgian frontier.</p>
+<p>Of course, if the government ordered the expulsion
+of these people, the people must go; but I for one found
+the order a foolish one, because it removed a bait that
+might attract Buckhurst back where we stood a chance
+of trapping him.</p>
+<p>But in a foreign country he could visit his friends
+freely, and whatever movement he might ultimately
+contemplate against the French government could
+easily be directed from that paradise of anarchists,
+Belgium, without the necessity of his exposing himself
+to any considerable danger.</p>
+<p>I was sorry that affairs had taken this turn.</p>
+<p>A little breeze began blowing; the scarlet skirt of
+my turkey-girl fluttered above her wooden shoes, and
+on her head the silk bow quivered like a butterfly on
+a golden blossom.</p>
+<p>&#8220;They say when the Lord fashioned the first maid
+of Alsace half the angels cried themselves ill with
+jealousy,&#8221; said I, looking up at her.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And the other half, monsieur?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The sterner half started for Alsace in a body. They
+were controlled with difficulty, mademoiselle. That
+is why St. Peter was given a key to lock them in, not
+to lock us poor devils out.&#8221;</p>
+<p>After a silence she said, musing: &#8220;It is a curious
+thing, but you speak as though you had seen better
+days.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; I said, &#8220;I have never seen better days. I
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_30' name='page_30'></a>30</span>
+am slowly rising in the world. Last year I was a
+lieutenant; I am now inspector.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I meant,&#8221; she said, scornfully, &#8220;that you had been
+well-born&mdash;a gentleman.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are gentlemen scarce in the Imperial Military
+Police?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is not a profession that honors a man.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of all people in the world,&#8221; said I, &#8220;the police would
+be the most gratified to believe that this violent world
+needs no police.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Monsieur, there is another remedy for violence.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And what may that remedy be, mademoiselle?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Non-resistance&mdash;absolute non-resistance,&#8221; said the
+girl, earnestly, bending her pretty head toward me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is not human nature,&#8221; I said, laughing.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is the justification of human nature our aim in
+this world?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nor is it possible for mankind to submit to violence,&#8221;
+I added.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I believe otherwise,&#8221; she said, gravely.</p>
+<p>As we mounted the hill along a sandy road, bordered
+with pines and with cool, green thickets of broom and
+gorse, I looked up at her and said: &#8220;In spite of your
+theories, mademoiselle, you yourself refused to accompany
+me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But I did not resist your violence,&#8221; she replied,
+smiling.</p>
+<p>After a moment&#8217;s silence I said: &#8220;For a disciple of
+a stern and colorless creed, you are very human. I am
+sorry that you believe it necessary to reform the world.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She said, thoughtfully: &#8220;There is nothing joyless
+in my creed&mdash;above all, nothing stern. If it be fanaticism
+to desire for all the world that liberty of thought
+and speech and deed which I, for one, have assumed,
+then I am, perhaps, a fanatic. If it be fanaticism to
+detest violence and to deplore all resistance to violence,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_31' name='page_31'></a>31</span>
+I am a very guilty woman, monsieur, and deserve ill
+of the Emperor&#8217;s Military Police.&#8221;</p>
+<p>This she said with that faintly ironical smile hovering
+sometimes in her eyes, sometimes on her lips, so
+that it was hard to face her and feel quite comfortable.</p>
+<p>I began, finally, an elaborate and logical argument,
+forgetting that women reason only with their hearts,
+and she listened courteously. To meet her eyes when
+I was speaking interrupted my train of thought, and
+often I was constrained to look out across the hills at
+the heavy, solid flanks of the mountains, which seemed
+to steady my logic and bring rebellious thought and
+wandering wisdom to obedience.</p>
+<p>I explained my theory of the acceptance of three
+things&mdash;human nature, the past, and the present.
+Given these, the solution of future problems must be
+a different solution from that which she proposed.</p>
+<p>At moments the solemn absurdity of it all came
+over me&mdash;the turkey-girl, with her golden head bent,
+her butterfly coiffe a-flutter, discussing ethics with an
+irresponsible fly-by-night, who happened at that period
+of his career to carry a commission in the Imperial
+Police.</p>
+<p>The lazy roadside butterflies flew up in clouds before
+the slow-stepping horse; the hill rabbits, rising
+to their hindquarters, wrinkled their whiskered noses
+at us; from every thicket speckled hedge-birds peered
+at us as we went our way solemnly deciding those
+eternal questions already ancient when the Talmud
+branded woman with the name of Lilith.</p>
+<p>At length, as we reached the summit of the sandy
+hill, &#8220;There is La Trappe, monsieur,&#8221; said my turkey-girl,
+and once more stretched out her lovely arm.</p>
+<p>There appeared to be nothing mysterious about the
+house or its surroundings; indeed, a sunnier and more
+peaceful spot would be hard to find in that land of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_32' name='page_32'></a>32</span>
+hills, ravines, and rocky woodlands, outposts of those
+cloudy summits soaring skyward in the south.</p>
+<p>The house itself was visible through gates of wrought
+iron, swinging wide between pillars of stone, where
+an avenue stretched away under trees to a granite
+terrace, glittering in the sun. And under the terrace
+a quiet pool lay reflecting tier on tier of stone steps
+which mounted to the bright esplanade above.</p>
+<p>There was no porter at the gate to welcome me or
+to warn me back; the wet road lay straight in front,
+barred only by sunbeams.</p>
+<p>&#8220;May we enter?&#8221; I asked, politely.</p>
+<p>She did not answer, and I led the horse down that
+silent avenue of trees towards the terrace and the
+glassy pool which mirrored the steps of stone.</p>
+<p>Masses of scarlet geraniums, beds of living coals,
+glowed above the terrace. As we drew nearer, the
+water caught the blaze of color, reflecting the splendor
+in subdued tints of smothered flame. And always,
+in the pool, I saw the terrace steps, reversed, leading
+down into depths of sombre fire.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And here we dismount,&#8221; said I, and offered my
+aid.</p>
+<p>She laid her hands on my shoulders; I swung her
+to the ground, where her sabots clicked and her silver
+neck-chains jingled in the silence.</p>
+<p>I looked around. How intensely still was everything&mdash;the
+leaves, the water! The silent blue peaks on the
+horizon seemed to be watching me; the trees around
+me were so motionless that they also appeared to be
+listening with every leaf.</p>
+<p>This quarter of the world was too noiseless for me;
+there might have been a bird-note, a breeze to whisper,
+a minute stirring of unseen life&mdash;but there was not.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is that house empty?&#8221; I asked, turning brusquely
+on my companion.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_33' name='page_33'></a>33</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;The Countess de Vassart will give you your answer,&#8221;
+she replied.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Kindly announce me, then,&#8221; I said, grimly, and
+together we mounted the broad flight of steps to the
+esplanade, above which rose the gray mansion of
+La Trappe.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_34' name='page_34'></a>34</span>
+<a name='III_LA_TRAPPE' id='III_LA_TRAPPE'></a>
+<h2>III</h2>
+<h3>LA TRAPPE</h3>
+</div>
+<p>There was a small company of people gathered
+at a table which stood in the cool shadows of the
+ch&acirc;teau&#8217;s eastern wing. Towards these people my
+companion directed her steps; I saw her bend close
+to the ear of a young girl who had already turned to
+look at me. At the same instant a heavily built, handsome
+man pushed back his chair and stood up, regarding
+me steadily through his spectacles, one hand
+grasping the back of the seat from which he had
+risen.</p>
+<p>Presently the young girl to whom my companion of
+the morning had whispered rose gracefully and came
+toward me.</p>
+<p>Slender, yet with that charming outline of body
+which youth wears as a promise, she moved across
+the terrace in her flowing robe of crape, and welcomed
+me with a gesture and a pleasant word, which I scarcely
+heard, so stupidly I stood, silenced by the absolute
+loveliness of the girl. Did I say loveliness? No,
+not that, but something newer, something far more
+fresh, far sweeter, that made mere physical beauty
+a thing less vital than the colorless shadow of a crystal.</p>
+<p>She was not only beautiful, she was Beauty itself,
+incarnate, alive, soul and body. Later I noticed that
+she was badly sun-burned under the eyes, that her delicate
+nose was adorned by an adorable freckle, and that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_35' name='page_35'></a>35</span>
+she had red hair.... Could this be the Countess de
+Vassart? What a change!</p>
+<p>I stepped forward to meet her, and took off my forage-cap.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is it true, monsieur, that you have come to arrest
+us?&#8221; she asked, in a low voice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, madame,&#8221; I replied, already knowing that she
+was the Countess. She hesitated; then:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Will you tell me your name? I am Madame de
+Vassart.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Cap in hand I followed her to the table, where the
+company had already risen. The young Countess
+presented me with undisturbed simplicity; I bowed to
+my turkey-girl, who proved, after all, to be the actress
+from the Od&eacute;on, Sylvia Elven; then I solemnly shook
+hands with Dr. Leo Delmont, Professor Claude Tavernier,
+and Monsieur Bazard, ex-instructor at the Fontainebleau
+Artillery School, whom I immediately recognized
+as the snipe-faced notary I had met on the
+road.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, sir,&#8221; exclaimed Dr. Delmont, in his deep,
+hearty voice, &#8220;if this peaceful little community is
+come under your government&#8217;s suspicion, I can only
+say, Heaven help France!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is not that what we all say in these times, doctor?&#8221;
+I asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;When I say &#8216;Heaven help France!&#8217; I do not mean
+Vive l&#8217;Empereur!&#8217;&#8221; retorted the big doctor, dryly.</p>
+<p>Professor Tavernier, a little, gray-headed savant
+with used-up eyes, asked me mildly if he might know
+why they all were to be expelled from France. I did
+not reply.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is thought no longer free in France?&#8221; asked Dr.
+Delmont, in his heavy voice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thought is free in France,&#8221; I replied, &#8220;but its
+expression is sometimes inadvisable, doctor.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_36' name='page_36'></a>36</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;And the Emperor is to be the judge of when it is
+advisable to express one&#8217;s thoughts?&#8221; inquired Professor
+Tavernier.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The Emperor,&#8221; I said, &#8220;is generous, broad-minded,
+and wonderfully tolerant. Only those whose attitude
+incites to disorder are held in check.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;According to the holy Code Napol&eacute;on,&#8221; observed
+Professor Tavernier, with a shrug.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The code kills the body, Napoleon the soul,&#8221; said
+Dr. Delmont, gravely.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It was otherwise with Victor Noir,&#8221; suggested
+Mademoiselle Elven.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; added Delmont, &#8220;he asked for justice and
+they gave him ... Pierre!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think we are becoming discourteous to our guest,
+gentlemen,&#8221; said the young Countess, gently.</p>
+<p>I bowed to her. After a moment I said: &#8220;Doctor,
+if you do truly believe in that universal brotherhood
+which apparently even tolerates within its boundaries
+a poor devil of the Imperial Police, if your creed really
+means peace and not violence, suffering and patience,
+not provocation and revolt, demonstrate to the government
+by the example of your submission to its decrees
+that the theories you entertain are not the chimeras
+of generous but unbalanced minds.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We never had the faintest idea of resisting,&#8221; said
+Monsieur Bazard, the notary, otherwise the Chevalier
+de Grey, a lank, hollow-eyed young fellow, already
+marked heavily with the ravages of pulmonary disease.
+But the fierce glitter in his eyes gave the lie to his words.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yesterday, Madame la Comtesse,&#8221; I said, turning
+to the Countess de Vassart, &#8220;the Emperor could easily
+afford to regard with equanimity the movement in
+which you are associated. To-day that is no longer
+possible.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The young Countess gave me a bewildered look.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_37' name='page_37'></a>37</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Is it true,&#8221; she asked, &#8220;that the Emperor does
+not know we have severed all connection with the
+Internationale?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If that is so,&#8221; said I, &#8220;why does Monsieur Bazard
+return across the fields to warn you of my coming?
+And why do you harbor John Buckhurst at La Trappe?
+Do you not know he is wanted by the police?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But we do not know why,&#8221; said Dr. Delmont, bending
+forward and pouring himself a glass of red wine.
+This he drank slowly, eating a bit of black bread with it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Monsieur Scarlett,&#8221; said Mademoiselle Elven, suddenly,
+&#8220;why does the government want John Buckhurst?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That, mademoiselle, is the affair of the government
+and of John Buckhurst,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Pardon,&#8221; interrupted Delmont, heavily, &#8220;it is the
+affair of every honest man and woman&mdash;where a Bonaparte
+is concerned.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I do not understand you, doctor,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then I will put it brutally,&#8221; he replied. &#8220;We
+free people fear a family a prince of which is a common
+murderer.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I did not answer; the world has long since judged
+the slayer of Victor Noir.</p>
+<p>After a troubled silence the Countess asked me if
+I would not share their repast, and I thanked her and
+took some bread and grapes and a glass of red wine.</p>
+<p>The sun had stolen into the corner where we had
+been sitting, and the Countess suggested that we
+move down to the lawn under the trees; so Dr. Delmont
+and Professor Tavernier lifted the table and bore it
+down the terrace steps, while I carried the chairs to
+the lawn.</p>
+<p>It made me uncomfortable to play the r&ocirc;le I was
+playing among these misguided but harmless people;
+that I showed it in my face is certain, for the Countess
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_38' name='page_38'></a>38</span>
+looked up at me and said, smilingly: &#8220;You must
+not look at us so sorrowfully, Monsieur Scarlett. It
+is we who pity you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And I replied, &#8220;Madame, you are generous,&#8221; and
+took my place among them and ate and drank with
+them in silence, listening to the breeze in the elms.</p>
+<p>Mademoiselle Elven, in her peasant&#8217;s dress, rested
+her pretty arm across her chair and sighed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is all very well not to resist violence,&#8221; she said,
+&#8220;but it seems to me that the world is going to run over
+us some day. Is there any harm in stepping out of
+the way, Dr. Delmont?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The Countess laughed outright.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not at all,&#8221; she said. &#8220;But we must not attempt
+to box the world&#8217;s ears as we run. Must we, doctor?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Turning her lovely, sun-burned face to me, she continued:
+&#8220;Is it not charming here? The quiet is
+absolute. It is always still. We are absurdly contented
+here; we have no servants, you see, and we all
+plough and harrow and sow and reap&mdash;not many
+acres, because we need little. It is one kind of life,
+quite harmless and passionless, monsieur. I have
+been raking hay this morning. It is so strange that
+the Emperor should be troubled by the silence of these
+quiet fields&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>The distress in her eyes lasted only a moment; she
+turned and looked out across the green meadows,
+smiling to herself.</p>
+<p>&#8220;At first when I came here from Paris,&#8221; she said,
+&#8220;I was at a loss to know what to do with all this land.
+I owe much happiness to Dr. Delmont, who suggested
+that the estate, except what we needed, might be loaned
+free to the people around us. It was an admirable
+thought; we have no longer any poor among us&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>She stopped short and gave me a quick glance.
+&#8220;Please understand me, Monsieur Scarlett. I make
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_39' name='page_39'></a>39</span>
+no merit of giving what I cannot use. That would
+be absurd.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The world knows, madame, that you have given
+all you have,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then why is your miserable government sending
+her into exile?&#8221; broke in Monsieur Bazard, harshly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I will tell you,&#8221; I said, surprised at his tone and
+manner. &#8220;The colony at La Trappe is the head and
+centre of a party which abhors war, which refuses
+resistance, which aims, peacefully perhaps, at political
+and social annihilation. In time of peace this colony
+is not a menace; in time of war it is worse than a
+menace, monsieur.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I turned to Dr. Delmont.</p>
+<p>&#8220;With the German armies massing behind the forest
+borders yonder, it is unsafe for the government to leave
+you here at La Trappe, doctor. You are <i>too neutral</i>.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You mean that the government fears treason?&#8221; demanded
+the doctor, growing red.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; I said, &#8220;if you insist.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The Countess had turned to me in amazement.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Treason!&#8221; she repeated, in an unsteady voice.
+&#8220;Is it treason for a small community to live quietly
+here in the Alsatian hills, harming nobody, asking
+nothing save freedom of thought? Is it treason for
+a woman of the world to renounce the world? Is it
+treason for her to live an unostentatious life and use
+her fortune to aid others to live? Treason! Monsieur,
+the word has an ugly ring to me. I am a soldier&#8217;s
+daughter!&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was something touchingly illogical in the
+last words&mdash;this young apostle of peace na&iuml;vely displaying
+her credentials as though the mere word
+&#8220;soldier&#8221; covered everything.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Your government insults us all,&#8221; said Bazard, between
+his teeth.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_40' name='page_40'></a>40</span></p>
+<p>Mademoiselle Elven leaned forward, her blue eyes
+shining angrily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Because I have learned that the boundaries of nations
+are not the frontiers of human hearts, am I a
+traitor? Because I know no country but the world,
+no speech but the universal speech that one reads in
+a brother&#8217;s eyes, because I know no barriers, no boundaries,
+no limits to human brotherhood, am I a traitor?&#8221;</p>
+<p>She made an exquisite gesture with half-open arms;
+all the poetry of the Th&eacute;&acirc;tre Fran&ccedil;ais was in it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Look at me! I had all that life could give, save
+freedom, and that I have now&mdash;freedom in thought,
+in speech, in action, freedom to love as friends love,
+freedom to love as lovers love. Ah, more! freedom
+from caste, from hate and envy and all suspicion,
+freedom to give, freedom to receive, freedom in life
+and in death! Am I a traitor? What do I betray?
+Shame on your Emperor!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The young Countess, too, had risen in her earnestness
+and had laid one slender, sun-tanned hand upon
+the table.</p>
+<p>&#8220;War?&#8221; she said. &#8220;What is this war to us? The
+Emperor? What is he to us? We who have set a
+watch on the world&#8217;s outer ramparts, guarding the
+white banner of universal brotherhood! What is
+this war to us!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are you not a native of France?&#8221; I asked, bluntly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am a native of the world, monsieur.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you mean to say that you care nothing for
+your own birthland?&#8221; I demanded, sharply.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I love the world&mdash;all of it&mdash;every inch&mdash;and if
+France is part of the world, so is this Prussia that we
+are teaching our poor peasants to hate.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Madame,&#8221; said I, &#8220;the women of France to-day
+think differently. Our Creator did not make love
+of country a trite virtue, but a passion, and set it in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_41' name='page_41'></a>41</span>
+our bodies along with our other passions. If in you
+it is absent, that concerns pathology, not the police!&#8221;</p>
+<p>I did not mean to wound her&mdash;I was intensely in
+earnest; I wanted her to show just a single glimmer
+of sympathy for her own country. It seemed as though
+I could not endure to look at such a woman and know
+that the primal passion, born with those who had at
+least wept for their natal Eden, was meaningless to her.</p>
+<p>She had turned a trifle pale; now she sank back
+into her chair, looking at me with those troubled gray
+eyes in which Heaven itself had set truth and loyalty.</p>
+<p>I said: &#8220;I do not believe that you care nothing
+for France. Train and curb and crush your own
+heart as you will, you cannot drive out that splendid
+earth-born humanity which is part of us&mdash;else we had
+all been born in heaven!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come,&#8221; said Bazard, in a rage-choked voice, &#8220;let it
+end here, Monsieur Scarlett. If the government sends
+you here as a spy and an official, pray remember that
+you are not also sent as a missionary.&#8221;</p>
+<p>My ears began to burn. &#8220;That is true,&#8221; I said, looking
+at the Countess, whose face had become expressionless.
+&#8220;I ask your pardon for what I have said
+and ... for what I am about to do.&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was a silence. Then, in a low voice, I placed
+them under formal arrest, one by one, touching each
+lightly on the shoulder as prescribed by the code.
+And when I came to the Countess, she rose, without
+embarrassment. I moved my lips and stretched out
+my arm, barely touching her. I heard Bazard draw
+a deep breath. She was my prisoner.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I must ask you to prepare for a journey,&#8221; I said.
+&#8220;You have your own horses, of course?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Without answering, Dr. Delmont walked away towards
+the stables; Professor Tavernier followed him,
+head bent.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_42' name='page_42'></a>42</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;We shall want very little,&#8221; said the Countess,
+calmly, to Mademoiselle Elven. &#8220;Will you pack up
+what we need? And you, Monsieur Bazard, will
+you be good enough to go to Trois-Feuilles and hire
+old Brauer&#8217;s carriage?&#8221; Turning to me she said: &#8220;I
+must ask for a little delay; I have no longer a carriage
+of my own. We keep two horses to plough and
+draw grain; they can be harnessed to the farm-wagon
+for our effects.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Monsieur Bazard&#8217;s hectic visage flushed, he gave
+me a crazy stare, and, for a moment, I fancied there
+was murder in his bright eyes. Doubtless, however,
+devotion to his creed of non-resistance conquered the
+impulse, and he walked quickly away across the
+meadows, his skeleton hands clinched under his loose
+sleeves.</p>
+<p>Mademoiselle Elven also departed tip-tap! up the
+terrace in her coquettish wooden shoes, leaving me
+alone with the Countess under the trees.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Madame,&#8221; said I, &#8220;before I affix the government
+seals to the doors of your house I must ask you to
+conduct me to the roof of the east wing.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She bent her head in acquiescence; I followed her
+up the terrace into a stone hall where the dark Flemish
+pictures stared back at me and my spurred heels jingled
+in the silence. Up, up, and still up, winding around a
+Gothic spiral, then through a passage under the battlements
+and out across the slates, with wind and setting
+sun in my face and the sighing tree-tops far below.</p>
+<p>Without glancing at me the Countess walked to
+the edge of the leads and looked down along the sheer
+declivity of the stone facade. Slender, exquisite, she
+stood there, a lonely shape against the sky, and I saw
+the sun glowing on her burnished red-gold hair, and
+her sun-burned hands, half unclosed, hanging at her
+side.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_43' name='page_43'></a>43</span></p>
+<p>South, north, and west the mountains towered,
+purple as the bloom on October grapes; the white arm
+of the semaphore on the Pigeonnier was tinted with
+rose color; green velvet clothed the world, under a
+silver veil.</p>
+<p>In the north a spark of white fire began to flicker
+on the crest of Mount Tonnerre. It was the mirror
+of a heliograph flashing out across leagues of gray-green
+hills to the rocky pulpit of the Pigeonnier.</p>
+<p>I unslung my glasses and levelled them. The
+shining arm of the semaphore fell to a horizontal position
+and remained rigid; down came the signal flags,
+up went a red globe and two cones. Another string of
+flags blossomed along the bellying halliards; the white
+star flashed twice on Mount Tonnerre and went out.</p>
+<p>Instantly I drew a flag from my pouch, tied it to
+the point of my sabre, and stepped out along the projecting
+snout of a gargoyle. Below, under my feet,
+the tree-tops rustled in the wind.</p>
+<p>I had been flagging the Pigeonnier vigorously for
+ten minutes without result, when suddenly a dark
+dot appeared on the tower beneath the semaphore,
+then another. My glasses brought out two officers,
+one with a flag; and, still watching them through the
+binoculars, I signalled slowly, using my free hand:
+&#8220;This is La Trappe. Telegraph to Morsbronn that
+the inspector of Imperial Police requires a peloton of
+mounted gendarmes at once.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then I sat down on the sun-warmed slates and
+waited, amusing myself by watching the ever-changing
+display of signal flags on the distant observatory.</p>
+<p>It may have been half a minute before I saw two
+officers advance to the railing of the tower and signal:
+&#8220;Attention, La Trappe!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Pencil and pad on my knee, I managed to use my
+field-glasses and jot down the message:
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_44' name='page_44'></a>44</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Peloton of mounted gendarmes goes to you as
+soon as possible. Repeat.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I repeated, then raised my glasses. Another message
+came by flag: &#8220;Attention, La Trappe. Uhlans
+reported near the village of Trois-Feuilles; have you
+seen them?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Prussian Uhlans! Here in the rear of our entire
+army! Nonsense! And I signalled a vigorous:</p>
+<p>&#8220;No. Have you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>To which came the disturbing reply: &#8220;Be on your
+guard. We are ordered to display the semaphore at
+danger. Report is credited at headquarters. Repeat.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I repeated. Raising my glasses again, I could
+plainly see a young officer, an unlighted cigar between
+his teeth, jotting down our correspondence,
+while the other officer who had flagged me furled up
+his flags and laid them aside, yawning and stretching
+himself to his full height.</p>
+<p>So distinctly did my powerful binoculars bring the
+station into range that I could even see the younger
+officer light a match, which the wind extinguished,
+light another, and presently blow a tiny cloud of smoke
+from his cigar.</p>
+<p>The Countess de Vassart had come up to where I
+was standing on the gargoyle, balanced over the gulf
+below. Very cautiously I began to step backward,
+for there was not room to turn around.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Would you care to look at the Pigeonnier, madame?&#8221;
+I asked, glancing at her over my shoulder.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I beg you will be careful,&#8221; she said. &#8220;It is a useless
+risk to stand out there.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I had never known the dread of great heights which
+many people feel, and I laughed and stepped backward,
+expecting to land on the parapet behind me.
+But the point of my scabbard struck against the battlements,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_45' name='page_45'></a>45</span>
+forcing me outward; I stumbled, staggered,
+and swayed a moment, striving desperately to recover
+my balance; I felt my gloved fingers slipping along
+the smooth face of the parapet, my knees gave way
+with horror; then my fingers clutched something&mdash;an
+arm&mdash;and I swung back, slap against the parapet,
+hanging to that arm with all my weight. A terrible
+effort and I planted my boots on the leads and looked
+up with sick eyes into the eyes of the Countess.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Can you stand it?&#8221; I groaned, clutching her arm
+with my other hand.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes&mdash;don&#8217;t be afraid,&#8221; she said, calmly. &#8220;Draw
+me toward you; I cannot draw you over.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Press your knees against the battlements,&#8221; I
+gasped.</p>
+<p>She bent one knee and wedged it into a niche.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t be afraid; you are not hurting me,&#8221; she
+said, with a ghastly smile.</p>
+<p>I raised one hand and caught her shoulder, then,
+drawn forward, I seized the parapet in both arms, and
+vaulted to the slate roof.</p>
+<p>A fog seemed to blot my eyes; I shook from hair to
+heel and laid my head against the solid stone, while
+the blank, throbbing seconds past. The Countess
+stood there, shocked and breathless. I saw her sleeve
+in rags, and the snowy skin all bruised beneath.</p>
+<p>I tried to thank her; we both were badly shaken, and
+I do not know that she even heard me. Her burnished
+hair had sagged to her white neck; she twisted it up
+with unsteady fingers and turned away. I followed
+slowly, back through the dim galleries, and presently
+she seemed to remember my presence and waited for
+me as I felt my way along the passage.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Every little shadow is a yawning gulf,&#8221; I said.
+&#8220;My nerve is gone, madame. The banging of my
+own sabre scares me.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_46' name='page_46'></a>46</span></p>
+<p>I strove to speak lightly, but my voice trembled,
+and so did hers when she said: &#8220;High places always
+terrify me; something below seems to draw me. Did
+you ever have that dreadful impulse to sway forward
+into a precipice?&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was a subtle change in her voice and manner,
+something almost friendly in her gray eyes as she
+looked curiously at me when we came into the half-light
+of an inner gallery.</p>
+<p>What irony lurks in blind chance that I should owe
+this woman my life&mdash;this woman whose home I had
+come to confiscate, whose friends I had arrested, who
+herself was now my prisoner, destined to the shame of
+exile!</p>
+<p>Perhaps she divined my thoughts&mdash;I do not know&mdash;but
+she turned her troubled eyes to the arched window,
+where a painted saint imbedded in golden glass
+knelt and beat his breast with two heavy stones.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Madame,&#8221; I said, slowly, &#8220;your courage and your
+goodness to me have made my task a heavy one. Can
+I lighten it for you in any manner?&#8221;</p>
+<p>She turned towards me, almost timidly. &#8220;Could
+I go to Morsbronn before&mdash;before I cross the frontier?
+I have a house there; there are a few things I would
+like to take&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>She stopped short, seeing, doubtless, the pain of refusal
+in my face. &#8220;But, after all, it does not matter.
+I suppose your orders are formal?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, madame.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then it is a matter of honor?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A soldier is always on his honor; a soldier&#8217;s
+daughter will understand that.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I understand,&#8221; she said.</p>
+<p>After a moment she smiled and moved forward,
+saying:</p>
+<p>&#8220;How the world tosses us&mdash;flinging strangers into
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_47' name='page_47'></a>47</span>
+each other&#8217;s arms, parting brothers, leading enemies
+across each other&#8217;s paths! One has a glimpse of kindly
+eyes&mdash;and never meets them again. Often and often
+I have seen a good face in the lamp-lit street that I
+could call out to, &#8216;Be friends with me!&#8217; Then it is
+gone&mdash;and I am gone&mdash;Oh, it is curiously sad, Monsieur
+Scarlett!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Does your creed teach you to care for everybody,
+madame?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes&mdash;I try to. Some attract me so strongly&mdash;some
+I pity so. I think that if people only knew that there
+was no such thing as a stranger in the world, the world
+might be a paradise in time.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It might be, some day, if all the world were as
+good as you, madame.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I am only a perplexed woman,&#8221; she said, laughing.
+&#8220;I do so long for the freedom of all the world,
+absolute individual liberty and no law but that best
+of all laws&mdash;the law of the unselfish.&#8221;</p>
+<p>We had stopped, by a mutual impulse, at the head
+of the stone stairway.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why do you shelter such a man as John Buckhurst?&#8221;
+I asked, abruptly.</p>
+<p>She raised her eyes to me with perfect composure.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why do you ask?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Because I have come here from Paris to arrest
+him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She bent her head thoughtfully and laid the tips of
+her fingers on the sculptured balustrade.</p>
+<p>&#8220;To me,&#8221; she said, &#8220;there&#8217;s no such thing as a
+political crime.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is not for a political crime that we want John
+Buckhurst,&#8221; I said, watching her. &#8220;It is for a civil
+outrage.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Her face was like marble; her hands tightened on
+the fretted carving.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_48' name='page_48'></a>48</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;What crime is he charged with?&#8221; she asked, without
+moving.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He is charged with being a common thief,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>Now there was color enough in her face, and to
+spare, for the blood-stained neck and cheek, and even
+the bare shoulder under the torn crape burned pink.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is brutal to make such a charge!&#8221; she said.
+&#8220;It is shameful!&mdash;&#8221; her voice quivered. &#8220;It is not
+true! Monsieur, give me your word of honor that the
+government means what it says and nothing more!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Madame,&#8221; I said, &#8220;I give my word of honor that
+no political crime is charged against that man.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Will you pledge me your honor that if he answers
+satisfactorily to that false charge of theft, the government
+will let him go free?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I will take it upon myself to do so,&#8221; said I. &#8220;But
+what in Heaven&#8217;s name is this man to you, madame?
+He is a militant anarchist, whose creed is not yours,
+whose propaganda teaches merciless violence, whose
+programme is terror. He is well known in the faubourgs;
+Belleville is his, and in the Ch&acirc;teau Rouge he
+has pointed across the river to the rich quarters, calling
+it the promised land! Yet here, at La Trappe, where
+your creed is peace and non-resistance, he is welcomed
+and harbored, he is deferred to, he is made executive
+head of a free commune which he has turned into a
+despotism ... for his own ends!&#8221;</p>
+<p>She was gazing at me with dilated eyes, hands
+holding tight to the balustrade.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did you not know that?&#8221; I asked, astonished.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; she said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are not aware that John Buckhurst is the
+soul and centre of the Belleville Reds?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is&mdash;it is false!&#8221; she stammered.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, madame, it is true. He wears a smug mask
+here; he has deceived you all.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_49' name='page_49'></a>49</span></p>
+<p>She stood there, breathing rapidly, her head high.</p>
+<p>&#8220;John Buckhurst will answer for himself,&#8221; she said,
+steadily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;When, madame?&#8221;</p>
+<p>For answer she stepped across the hall and laid one
+hand against the blank stone wall. Then, reaching
+upward, she drew from between the ponderous blocks
+little strips of steel, colored like mortar, dropping them
+to the stone floor, where they rang out. When she had
+flung away the last one, she stepped back and set her
+frail shoulder to the wall; instantly a mass of stone
+swung silently on an unseen pivot, a yellow light
+streamed out, and there was a tiny chamber, illuminated
+by a lamp, and a man just rising from his chair.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_50' name='page_50'></a>50</span>
+<a name='IV_PRISONERS' id='IV_PRISONERS'></a>
+<h2>IV</h2>
+<h3>PRISONERS</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Instantly I recognized in him the insolent priest
+who had confronted me on my way to La Trappe that
+morning. I knew him, although now he was wearing
+neither robe nor shovel-hat, nor those square shoes too
+large to buckle closely over his flat insteps.</p>
+<p>And he knew me.</p>
+<p>He appeared admirably cool and composed, glancing
+at the Countess for an instant with an interrogative
+expression; then he acknowledged my presence by
+bowing almost humorously.</p>
+<p>&#8220;This is Monsieur Scarlett, of the Imperial Military
+Police,&#8221; said the Countess, in a clear voice, ending
+with that slightly rising inflection which demands an
+answer.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Buckhurst,&#8221; I said, &#8220;I am an Inspector of
+Military Police, and I cannot begin to tell you what a
+pleasure this meeting is to me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I have no doubt of that, monsieur,&#8221; said Buckhurst,
+in his smooth, almost caressing tones. &#8220;It,
+however, inconveniences me a great deal to cross the
+frontier to-day, even in your company, otherwise I
+should have surrendered with my confr&egrave;res.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But there is no question of <i>your</i> crossing the frontier,
+Mr. Buckhurst,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>His colorless eyes sought mine, then dropped. They
+were almost stone white in the lamp-light&mdash;white as
+his delicately chiselled face and hands.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_51' name='page_51'></a>51</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Are we not to be exiled?&#8221; he asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;<i>You</i> are not,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Am I not under arrest?&#8221;</p>
+<p>I stepped forward and placed him formally under
+arrest, touching him slightly on the shoulder. He
+did not move a muscle, yet, beneath the thin cloth of
+his coat I could divine a frame of iron.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Your creed is one of non-resistance to violence,&#8221;
+I said&mdash;&#8220;is it not?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; he replied. I saw that gray ring around
+the pale pupil of his eyes contracting, little by little.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You have not asked me why I arrest you,&#8221; I suggested,
+&#8220;and, monsieur, I must ask you to step back
+from that table&mdash;quick!&mdash;don&#8217;t move!&mdash;not one finger!&#8221;</p>
+<p>For a second he looked into the barrel of my pistol
+with concentrated composure, then glanced at the
+table-drawer which he had jerked open. A revolver
+lay shining among the litter of glass tubes and papers
+in the drawer.</p>
+<p>The Countess, too, saw the revolver and turned an
+astonished face to my prisoner.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who brought you here?&#8221; asked Buckhurst, quietly
+of me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I did,&#8221; said the Countess, her voice almost breaking.
+&#8220;Tell this man and his government that you are
+ready to face every charge against your honor! There
+is a dreadful mistake; they&mdash;they think you are&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A thief,&#8221; I interposed, with a smile. &#8220;The government
+only asks you to prove that you are not.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Slowly Buckhurst turned his eyes on the Countess;
+the faintest glimmer of white teeth showed for an instant
+between the gray lines that were his lips.</p>
+<p>&#8220;So <i>you</i> brought this man here?&#8221; he said. &#8220;Oh,
+I am glad to know it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then you cannot be that same John Buckhurst
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_52' name='page_52'></a>52</span>
+who stands in the tribune of the Ch&acirc;teau Rouge and
+promises all Paris to his chosen people,&#8221; I remarked,
+smiling.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; he said, slowly, &#8220;I cannot be that man, nor
+can I&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Stop! Stand back from that table!&#8221; I cried.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I beg your pardon,&#8221; he said, coolly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Madame,&#8221; said I, without taking my eyes from
+him, &#8220;in a community dedicated to peace, a revolver
+is an anachronism. So I think&mdash;if you move I will
+shoot you, Mr. Buckhurst!&mdash;so I think I had better
+take it, table-drawer and all&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Stop!&#8221; said Buckhurst.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh no, I can&#8217;t stop now,&#8221; said I, cheerfully, &#8220;and
+if you attempt to upset that lamp you will make a sad
+mistake. Now walk to the door! Turn your back!
+Go slowly!&mdash;halt!&#8221;</p>
+<p>With the table-drawer under one arm and my pistol-hand
+swinging, I followed Buckhurst out into the hall.</p>
+<p>Daylight dazzled me; it must have affected Buckhurst,
+too, for he reached out to the stone balustrade
+and guided himself down the steps, five paces in front
+of me.</p>
+<p>Under the trees on the lawn, beside the driveway,
+I saw Dr. Delmont standing, big, bushy head bent
+thoughtfully, hands clasped behind his back.</p>
+<p>Near him, Tavernier and Bazard were lifting a few
+boxes into a farm-wagon. The carriage from Trois-Feuilles
+was also there, a stumpy Alsatian peasant
+on the box. But there were yet no signs of the escort
+of gendarmes which had been promised me.</p>
+<p>As Buckhurst appeared, walking all alone ahead
+of me, Dr. Delmont looked up with a bitter laugh.
+&#8220;So they found you, too? Well, Buckhurst, this is
+too bad. They might have given you one more day
+on your experiments.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_53' name='page_53'></a>53</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;What experiments?&#8221; I asked, glancing at the bottles
+and retorts in the table-drawer.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nitrogen for exhausted soil,&#8221; said the Countess,
+quietly.</p>
+<p>I set the table-drawer on the grass, rested my pistol
+on my hip, and looked around at my prisoners, who
+now were looking intently at me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Gentlemen,&#8221; said I, &#8220;let me warn you not to claim
+comradeship with Mr. Buckhurst. And I will show you
+one reason why.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I picked up from the table-drawer a little stick about
+five inches long and held it up.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What is that, doctor? You don&#8217;t know? Oh, you
+think it might be some sample of fertilizer containing
+concentrated nitrogen? You are mistaken, it is not
+nitrogen, but nitro-glycerine.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Buckhurst&#8217;s face changed slightly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is it not, Mr. Buckhurst?&#8221; I asked.</p>
+<p>He was silent.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Would you permit me to throw this bit of stuff at
+your feet?&#8221; And I made a gesture.</p>
+<p>The superb nerve of the man was something to
+remember. He did not move, but over his face there
+crept a dreadful pallor, which even the others noticed,
+and they shrank away from him, shocked and amazed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Here, gentlemen,&#8221; I continued, &#8220;is a box with
+a German label&mdash;&#8216;Oberlohe, Hanover.&#8217; The silicious
+earth with which nitro-glycerine is mixed to make
+dynamite comes from Oberlohe, in Hanover.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I laid my pistol on the table, struck a match, and
+deliberately lighted my stick of dynamite. It burned
+quietly with a brilliant flame, and I laid it on the grass
+and let it burn out like a lump of Greek fire.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Messieurs,&#8221; I said, cocking and uncocking my
+pistol, &#8220;it is not because this man is a dangerous,
+political criminal and a maker of explosives that the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_54' name='page_54'></a>54</span>
+government has sent me here to arrest him ... or
+kill him. It is because he is a common thief,... a
+thief who steals crucifixes,... like this one&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>I brushed aside a pile of papers in the drawer and
+drew out a big gold crucifix, marvellously chiselled
+from a lump of the solid metal.... &#8220;A thief,&#8221; I continued,
+&#8220;who strips the diamonds from crucifixes,... as
+this has been stripped,... and who sells
+a single stone to a Jew in Strasbourg, named Fishel
+Cohen,... now in prison to confront our friend Buckhurst.&#8221;</p>
+<p>In the dead silence I heard Dr. Delmont&#8217;s heavy
+breathing. Tavernier gave a dry sob and covered
+his face with his thin hands. The young Countess
+stood motionless, frightfully white, staring at Buckhurst,
+who had folded his arms.</p>
+<p>Sylvia Elven touched her, but the Countess shook
+her off and walked straight to Buckhurst.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Look at me,&#8221; she said. &#8220;I have promised you
+my friendship, my faith and trust and support. And
+now I say to you, I believe in you. Tell them where
+that crucifix came from.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Buckhurst looked at me, long enough to see that
+the end of his rope had come. Then he slowly turned
+his deadly eyes on the girl before him.</p>
+<p>Scarlet to the roots of her hair, she stood there, utterly
+stunned. The white edges of Buckhurst&#8217;s teeth began
+to show again; for an instant I thought he meant to
+strike her. Then the sudden double beat of horses&#8217;
+hoofs broke out along the avenue below, and, through
+the red sunset I saw a dozen horsemen come scampering
+up the drive toward us.</p>
+<p>&#8220;They&#8217;ve sent me lancers instead of gendarmes
+for your escort,&#8221; I remarked to Dr. Delmont; at the
+same moment I stepped out into the driveway to signal
+the riders, raising my hand.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_55' name='page_55'></a>55</span></p>
+<p>Instantly a pistol flashed&mdash;then another and another,
+and a dozen harsh voices shouted: &#8220;Hourra!
+Hourra! Preussen!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mille tonnerre!&#8221; roared Delmont; &#8220;the Prussians
+are here!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Look out! Stand back there! Get the women
+back!&#8221; I cried, as an Uhlan wheeled his horse straight
+through a bed of geraniums and fired his horse-pistol
+at me.</p>
+<p>Delmont dragged the young Countess to the shelter
+of an elm; Sylvia Elven and Tavernier followed; Buckhurst
+ran to the carriage and leaped in.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No resistance!&#8221; bellowed Delmont, as Bazard
+snatched up the pistol I had taken from Buckhurst.
+But the invalid had already fired at a horseman, and
+had gone down under the merciless hoofs with a lance
+through his face.</p>
+<p>My first impulse was to shoot Buckhurst, and I
+started for him.</p>
+<p>Then, in front of me, a horse galloped into the table
+and fell with a crash, hurling his rider at my feet. I
+can see him yet sprawling there on the lawn, a lank,
+red-faced fellow, his helmet smashed in, and his spurred
+boots sticking fast in the sod.</p>
+<p>Helter-skelter through the trees came the rest of
+the Uhlans, shouting their hoarse &#8220;Hourra! Hourra!
+Preussen!&#8221;&mdash;white-and-black pennons streaming from
+their lance-heads, pistols flashing in the early dusk.</p>
+<p>I ran past Bazard&#8217;s trampled body and fired at an
+Uhlan who had seized the horses which were attached
+to the carriage where Buckhurst sat. The Uhlan&#8217;s
+horse reared and plunged, carrying him away at a
+frightful pace, and I do not know whether I hit him
+or not, but he dropped his pistol, and I picked it up and
+fired at another cavalryman who shouted and put
+his horse straight at me.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_56' name='page_56'></a>56</span></p>
+<p>Again I ran around the wagon, through a clump of
+syringa bushes, and up the stone steps to the terrace,
+and after me galloped one of those incomparable cossack
+riders&mdash;an Uhlan, lance in rest, setting his wiry
+little horse to the stone steps with a loud &#8220;Hourra!&#8221;</p>
+<p>It was too steep a grade for the gallant horse. I flung
+my pistol in the animal&#8217;s face and the poor brute reared
+straight up and fell backward, rolling over and over
+with his unfortunate rider, and falling with a tremendous
+splash into the pool below.</p>
+<p>&#8220;In God&#8217;s name stop that!&#8221; roared Delmont, from
+below. &#8220;Give up, Scarlett! They mean us no harm!&#8221;</p>
+<p>I could see the good doctor on the lawn, waving his
+handkerchief frantically at me; in a group behind
+stood the Countess and Sylvia; Tavernier was kneeling
+beside Bazard&#8217;s body; two Uhlans were raising their
+stunned comrade from the wreck of the table; other
+Uhlans cantered toward the foot of the terrace above
+which I stood.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come down, hussar!&#8221; called an officer. &#8220;We respect
+your uniform.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Will you parley?&#8221; I asked, listening intently for
+the gallop of my promised gendarmes. If I could
+only gain time and save Buckhurst. He was there
+in the carriage; I had seen him spring into it when
+the Germans burst in among the trees.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Foulez-fous fous rendre? Oui ou non?&#8221; shouted
+the officer, in his terrible French.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Eh bien,... non!&#8221; I cried, and ran for the ch&acirc;teau.</p>
+<p>I heard the Uhlans dismount and run clattering and
+jingling up the stone steps. As I gained the doorway
+they shot at me, but I only fled the faster, springing
+up the stairway. Here I stood, sabre in hand, ready
+to stop the first man.</p>
+<p>Up the stairs rushed three Uhlans, sabres shining
+in the dim light from the window behind me; I laid
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_57' name='page_57'></a>57</span>
+my forefinger flat on the blade of my sabre and
+shortened my arm for a thrust&mdash;then there came a
+blinding flash, a roar, and I was down, trying to rise,
+until a clinched fist struck me in the face and I fell
+flat on my back.</p>
+<p>Without any emotion whatever I saw an Uhlan
+raise his sabre to finish me; also I saw a yellow-and-black
+sleeve interposed between death and myself.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No butchery!&#8221; growled the big officer who had
+summoned me from the lawn. &#8220;Cursed pig, you&#8217;d
+sabre your own grandmother! Lift him, Sepp! You,
+there, Loisel!&mdash;lift him up. Is he gone?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He is alive, Herr Rittmeister,&#8221; said a soldier, &#8220;but
+his back is broken.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It isn&#8217;t,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Herr Je!&#8221; muttered the Rittmeister; &#8220;an eel, and a
+Frenchman, and nine long lives! Here, you hussar,
+what&#8217;s the matter with you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;One of them shot me; I thought it was to be sabres,&#8221;
+said I, weakly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And why the devil wasn&#8217;t it sabres!&#8221; roared the
+officer, turning on his men. &#8220;One to three&mdash;and
+six more below! Sepp, you disgust me. Carry him
+out!&#8221;</p>
+<p>I groaned as they lifted me. &#8220;Easy there!&#8221; growled
+the officer, &#8220;don&#8217;t pull him that way. Now, young
+hell-cat, set your teeth; you have eight more lives
+yet.&#8221;</p>
+<p>They got me out to the terrace, and carried me to
+the lawn. One of the men brought a cup of water
+from the pool.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Herr Rittmeister,&#8221; I said, faintly, &#8220;I had a prisoner
+here; he should be in the carriage. Is he?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The officer walked briskly over to the carriage.
+&#8220;Nobody here but two women and a scared peasant!&#8221;
+he called out.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_58' name='page_58'></a>58</span></p>
+<p>As I lay still staring up into the sky, I heard the
+Rittmeister addressing Dr. Delmont in angry tones.
+&#8220;By every law of civilized war I ought to hang you
+and your friend there! Civilians who fire on troops
+are treated that way. But I won&#8217;t. Your foolish
+companion lies yonder with a lance through his mouth.
+He&#8217;s dead; I say nothing. For you, I have no respect.
+But I have for that hell-cat who did his duty.
+You civilians&mdash;you go to the devil!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are not your prisoners sacred from insult?&#8221; asked
+the doctor, angrily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Prisoners! <i>My</i> prisoners! You compliment yourself!
+Loisel! Send those impudent civilians into the
+house! I won&#8217;t look at them! They make me sick!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The astonished doctor attempted to take his stand
+by me, offering his services, but the troopers hustled
+him and poor Tavernier off up the terrace steps.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The two ladies in the carriage, Herr Rittmeister?&#8221;
+said a cavalryman, coming up at salute.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What? Ladies? Oh yes.&#8221; Then he muttered
+in his mustache: &#8220;Always around&mdash;always everywhere.
+They can&#8217;t stay there. I want that carriage.
+Sepp!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;At orders, Herr Rittmeister!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Carry that gentleman to the carriage. Place
+Schwartz and Ruppert in the wagon yonder. Get
+straw&mdash;you, Brauer, bring straw&mdash;and toss in those
+boxes, if there is room. Where&#8217;s Hofman?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;In the pool, Herr Rittmeister.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Take him out,&#8221; said the officer, soberly. &#8220;Uhlans
+don&#8217;t abandon their dead.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Two soldiers lifted me again and bore me away in
+the darkness. I was perfectly conscious.</p>
+<p>And all the while I was listening for the gallop of
+my gendarmes, not that I cared very much, now that
+Buckhurst was gone.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_59' name='page_59'></a>59</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Herr Rittmeister,&#8221; I said, as they laid me in the
+carriage, &#8220;ask the Countess de Vassart if she will
+let me say good-bye to her.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;With pleasure,&#8221; said the officer, promptly.
+&#8220;Madame, here is a polite young gentleman who
+desires to make his adieux. Permit me, madame&mdash;he
+is here in the dark. Sepp! fall back! Loisel, advance
+ten paces! Halt!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is it you, Monsieur Scarlett?&#8221; came an unsteady
+voice, from the darkness.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, madame. Can you forgive me?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Forgive you? My poor friend, I have nothing to
+forgive. Are you badly hurt, Monsieur Scarlett?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know,&#8221; I muttered.</p>
+<p>Suddenly the chapel bell of La Trappe rang out a
+startling peal; the Prussian captain shouted: &#8220;Stop
+that bell! Shoot every civilian in the house!&#8221; But
+the Uhlans, who rushed up the terrace, found the
+great doors bolted and the lower windows screened
+with steel shutters.</p>
+<p>On the battlements of the south wing a red radiance
+grew brighter; somebody had thrown wood into the
+iron basket of the ancient beacon, and set fire to it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That teaches me a lesson!&#8221; bawled the enraged
+Rittmeister, shaking his fist up at the brightening
+alarm signal.</p>
+<p>He vaulted into his saddle, wheeled his horse and
+rode up to the peasant, Brauer, who, frightened to the
+verge of stupidity, sat on the carriage-box.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you know the wood-road that leads to Gunstett
+through the foot-hills?&#8221; he demanded, controlling
+his fury with a strong effort.</p>
+<p>The blank face of the peasant was answer enough;
+the Rittmeister glared around; his eyes fell on the
+Countess.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You know this country, madame?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_60' name='page_60'></a>60</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, monsieur.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Will you set us on our way through the Gunstett
+hill-road?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The chapel bell was clanging wildly; the beacon
+shot up in a whirling column of sparks and red smoke.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Put that woman into the carriage!&#8221; bellowed the
+officer. &#8220;I&#8217;m cursed if I leave her to set the whole
+country yapping at our heels! Loisel, put her in
+beside the prisoner! Madame, it is useless to resist.
+Hark! What&#8217;s that sound of galloping?&#8221;</p>
+<p>I listened. I heard nothing save the clamor of the
+chapel bell.</p>
+<p>An Uhlan laid a heavy hand on the shoulder of
+the listening Countess; she tried to draw back, but he
+pushed her brutally into the carriage, and she stumbled
+and fell into the cushions beside me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Uhlans, into your saddles!&#8221; cried the Rittmeister,
+sharply. &#8220;Two men to the wagon!&mdash;a man on the box
+there! Here you, Jacques Bonhomme, drive carefully
+or I&#8217;ll hang you higher than the Strasbourg clock.
+Are the wounded in the straw? Sepp, take the riderless
+horses. Peloton, attention! Draw sabres! March!
+Trot!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Fever had already begun to turn my head; the jolting
+of the carriage brought me to my senses at times;
+at times, too, I could hear the two wounded Uhlans
+groaning in the wagon behind me, the tramping of
+the cavalry ahead, the dull rattle of lance butts in the
+leather stirrup-boots.</p>
+<p>If I could only have fainted, but I could not, and
+the agony grew so intense that I bit my lip through
+to choke the scream that strained my throat.</p>
+<p>Once the carriage stopped; in the darkness I heard
+somebody whisper: &#8220;There go the French riders!&#8221;
+And I fancied I heard a far echo of hoof-strokes along
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_61' name='page_61'></a>61</span>
+the road to La Trappe. It might have been the fancy
+of an intermittent delirium; it may have been my
+delayed gendarmes&mdash;I never knew. And the carriage
+presently moved on more smoothly, as though we
+were now on one of those even military high-roads
+which traverse France from Luxembourg to the sea.</p>
+<p>Which way we were going I did not know, I did
+not care. Absurdly mingled with sick fancies came
+flashes of reason, when I could see the sky frosted with
+silver, and little, bluish stars peeping down. At times
+I recognized the mounted men around me as Prussian
+Uhlans, and weakly wondered by what deviltry they
+had got into France, and what malignant spell they
+cast over the land that the very stones did not rise up
+and smite them from their yellow-and-black saddles.</p>
+<p>Once&mdash;it was, I think, very near daybreak&mdash;I came
+out of a dream in which I was swimming through
+oceans of water, drinking as I swam. The carriage
+had stopped; I could not see the lancers, but presently
+I heard them all talking in loud, angry voices. There
+appeared to be some houses near by; I heard a dog
+barking, a great outcry of pigs and feathered fowls,
+the noise of a scuffle, a trampling of heavy boots, a
+shot!</p>
+<p>Then the terrible voice of the Rittmeister: &#8220;Hang
+that man to his barn gate! Pig of an assassin, I&#8217;ll
+teach you to murder German soldiers!&#8221;</p>
+<p>A woman began to scream without ceasing.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Burn that house!&#8221; bellowed the Rittmeister.</p>
+<p>Through the prolonged screaming I heard the crash
+of window-glass; presently a dull red light grew out
+of the gloom, brighter and brighter. The screaming
+never ceased.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Uhlans! Mount!&#8221; came the steady voice of the
+Rittmeister; the carriage started. Almost at the word
+the darkness turned to flame; against the raging
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_62' name='page_62'></a>62</span>
+furnace of a house on fire I saw the figure of a man,
+inky black, hanging from the high cross-bar of the
+cow-yard gate, and past him filed the shadowy horsemen,
+lances slanting backward from their stirrups.</p>
+<p>The last I remember was seeing the dead man&#8217;s
+naked feet&mdash;for they hanged him in his night-shirt&mdash;and
+the last I heard was that awful screaming from
+the red shadows that flickered across the fields of uncut
+wheat.</p>
+<p>For presently my madness began again, and again
+I was bathed to the mouth in cold, sweet waters, and
+I drank as I swam lazily in the sunshine.</p>
+<p>My next lucid interval came from pain almost unendurable.
+We were fording a river in bright starlight;
+the carriage bumped across the stones, water
+washed and slopped over the carriage floor. To right
+and left, Prussian lancers were riding, and I saw the
+water boiling under their horses and their long lances
+aslant the stars.</p>
+<p>But there were more horsemen now, scores and
+scores of them, trampling through the shallow river.
+And beyond I could see a line of cannon, wallowing
+through the water, shadowy artillerymen clinging
+to forge and caisson, mounted men astride straining
+teams, tall officers on either flank, sitting their horses
+motionless in mid-stream.</p>
+<p>The carriage stopped.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are you suffering?&#8221; came a low voice, close to my
+ear.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Madame, could I have a little of that water?&#8221; I
+muttered.</p>
+<p>Very gently she laid me back. I was entirely without
+power to move below my waist, or to support my
+body.</p>
+<p>She filled my cap with river water and held it while
+I drank. After I had my fill she bathed my face,
+passing her wet hands through my hair and over my
+eyes. The carriage moved on.</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_3' id='linki_3'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-062.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 550px; height: 375px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 550px;'>
+&#8220;TO RIGHT AND LEFT, PRUSSIAN LANCERS WERE RIDING&#8221;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_63' name='page_63'></a>63</span></div>
+<p>After a while she whispered.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are you awake?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, madame.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;See the dawn&mdash;how red it is on the hills! There
+are vineyards there on the heights,... and a castle,... and
+soldiers moving out across the river meadows.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The rising sun was shining in my eyes as we came
+to a halt before a small stone bridge over which a column
+of cavalry was passing&mdash;Prussian hussars, by
+their crimson dolmans and little, flat busbies.</p>
+<p>Our Uhlan escort grouped themselves about us to
+watch the hussars defile at a trot, and I saw the Rittmeister
+rigidly saluting their standards as they bobbed
+past above a thicket of sabres.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What are these Uhlans doing?&#8221; broke in a nasal
+voice behind us; an officer, followed by two orderlies
+and a trumpeter, came galloping up through the mud.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who&#8217;s that&mdash;a dead Frenchman?&#8221; demanded the
+officer, leaning over the edge of the carriage to give
+me a near-sighted stare. Then he saw the Countess,
+stared at her, and touched the golden peak of his helmet.</p>
+<p>&#8220;At your service, madame,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Is this officer
+dead?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dying, general,&#8221; said the Rittmeister, at salute.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then he will not require these men. Herr Rittmeister,
+I take your Uhlans for my escort. Madame,
+you have my sympathy; can I be of service?&#8221;</p>
+<p>He spoke perfect French. The Countess looked up
+at him in a bewildered way. &#8220;You cannot mean to
+abandon this dying man here?&#8221; she asked.</p>
+<p>There was a silence, broken brusquely by the Rittmeister.
+&#8220;That Frenchman did his duty!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did he?&#8221; said the general, staring at the Countess.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_64' name='page_64'></a>64</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Very well; I want that carriage, but I won&#8217;t take it.
+Give the driver a white flag, and have him drive into
+the French lines. Herr Rittmeister, give your orders!
+Madame, your most devoted!&#8221; And he wheeled his
+beautiful horse and trotted off down the road, while
+the Rittmeister hastily tied a handkerchief to a stick
+and tossed it up to the speechless peasant on the box.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Morsbronn is the nearest French post!&#8221; he said,
+in French. Then he bent from his horse and looked
+down at me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You did your duty!&#8221; he snapped, and, barely saluting
+the Countess, touched spurs to his mount and disappeared,
+followed at a gallop by his mud-splashed
+Uhlans.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_65' name='page_65'></a>65</span>
+<a name='V_THE_IMMORTALS' id='V_THE_IMMORTALS'></a>
+<h2>V</h2>
+<h3>THE IMMORTALS</h3>
+</div>
+<p>When I became conscious again I was lying on
+a table. Two men were leaning over me; a third
+came up, holding a basin. There was an odor of carbolic
+in the air.</p>
+<p>The man with the basin made a horrid grimace
+when he caught my eye; his face was a curious golden
+yellow, his eyes jet black, and at first I took him for
+a fever phantom.</p>
+<p>Then my bewildered eyes fastened on his scarlet
+fez, pulled down over his left ear, the sky-blue Zouave
+jacket, with its bright-yellow arabesques, the canvas
+breeches, leggings laced close over the thin shins and
+ankles of an Arab. And I knew him for a soldier of
+African riflemen, one of those brave children of the
+desert whom we called &#8220;Turcos,&#8221; and whose faith
+in the greatness of France has never faltered since
+the first blue battalion of Africa was formed under
+the eagles of the First Empire.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hallo, Mustapha!&#8221; I said, faintly; &#8220;what are they
+doing to me now?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The Turco&#8217;s golden-bronze visage relaxed; he saluted
+me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Macache sabir,&#8221; he said; &#8220;they picked a bullet
+from your spine, my inspector.&#8221;</p>
+<p>An officer in the uniform of a staff-surgeon came
+around the table where I was lying.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_66' name='page_66'></a>66</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Bon!&#8221; he exclaimed, eying me sharply through his
+gold-rimmed glasses. &#8220;Can you feel your hind-legs
+now, young man?&#8221;</p>
+<p>I could feel them all too intensely, and I said so.</p>
+<p>The surgeon began to turn down his shirt-sleeves
+and button his cuffs, saying, &#8220;You&#8217;re lucky to have
+a pain in your legs.&#8221; Turning to the Turco, he added,
+&#8220;Lift him!&#8221; And the giant rifleman picked me up and
+laid me in a long chair by the window.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Your case is one of those amusing cases,&#8221; continued
+the surgeon, buckling on his sword and revolver; &#8220;very
+amusing, I assure you. As for the bullet, I
+could have turned it out with a straw, only it rested
+there <i>exactly</i> where it stopped the use of those long
+legs of yours!&mdash;a fine example of temporary reflex
+paralysis, and no hemorrhage to speak of&mdash;nothing
+to swear about, young man. By-the-way, you ought
+to go to bed for a few days.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He clasped his short baldric over his smartly buttoned
+tunic. The room was shaking with the discharges of
+cannon.</p>
+<p>&#8220;A millimetre farther and that bullet would have
+cracked your spine. Remember that and keep off
+your feet. Ouf! The cannon are tuning up!&#8221; as a
+terrible discharge shattered the glass in the window-panes
+beside me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where am I, doctor?&#8221; I asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Parbleu, in Morsbronn! Can&#8217;t you hear the orchestra,
+zim-bam-zim! The Prussians are playing
+their Wagner music for us. Here, swallow this. How
+do you feel now?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sleepy. Did you say a day or two, doctor?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I said a week or two&mdash;perhaps longer. I&#8217;ll look
+in this evening if I&#8217;m not up to my chin in amputations.
+Take these every hour if in pain. Go to sleep, my son.&#8221;</p>
+<p>With a paternal tap on my head, he drew on his
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_67' name='page_67'></a>67</span>
+scarlet, gold-banded cap, tightened the check strap,
+and walked out of the room. Down-stairs I heard
+him cursing because his horse had been shot. I never
+saw him again.</p>
+<p>Dozing feverishly, hearing the cannon through
+troubled slumber, I awoke toward noon quite free
+from any considerable pain, but thirsty and restless,
+and numbed to the hips. Alarmed, I strove to move
+my feet, and succeeded. Then, freed from the haunting
+terror of paralysis, I fell to pinching my legs with
+satisfaction, my eyes roving about in search of water.</p>
+<p>The room where I lay was in disorder; it appeared
+to be completely furnished with well-made old pieces,
+long out of date, but not old enough to be desirable.
+Chairs, sofas, tables were all fashioned in that poor
+design which marked the early period of the Consulate;
+the mirror was a fine sheet of glass imbedded in
+Pompeian and Egyptian designs; the clock, which had
+stopped, was a meaningless lump of gilt and marble,
+supported on gilt sphinxes. Over the bed hung a
+tarnished canopy broidered with a coronet, which, from
+the strawberry leaves and the pearls raised above them,
+I took to be the coronet of a count of English origin.</p>
+<p>The room appeared to be very old, and I knew the
+house must have stood for centuries somewhere along
+the single street of Morsbronn, though I could not
+remember seeing any building in the village which,
+judging from the exterior, seemed likely to contain
+such a room as this.</p>
+<p>The nearer and heavier cannon-shots had ceased, but
+the window-sashes hummed with the steady thunder
+of a battle going on somewhere among the mountains.
+Knowing the Alsatian frontier fairly well, I understood
+that a battle among the mountains must mean that
+our First Corps had been attacked, and that we were
+on the defensive on French soil.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_68' name='page_68'></a>68</span></p>
+<p>The booming of the guns was unbroken, as steady
+and sustained as the eternal roar of a cataract. At
+moments I believed that I could distinguish the staccato
+crashes of platoon firing, but could not be certain in
+the swelling din.</p>
+<p>As I lay there on my long, cushioned chair, burning
+with that insatiable thirst which, to thoroughly appreciate,
+one must be wounded, the door opened and a
+Turco soldier came into the room and advanced toward
+me on tip-toe.</p>
+<p>He wore full uniform, was fully equipped, crimson
+chechia, snowy gaiters, and terrible sabre-bayonet.</p>
+<p>I beckoned him, and the tall, bronzed fellow came
+up, smiling, showing his snowy, pointed teeth under
+a crisp beard.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Water, Mustapha,&#8221; I motioned with stiffened lips,
+and the good fellow unslung his blue water-bottle and
+set it to my burning mouth.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Merci, mon brave!&#8221; I said. &#8220;May you dwell in
+Paradise with Ali, the fourth Caliph, the Lion of God!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The Turco stared, muttered the Tekbir in a low voice,
+bent and kissed my hands.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Were you once an officer of our African battalions?&#8221;
+he asked, in the Arab tongue.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sous-officier of spahi cavalry,&#8221; I said, smiling.
+&#8220;And you are a Kabyle mountaineer from Constantine,
+I see.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is true as I recite the fatha,&#8221; cried the great fellow,
+beaming on me. &#8220;We Kabyles love our officers and
+bear witness to the unity of God, too. I am a marabout,
+my inspector, Third Turcos, and I am anxious to have
+a Prussian ask me who were my seven ancestors.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The music of his long-forgotten tongue refreshed
+me; old scenes and memories of the camp at Oran, the
+never-to-be-forgotten cavalry with the scarlet cloaks,
+rushed on me thick and fast; incidents, trivial matters
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_69' name='page_69'></a>69</span>
+of the bazaars, faces of comrades dead, came to me
+in flashes. My eyes grew moist, my throat swelled, I
+whimpered:</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is all very well, mon enfant, but I&#8217;m here with
+a hole in me stuffed full of lint, and you have your
+two good arms and as many legs with which to explain
+to the Prussians who your seven ancestors may
+be. Give me a drink, in God&#8217;s name!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Again he held up the blue water-bottle, saying,
+gravely: &#8220;We both worship the same God, my inspector,
+call Him what we will.&#8221;</p>
+<p>After a moment I said: &#8220;Is it a battle or a bousculade?
+But I need not ask; the cannon tell me enough.
+Are they storming the heights, Mustapha?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Macache comprendir,&#8221; said the soldier, dropping
+into patois. &#8220;There is much noise, but we Turcos are
+here in Morsbronn, and we have seen nothing but
+sparrows.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I listened for a moment; the sound of the cannonade
+appeared to be steadily receding westward.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It seems to me like retreat!&#8221; I said, sharply.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ritrite? Quis qui ci, ritrite?&#8221;</p>
+<p>I looked at the simple fellow with tears in my
+eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You would not understand if I told you,&#8221; said I.
+&#8220;Are you detailed to look after me?&#8221;</p>
+<p>He said he was, and I informed him that I needed
+nobody; that it was much more important for everybody
+that he should rejoin his battalion in the street
+below, where even now I could hear the Algerian bugles
+blowing a silvery sonnerie&mdash;&#8220;Garde &agrave; vous!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am Salah Ben-Ahmed, a marabout of the Third
+Turcos,&#8221; he said, proudly, &#8220;and I have yet to explain
+to these Prussians who my seven ancestors were.
+Have I my inspector&#8217;s permission to go?&#8221;</p>
+<p>He was fairly trembling as the imperative clangor
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_70' name='page_70'></a>70</span>
+of the bugles rang through the street; his fine nostrils
+quivered, his eyes glittered like a cobra&#8217;s.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Go, Salah Ben-Ahmed, the marabout,&#8221; said I,
+laughing.</p>
+<p>The soldier stiffened to attention; his bronzed hand
+flew to his scarlet fez, and, &#8220;Salute! O my inspector!&#8221;
+he cried, sonorously, and was gone at a bound.</p>
+<p>That breathless unrest which always seizes me when
+men are at one another&#8217;s throats set me wriggling
+and twitching, and peering from the window, through
+which I could not see because of the blinds. Command
+after command was ringing out in the street below.
+&#8220;Forward!&#8221; shouted a resonant voice, and &#8220;Forward!
+forward! forward!&#8221; echoed the voices of the captains,
+distant and more distant, then drowned in the rolling of
+kettle-drums and the silvery clang of Moorish cymbals.</p>
+<p>The band music of the Algerian infantry died away
+in the distant tumult of the guns; faintly, at moments,
+I could still hear the shrill whistle of their flutes, the
+tinkle of the silver chimes on their <i>toug</i>; then a blank,
+filled with the hollow roar of battle, then a clear note
+from their reeds, a tinkle, an echoing chime&mdash;and nothing,
+save the immense monotone of the cannonade.</p>
+<p>I had been lying there motionless for an hour, my
+head on my hand, snivelling, when there came a knock
+at the door, and I hastily buttoned my blood-stained
+shirt to the throat, threw a tunic over my shoulders,
+and cried, &#8220;Come in!&#8221;</p>
+<p>A trick of memory and perhaps of physical weakness
+had driven from my mind all recollection of the
+Countess de Vassart since I had come to my senses
+under the surgeon&#8217;s probe. But at the touch of her
+fingers on the door outside, I knew her&mdash;I was certain
+that it could be nobody but my Countess, who
+had turned aside in her gentle pilgrimage to lift this
+Lazarus from the waysides of a hostile world.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_71' name='page_71'></a>71</span></p>
+<p>She entered noiselessly, bearing a bowl of broth and
+some bread; but when she saw me sitting there with
+eyes and nose all red and swollen from snivelling she
+set the bowl on a table and hurried to my side.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What is it? Is the pain so dreadful?&#8221; she whispered.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No&mdash;oh no. I&#8217;m only a fool, and quite hungry,
+madame.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She brought the broth and bread and a glass of the
+most exquisite wine I ever tasted&mdash;a wine that seemed
+to brighten the whole room with its liquid sunshine.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you know where you are?&#8221; she asked, gravely.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh yes&mdash;in Morsbronn.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And in whose house, monsieur?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know&mdash;&#8221; I glanced instinctively at the
+tarnished coronet on the canopy above the bed. &#8220;Do
+you know, Madame la Comtesse?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I ought to,&#8221; she said, faintly amused. &#8220;I was
+born in this room. It was to this house that I desired
+to come before&mdash;my exile.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Her eyes softened as they rested first on one familiar
+object, then on another.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The house has always been in our family,&#8221; she
+said. &#8220;It was once one of those fortified farms in the
+times when every hamlet was a petty kingdom&mdash;like
+the King of Yvet&ocirc;t&#8217;s domain. Doubtless the ancient
+Tr&eacute;courts also wore cotton night-caps for their coronets.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I remember now,&#8221; said I, &#8220;a stone turret wedged
+in between two houses. Is this it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, it is all that is left of the farm. My ancestors
+built this crazy old row of houses for their tenants.&#8221;</p>
+<p>After a silence I said, &#8220;I wish I could look out of
+the window.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She hesitated. &#8220;I don&#8217;t suppose it could harm you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It will harm me if I don&#8217;t,&#8221; said I.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_72' name='page_72'></a>72</span></p>
+<p>She went to the window and folded up the varnished
+blinds.</p>
+<p>&#8220;How dreadful the cannonade is growing,&#8221; she said.
+&#8220;Wait! don&#8217;t think of moving! I will push you close
+to the window, where you can see.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The tower in which my room was built projected
+from the rambling row of houses, so that my narrow
+window commanded a view of almost the entire length
+of the street. This street comprised all there was of
+Morsbronn; it lay between a double rank of houses
+constructed of plaster and beams, and surmounted by
+high-pointed gables and slated or tiled roofs, so fantastic
+that they resembled steeples.</p>
+<p>Down the street I could see the house that I had left
+twenty-four hours before, never dreaming what my
+journey to La Trappe held in store for me. One or
+two dismounted soldiers of the Third Hussars sat in
+the doorway, listening to the cannon; but, except for
+these listless troopers, a few nervous sparrows, and
+here and there a skulking peasant, slinking off with a
+load of household furniture on his back, the street
+was deserted.</p>
+<p>Everywhere shutters had been put up, blinds closed,
+curtains drawn. Not a shred of smoke curled from
+the chimneys of these deserted houses; the heavy
+gables cast sinister shadows over closed doors and
+gates barred and locked, and it made me think of an
+unseaworthy ship, prepared for a storm, so bare and
+battened down was this long, dreary commune, lying
+there in the August sun.</p>
+<p>Beside the window, close to my face, was a small,
+square loop-hole, doubtless once used for arquebus
+fire. It tired me to lean on the window, so I contented
+myself with lying back and turning my head, and I
+could see quite as well through the loop-hole as from
+the window.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_73' name='page_73'></a>73</span></p>
+<p>Lying there, watching the slow shadows crawling
+out over the sidewalk, I had been for some minutes
+thinking of my friend Mr. Buckhurst, when I heard
+the young Countess stirring in the room behind me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are not going to be a cripple?&#8221; she said, as I
+turned my head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh no, indeed!&#8221; said I.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nor die?&#8221; she added, seriously.</p>
+<p>&#8220;How could a man die with an angel straight from
+heaven to guard him! Pardon, I am only grateful,
+not impertinent.&#8221; I looked at her humbly, and she
+looked at me without the slightest expression.
+Oh, it was all very well for the Countess de Vassart
+to tuck up her skirts and rake hay, and live with a
+lot of half-crazy apostles, and throw her fortune to
+the proletariat and her reputation to the dogs. She
+could do it; she was &Eacute;line Cyprienne de Tr&eacute;court,
+Countess de Vassart; and if her relatives didn&#8217;t like
+her views, that was their affair; and if the Faubourg
+Saint-Germain emitted moans, that concerned the
+noble faubourg and not James Scarlett, a policeman
+attached to a division of paid mercenaries.</p>
+<p>Oh yes, it was all very well for the Countess de
+Vassart to play at democracy with her unbalanced
+friends, but it was also well for Americans to remember
+that she was French, and that this was France, and
+that in France a countess was a countess until she was
+buried in the family vault, whether she had chosen to
+live as a countess or as Doll Dairymaid.</p>
+<p>The young girl looked at me curiously, studying
+me with those exquisite gray eyes of hers. Pensive,
+distraite, she sat there, the delicate contour of her head
+outlined against the sunny window, which quivered
+with the slow boom! boom! of the cannonade.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are you English, Monsieur Scarlett?&#8221; she asked,
+quietly.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_74' name='page_74'></a>74</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;American, madame.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And yet you take service under an emperor.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I have taken harder service than that.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of necessity?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, madame.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She was silent.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Would it amuse you to hear what I have been?&#8221;
+I said, smiling.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is not the word,&#8221; she said, quietly. &#8220;To hear
+of hardship helps one to understand the world.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The cannonade had been growing so loud again
+that it was with difficulty that we could make ourselves
+audible to each other. The jar of the discharges
+began to dislodge bits of glass and little triangular
+pieces of plaster, and the solid walls of the tower shook
+till even the mirror began to sway and the tarnished
+gilt sconces to quiver in their sockets.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I wish you were not in Morsbronn,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I feel safer here in my own house than I should at
+La Trappe,&#8221; she replied.</p>
+<p>She was probably thinking of the dead Uhlan and
+of poor Bazard; perhaps of the wretched exposure of
+Buckhurst&mdash;the man she had trusted and who had
+proved to be a swindler, and a murderous one at that.</p>
+<p>Suddenly a shell fell into the court-yard opposite,
+bursting immediately in a cloud of gravel which rained
+against our turret like hail.</p>
+<p>Stunned for an instant, the Countess stood there
+motionless, her face turned towards the window. I
+struggled to sit upright.</p>
+<p>She looked calmly at me; the color came back into
+her face, and in spite of my remonstrance she walked
+to the window, closed the heavy outside shutters and
+the blinds. As she was fastening them I heard the
+whizzing quaver of another shell, the racket of its
+explosion, the crash of plaster.</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_4' id='linki_4'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-074.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 369px; height: 562px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 369px;'>
+&#8220;A COMPANY OF TURCOS CAME UP&#8221;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_75' name='page_75'></a>75</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;Where is the safest place for us to stay?&#8221; she asked.
+Her voice was perfectly steady.</p>
+<p>&#8220;In the cellar. I beg you to go at once.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Bang! a shell blew up in a shower of slates and
+knocked a chimney into a heap of bricks.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you insist on staying by that loop-hole?&#8221; she
+asked, without a quiver in her voice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I do,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Will you go to the cellar?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; she said, shortly.</p>
+<p>I saw her walk toward the rear of the room, hesitate,
+sink down by the edge of the bed and lay her face in
+the pillow.</p>
+<p>Two shells burst with deafening reports in the street;
+the young Countess covered her face with both hands.
+Shell after shell came howling, whistling, whizzing into
+the village; the two hussars had disappeared, but a
+company of Turcos came up on a run and began to dig
+a trench across the street a hundred yards west of our
+turret.</p>
+<p>How they made the picks and shovels fly! Shells
+tore through the air over them, bursting on impact
+with roof and chimney; the Turcos tucked up their
+blue sleeves, spat on their hands, and dug away like
+terriers, while their officers, smoking the eternal cigarette,
+coolly examined the distant landscape through
+their field-glasses.</p>
+<p>Shells rained fast on Morsbronn; nearer and nearer
+bellowed the guns; the plaster ceiling above my head
+cracked and fell in thin flakes, filling the room with
+an acrid, smarting dust. Again and again metal
+fragments from shells rang out on the heavy walls of
+our turret; a roof opposite sank in; flames flickered
+up through clouds of dust; a heavy yellow smoke,
+swarming with sparks, rolled past my window.</p>
+<p>Down the street a dull sound grew into a steady roar;
+the Turcos dropped pick and shovel and seized their rifles.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_76' name='page_76'></a>76</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Garde! Garde &agrave; vous!&#8221; rang their startled bugles;
+the tumult increased to a swelling uproar, shouting,
+cheering, the crash of shutters and of glass, and&mdash;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The Prussians!&#8221; bellowed the captain. &#8220;Turcos&mdash;charge!&#8221;</p>
+<p>His voice was lost; a yelling mass of soldiery burst
+into view; spiked helmets and bayonets glittering
+through the smoke, the Turcos were whirled about
+like brilliant butterflies in a tornado; the fusillade
+swelled to a stupefying din, exploding in one terrible
+crash; and, wrapped in lightning, the Prussian onset
+passed.</p>
+<p>From the stairs below came the sound of a voiceless
+struggle, the trample and panting and clicking of
+steel, till of a sudden a voice burst out into a dreadful
+screaming. A shot followed&mdash;silence&mdash;another shot&mdash;then
+the stairs outside shook under the rush of mounting
+men.</p>
+<p>As the door burst open I felt a touch on my arm;
+the Countess de Vassart stood erect and pale, one
+slender, protecting hand resting lightly on my shoulder;
+a lieutenant of Prussian infantry confronted us;
+straight, heavy sword drawn, rigid, uncompromising,
+in his faultless gray-and-black uniform, with its tight,
+silver waist-sash.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I do not have you thrown into the street,&#8221; he said
+to me, in excellent French, &#8220;because there has been
+no firing from the windows in this village. Otherwise&mdash;other
+measures. Be at ease, madame, I shall
+not harm your invalid.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He glanced at me out of his near-sighted eyes, dropped
+the point of his sword to the stone floor, and slowly
+caressed his small, blond mustache.</p>
+<p>&#8220;How many troops passed through here yesterday
+morning?&#8221; he asked.</p>
+<p>I was silent.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_77' name='page_77'></a>77</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;There was artillery, was there not?&#8221;</p>
+<p>I only looked at him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you hear?&#8221; he repeated, sharply. &#8220;You are a
+prisoner, and I am questioning you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You have that useless privilege,&#8221; I observed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you are insolent I will have you shot!&#8221; he retorted,
+staring haughtily at me.</p>
+<p>I glanced out of the window.</p>
+<p>There was a pause; the hand of the Countess de
+Vassart trembled on my shoulder.</p>
+<p>Under the window strident Prussian bugles were
+blowing a harsh summons; the young officer stepped
+to the loop-hole and looked out, then hastily removed
+his helmet and thrust his blond head through the
+smoky aperture. &#8220;March those prisoners in below!&#8221;
+he shouted down.</p>
+<p>Then he withdrew his head, put on his polished
+helmet of black leather, faced with the glittering Prussian
+eagle, and tightened the gold-scaled cheek-guard.</p>
+<p>A moment later came a trample of feet on the landing
+outside, the door was flung open, and three prisoners
+were brutally pushed into the room.</p>
+<p>I tried to turn and look at them; they stood in the
+dusk near the bed, but I could only make out that
+one was a Turco, his jacket in rags, his canvas breeches
+covered with mud.</p>
+<p>Again the lieutenant came to the loop-hole and
+glanced out, then shook his head, motioning the soldiers
+back.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is too high and the arc of fire too limited,&#8221; he
+said, shortly. &#8220;Detail four men to hold the stairs,
+ten men and a sergeant in the room below, and you&#8217;d
+better take your prisoners down there. Bayonet that
+Turco tiger if he shows his teeth again. March!&#8221;</p>
+<p>As the prisoners filed out I turned once more and
+thought I recognized Salah Ben-Ahmed in the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_78' name='page_78'></a>78</span>
+dishevelled Turco, but could not be certain, so disfigured
+and tattered the soldier appeared.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Here, you hussar prisoner!&#8221; cried the lieutenant,
+pointing at me with his white-gloved finger, &#8220;turn
+your head and busy yourself with what concerns you.
+And you, madame,&#8221; he added, pompously, &#8220;see that
+you give us no trouble and stay in this room until
+you have permission to leave.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are&mdash;are you speaking to me, monsieur?&#8221; asked
+the Countess, amazed. Then she rose, exasperated.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Your insolence disgraces your uniform,&#8221; she said.
+&#8220;Go to your French prisoners and learn the rudiments
+of courtesy!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The officer reddened to his colorless eyebrows; his
+little, near-sighted eyes became stupid and fixed; he
+smoothed the blond down on his upper lip with hesitating
+fingers.</p>
+<p>Suddenly he turned and marched out, slamming the
+door violently behind him.</p>
+<p>At this impudence the eyes of the Countess began
+to sparkle, and an angry flush mounted to her cheeks.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Madame,&#8221; said I, &#8220;he is only a German boy, unbalanced
+by his own importance and his first battle.
+But he will never forget this lesson; let him digest it
+in his own manner.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And he did, for presently there came a polite knock
+at the door, and the lieutenant reappeared, bowing
+rigidly, one hand on his sword-hilt, the other holding
+his helmet by the gilt spike.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Lieutenant von Eberbach present to apologize,&#8221;
+he said, jerkily, red as a beet. &#8220;Begs permission to
+take a half-dozen of wine; men very thirsty.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Lieutenant von Eberbach may take the wine,&#8221;
+said the Countess, calmly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Rudeness without excuse!&#8221; muttered the boy;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_79' name='page_79'></a>79</span>
+&#8220;beg the graciously well-born lady not to judge my
+regiment or my country by it. Can Lieutenant von
+Eberbach make amends?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The Lieutenant has made them,&#8221; said the Countess.
+&#8220;The merciful treatment of French prisoners will
+prove his sincerity.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The lad made another rigid bow and got himself
+out of the door with more or less dignity, and the Countess
+drew a chair beside my sofa-chair and sat down,
+eyes still bright with the cinders of a wrath I had never
+suspected in her.</p>
+<p>Together we looked down into the street.</p>
+<p>Under the window the flat, high-pitched drums began
+to rattle; deep voices shouted; the whole street undulated
+with masses of gray-and-black uniforms,
+moving forward through the smoke. A superb regimental
+band began to play; the troops broke out into
+heavy cheering.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Vorw&auml;rts! Vorw&auml;rts!&#8221; came the steady commands.
+The band passed with a dull flash of instruments; a
+thousand brass helmet-spikes pricked the smoke; the
+tread of the Prussian infantry shook the earth.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The invasion has begun,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>Her face was expressionless, save for the brightness
+of her eyes.</p>
+<p>And now another band sounded, playing &#8220;I Had
+a Comrade!&#8221; and the whole street began to ring with
+the noble marching-song of the coming regiment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Bavarian infantry,&#8221; I whispered, as the light-blue
+columns wheeled around the curve and came swinging
+up the street; for I could see the yellow crown on the
+collars of their tunics, and the heavy leather helmets,
+surmounted by chenille rolls.</p>
+<p>Behind them trotted a squadron of Uhlans on their
+dainty horses, under a canopy of little black-and-white
+flags fluttering from the points of their lances.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_80' name='page_80'></a>80</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Uhlans,&#8221; I murmured. I heard the faint click of
+her teeth closing tightly.</p>
+<p>Hussars in crimson tunics, armed with curious
+weapons, half carbine, half pistol, followed the Uhlans,
+filling the smoky street with a flood of gorgeous
+color.</p>
+<p>Suddenly a company of Saxon pioneers arrived on
+the double-quick, halted, fell out, and began to break
+down the locked doors of the houses on either side of
+the street. At the same time Prussian infantry came
+hurrying past, dragging behind them dozens of vehicles,
+long hay-wagons, gardeners&#8217; carts, heavy wheelbarrows,
+even a dingy private carriage, with tarnished
+lamps, rocking crazily on rusty springs.</p>
+<p>The soldiers wheeled these wagons into a double line,
+forming a complete chain across the street, where the
+Turcos had commenced to dig their ditch and breastworks&mdash;a
+barricade high enough to check a charge,
+and cunningly arranged, too, for the wooden abatis
+could not be seen from the eastern end of the street,
+where a charge of French infantry or cavalry must
+enter Morsbronn if it entered at all.</p>
+<p>We watched the building of the barricade, fascinated.
+Soldiers entered the houses on either side of the street,
+only to reappear at the windows and thrust out helmeted
+heads. More soldiers came, running heavily&mdash;the
+road swarmed with them; some threw themselves flat
+under the wagons, some knelt, thrusting their needle-guns
+through the wheel-spokes; others remained standing,
+rifles resting over the rails of the long, skeleton
+hay-wagons.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Something is going to happen,&#8221; I said, as a group
+of smartly uniformed officers appeared on the roof of
+the opposite house and hastily scrambled to the ridge-pole.</p>
+<p>Something was surely going to happen; the officers
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_81' name='page_81'></a>81</span>
+were using their field-glasses and pointing excitedly
+across the roof-tops; the windows of every house as
+far as I could see were black with helmets; a regiment
+in column came up on the double, halted, disintegrated,
+melting away behind walls, into yards, doorways, gardens.</p>
+<p>A colonel of infantry, splendidly mounted, drew bridle
+under our loop-hole and looked up at the officers on
+the roof across the way.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Attention, you up there!&#8221; he shouted. &#8220;Is it infantry?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No!&#8221; bawled an officer, hollowed hand to his cheek.
+&#8220;It&#8217;s their brigade of heavy cavalry coming like an
+earthquake!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The cuirassiers!&#8221; I cried, electrified. &#8220;It&#8217;s Michel&#8217;s
+cuirassiers, madame! And&mdash;oh, the barricade!&#8221;
+I groaned, twisting my fingers in helpless rage.
+&#8220;They&#8217;ll be caught in a trap; they&#8217;ll die like flies in
+that street.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;This is horrible!&#8221; muttered the girl. &#8220;Don&#8217;t they
+know the street is blocked? Can&#8217;t they find out before
+they ride into this ravine below us? Will they all be
+killed here under our windows?&#8221;</p>
+<p>She sprang to her feet, stood a moment, then stepped
+swiftly forward into the angle of the tower.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Look there!&#8221; she cried, in terror.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Push my chair&mdash;quick!&#8221; I said. She dragged it
+forward.</p>
+<p>An old house across the street, which had been on
+fire, had collapsed into a mere mound of slate, charred
+beams, and plaster. Through the brown heat which
+quivered above the ruins I could see out into the country.
+And what I saw was a line of hills, crowned
+with smoke, a rolling stretch of meadow below, set
+here and there with shot-torn trees and hop-poles; and
+over this uneven ground two regiments of French
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_82' name='page_82'></a>82</span>
+cuirassiers and two squadrons of lancers moving slowly
+forward as though on parade.</p>
+<p>Above them, around them, clouds of smoke puffed
+up suddenly and floated away&mdash;the shells from Prussian
+batteries on the heights. Long, rippling crashes
+broke out, belting the fields with smoky breastworks,
+where a Prussian infantry regiment, knee-deep in
+smoke, was firing on the advancing cavalry.</p>
+<p>The cuirassiers moved on slowly, the sun a blinding
+sheet of fire on their armor; now and then a horse
+tossed his beautiful head, now and then a steel helmet
+turned, flashing.</p>
+<p>Grief-stricken, I groaned aloud: &#8220;Madame, there
+rides the finest cavalry in the world!&mdash;to annihilation.&#8221;</p>
+<p>How could I know that they were coming deliberately
+to sacrifice themselves?&mdash;that they rode with death
+heavy on their souls, knowing well there was no hope,
+understanding that they were to die to save the fragments
+of a beaten army?</p>
+<p>Yet something of this I suspected, for already I
+saw the long, dark Prussian lines overlapping the
+French flank; I heard the French mitrailleuses rattling
+through the cannon&#8217;s thunder, and I saw an entire
+French division, which I did not then know to be
+Lartigue&#8217;s, falling back across the hills.</p>
+<p>And straight into the entire Prussian army rode
+the &#8220;grosse cavallerie&#8221; and the lancers.</p>
+<p>&#8220;They are doomed, like their fathers,&#8221; I muttered&mdash;&#8220;sons
+of the cuirassiers of Waterloo. See what men
+can do for France!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The young Countess started and stood up very
+straight.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Look, madame!&#8221; I said, harshly&mdash;&#8220;look on the
+men of France! You say you do not understand
+the narrow love of country! Look!&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_83' name='page_83'></a>83</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;It is too pitiful, too horrible,&#8221; she said, hoarsely.
+&#8220;How the horses fall in that meadow!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;They will fall thicker than that in this street!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;See!&#8221; she cried; &#8220;they have begun to gallop!
+They are coming! Oh, I cannot look!&mdash;I&mdash;I cannot!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Far away, a thin cry sounded above the cannon
+din; the doomed cuirassiers were cheering. It was
+the first charge they had ever made; nobody had ever
+seen cavalry of their arm on any battle-field of Europe
+since Waterloo.</p>
+<p>Suddenly their long, straight blades shot into the
+air, the cuirassiers broke into a furious gallop, and
+that mass of steel-clad men burst straight down the
+first slope of the plateau, through the Prussian infantry,
+then wheeled and descended like a torrent on
+Morsbronn.</p>
+<p>In the first ranks galloped the giants of the Eighth
+Cuirassiers, Colonel Guiot de la Rochere at their head;
+the Ninth Cuirassiers thundered behind them; then
+came the lancers under a torrent of red-and-white
+pennons. Nothing stopped them, neither hedges nor
+ditches nor fallen trees.</p>
+<p>Their huge horses bounded forward, manes in the
+wind, tails streaming, iron hoofs battering the shaking
+earth; the steel-clad riders, sabres pointed to the front,
+leaned forward in their saddles.</p>
+<p>Now among the thicket of hop-vines long lines of
+black arose; there was a flash, a belt of smoke, another
+flash&mdash;then the metallic rattle of bullets on steel breastplates.
+Entire ranks of cuirassiers went down in
+the smoke of the Prussian rifles, the sinister clash
+and crash of falling armor filled the air. Sheets of
+lead poured into them; the rattle of empty scabbards
+on stirrups, the metallic ringing of bullets on helmet
+and cuirass, the rifle-shots, the roar of the shells
+exploding swelled into a very hell of sound. And,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_84' name='page_84'></a>84</span>
+above the infernal fracas rose the heavy cheering of
+the doomed riders.</p>
+<p>Into the deep, narrow street wheeled the horsemen,
+choking road and sidewalk with their galloping squadrons,
+a solid cataract of impetuous horses, a flashing
+torrent of armored men&mdash;and then! Crash! the first
+squadron dashed headlong against the barricade of
+wagons and went down.</p>
+<p>Into them tore the squadron behind, unable to stop
+their maddened horses, and into these thundered squadron
+after squadron, unconscious of the dead wall ahead.</p>
+<p>In the terrible tumult and confusion, screaming
+horses and shrieking men were piled in heaps, a human
+whirlpool formed at the barricade, hurling bodily
+from its centre horses and riders. Men galloped headlong
+into each other, riders struggled knee to knee,
+pushing, shouting, colliding.</p>
+<p>Posted behind the upper and lower windows of the
+houses, the Prussians shot into them, so close that
+the flames from the rifles set the jackets of the cuirassiers
+on fire: a German captain opened the shutters
+of a window and fired his pistol at a cuirassier, who
+replied with a sabre thrust through the window, transfixing
+the German&#8217;s throat.</p>
+<p>Then a horrible butchery of men and horses began;
+the fusillade became so violent and the scene so sickening
+that a Prussian lieutenant went crazy in the
+house opposite, and flung himself from the window
+into the mass of writhing horsemen. Tall cuirassiers,
+in impotent fury, began slashing at the walls of the
+houses, breaking their heavy sabres to splinters against
+the stones; their powerful horses, white with foam,
+reared, fell back, crushing their riders beneath them.</p>
+<p>In front of the barricade a huge fellow reined in
+his horse and turned, white-gloved hand raised, red
+epaulets tossing.</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_5' id='linki_5'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-084.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 537px; height: 382px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 537px;'>
+&#8220;&#8216;HALT! HALT!&#8217; HE SHOUTED&#8221;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_85' name='page_85'></a>85</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;Halt! Halt!&#8221; he shouted. &#8220;Stop the lancers!&#8221;
+And a trumpeter, disengaging himself from the frantic
+chaos, set his long, silver trumpet to his lips and blew
+the &#8220;Halt!&#8221;</p>
+<p>A bullet rolled the trumpeter under his horse&#8217;s feet;
+a volley riddled the other&#8217;s horse, and the agonized
+animal reared and cleared the bristling abatis with a
+single bound, his rider dropping dead among the hay-wagons.</p>
+<p>Then into this awful struggle galloped the two
+squadrons of the lancers. For a moment the street
+swam under their fluttering red-and-white lance-pennons,
+then a volley swept them&mdash;another&mdash;another&mdash;and
+down they went.</p>
+<p>Herds of riderless horses tore through the street;
+the road undulated with crushed, quivering creatures
+crawling about. Against the doorway of a house
+opposite a noble horse in agony leaned with shaking
+knees, head raised, lips shrinking back over his teeth.</p>
+<p>Bewildered, stupefied, exhausted, the cuirassiers sat
+in their saddles, staring up at the windows where
+the Prussians stood and fired. Now and then one
+would start as from a nightmare, turn his jaded horse,
+and go limping away down the street. The road was
+filled with horsemen, wandering helplessly about under
+the rain of bullets. One, a mere boy, rode up to a
+door, leaned from his horse and began to knock for
+admittance; another dismounted and sat down on a
+doorstep, head buried in his hands, regardless of the
+bullets which tore the woodwork around him.</p>
+<p>The street was still crowded with entrapped cuirassiers,
+huddled in groups or riding up and down the
+walls mechanically seeking shelter. A few of these,
+dismounted, were wearily attempting to drag a heavy
+cart away from the barricade; the Prussians shot
+them, one at a time, but others came to help, and a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_86' name='page_86'></a>86</span>
+few lancers aided them, and at length they managed
+to drag a hay-wagon aside, giving a narrow passage
+to the open country beyond. Instantly the Prussian
+infantry swarmed out of the houses and into the street,
+shouting, &#8220;Prisoners!&#8221; pushing, striking, and dragging
+the exhausted cuirassiers from their saddles.
+But contact with the enemy, hand to hand, seemed
+to revive the fury of the armored riders. The d&eacute;bris
+of the regiments closed up, long, straight sabres glittered,
+trembling horses plunged forward, broke into a
+stiff gallop, and passed through the infantry, through
+the rent in the barricade, and staggered away across
+the fields, buried in the smoke of a thousand rifles.</p>
+<p>So rode the &#8220;Cuirassiers of Morsbronn,&#8221; the flower
+of an empire&#8217;s chivalry, the elect of France. So rode
+the gentlemen of the Sixth Lancers to shiver their
+slender spears against stone walls&mdash;for the honor of
+France.</p>
+<p>Death led them. Death rode with them knee to knee.
+Death alone halted them. But their shining souls
+galloped on into that vast Valhalla where their ancestors
+of Waterloo stood waiting, and the celestial trumpets
+pealed a last &#8220;Dismount!&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_87' name='page_87'></a>87</span>
+<a name='VI_THE_GAME_BEGINS' id='VI_THE_GAME_BEGINS'></a>
+<h2>VI</h2>
+<h3>THE GAME BEGINS</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The room in the turret was now swimming in
+smoke and lime dust; I could scarcely see the
+gray figure of the Countess through the powder-mist
+which drifted in through shutters and loop-hole, dimming
+the fading daylight.</p>
+<p>In the street a dense pall of pungent vapor hung
+over roof and pavement, motionless in the calm August
+air; two houses were burning slowly, smothered in
+smoke; through a ruddy fog I saw the dead lying
+in mounds, the wounded moving feebly, the Prussian
+soldiery tossing straw into the hay-carts that had
+served their deadly purpose.</p>
+<p>But oh, the dreadful murmur that filled the heavy
+air, the tremulous, ceaseless plaint which comes from
+strong, muscular creatures, tenacious of life, who are
+dying and who die hard.</p>
+<p>Helmeted figures swarmed through the smoke;
+wagon after wagon, loaded deep with dead cavalrymen,
+was drawn away by heavy teams of horses now
+arriving from the regimental transport train, which
+had come up and halted just at the entrance to the
+village.</p>
+<p>And now wagon-loads of French wounded began to
+pass, jolting over crushed helmets, rifles, cuirasses,
+and the carcasses of dead horses.</p>
+<p>A covey of Uhlans entered the shambles, picking
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_88' name='page_88'></a>88</span>
+their way across the wreckage of the battle, a slim,
+wiry, fastidious company, dainty as spurred gamecocks,
+with their helmet-cords swinging like wattles
+and their schapskas tilted rakishly.</p>
+<p>Then the sad cort&egrave;ge of prisoners formed in the
+smoke, the wounded leaning on their silent comrades,
+bandaged heads hanging, the others erect, defiant,
+supporting the crippled or standing with arms folded
+and helmeted heads held high.</p>
+<p>And at last they started, between two files of mounted
+Uhlans&mdash;Turcos, line infantrymen, gendarmes, lancers,
+and, towering head and shoulders above the
+others, the superb cuirassiers.</p>
+<p>A German general and his smartly uniformed staff
+came clattering up the slippery street and halted to
+watch the prisoners defile. And, as the first of the
+captive cuirassiers came abreast of the staff, the general
+stiffened in his saddle and raised his hand to his
+helmet, saying to his officers, loud enough for me to
+hear:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Salute the brave, gentlemen!&#8221;</p>
+<p>And the silent, calm-eyed cuirassiers passed on,
+heads erect, uniforms in shreds, their battered armor
+foul with smoke and mud, spurs broken, scabbards
+empty.</p>
+<p>Troops of captured horses, conducted by Uhlans,
+followed the prisoners, then wagons piled high with
+rifles, sabres, and saddles, then a company of Uhlans
+cantering away with the shot-torn guidons of the
+cuirassiers.</p>
+<p>Last of all came the wounded in their straw-wadded
+wagons, escorted by infantry; I heard them coming
+before I saw them, and, sickened, I closed my ears with
+my hands; yet even then the deep, monotonous groaning
+seemed to fill the room and vibrate through the
+falling shadows long after the last cart had creaked
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_89' name='page_89'></a>89</span>
+out of sight and hearing into the gathering haze of
+evening.</p>
+<p>The deadened booming of cannon still came steadily
+from the west, and it needed no messenger to tell me
+that the First Corps had been hurled back into Alsace,
+and that MacMahon&#8217;s army was in full retreat; that
+now the Rhine was open and the passage of the Vosges
+was clear, and Strasbourg must stand siege and Belfort
+and Toul must man their battlements for a struggle
+that meant victory, or an Alsace doomed and a Lorraine
+lost to France forever.</p>
+<p>The room had grown very dark, the loop-hole admitting
+but little of the smoky evening sunset. Some
+soldiers in the hallway outside finally lighted torches;
+red reflections danced over the torn ceiling and plaster-covered
+floor, illuminating a corner where the Countess
+was sitting by the bedside, her head lying on the
+covers. How long she had been there I did not know,
+but when I spoke she raised her head and answered
+quietly.</p>
+<p>In the torch-light her face was ghastly, her eyes red
+and dim as she came over to me and looked out into
+the darkness.</p>
+<p>The woman was shaken terribly, shaken to the
+very soul. She had not seen all that I had seen; she
+had flinched before the spectacle of a butchery too
+awful to look upon, but she had seen enough, and
+she had heard enough to support or to confound theories
+formed through a young girl&#8217;s brief, passionless,
+eventless life.</p>
+<p>Under the window soldiers began shooting the
+crippled horses; the heavy flash and bang of rifles
+set her trembling again.</p>
+<p>Until the firing ceased she stood as though stupefied,
+scarcely breathing, her splendid hair glistening like
+molten copper in the red torches&#8217; glare.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_90' name='page_90'></a>90</span></p>
+<p>A soldier came into the room and dragged the bedclothes
+from the bed, trailing them across the floor behind
+him as he departed. An officer holding a lantern
+peered through the door, his eye-glasses shining, his
+boots in his hand.</p>
+<p>He evidently had intended to get into the bed, but
+when his gaze fell upon us he withdrew in his stockinged
+feet.</p>
+<p>On the stairs soldiers were eating hunches of stale
+bread and knocking the necks from wine bottles with
+their bayonets. One lumpish fellow came to the door
+and offered me part of a sausage which he was devouring,
+a kindly act that touched me, and I wondered
+whether the other prisoners might find among their
+Uhlan guards the same humanity that moved this
+half-famished yokel to offer me the food he was gnawing.</p>
+<p>Soldiers began to come and go in the room; some
+carried off chairs for officers below some took the
+pillows from the bed, one bore away a desk on his
+broad shoulders.</p>
+<p>The Countess never moved or spoke.</p>
+<p>The evening had grown chilly; I was cold to my
+knees.</p>
+<p>A soldier offered to build me a fire in the great stone
+fireplace behind me, and when I assented he calmly
+smashed a chair to kindling-wood, wrenched off the
+heavy posts of the bed, and started a fire which lit
+up the wrecked room with its crimson glare.</p>
+<p>The Countess rose and looked around. The soldier
+pushed my long chair to the blaze, tore down the canopy
+over the bed and flung it over me, stolidly ignoring my
+protests. Then he clumped out with his muddy boots
+and shut the door behind him.</p>
+<p>For a long while I lay there, full in the heat of the
+fire, half dozing, then sleeping, then suddenly alert,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_91' name='page_91'></a>91</span>
+only to look about me to see the Countess with eyes
+closed, motionless in her arm-chair, only to hear the
+muffled thunder of the guns in the dark.</p>
+<p>Once again, having slept, I roused, listening. The
+crackle of the flames was all I heard; the cannon were
+silent. A few moments later a clock in the hallway
+struck nine times. At the same instant a deadened
+cannon-shot echoed the clamor of the clock. It
+was the last shot of the battle. And when the dull
+reverberations had died away Alsace was a lost province,
+MacMahon&#8217;s army was in full retreat, leaving
+on the three battle-fields of W&ouml;rth, Reichshoffen, and
+Fr&ouml;schweiler sixteen thousand dead, wounded, and
+missing soldiers of France.</p>
+<p>All night long I heard cavalry traversing Morsbronn
+in an unbroken column, the steady trample of their
+horses never ceasing for an instant. At moments,
+from the outskirts of the village, the sinister sound
+of cheering came from the vanguard of the German
+Sixth Corps, just arriving to learn of the awful disaster
+to France. Too late to take any part in the battle,
+these tired soldiers stood cheering by regiments as
+the cavalry rode past in pursuit of the shattered army,
+and their cheering swelled to a terrific roar toward
+morning, when the Prince Royal of Prussia appeared
+with his staff, and the soldiers in Morsbronn rushed
+out into the street bellowing, &#8220;Hoch soll er leben!
+Er soll leben&mdash;Hoch!&#8221;</p>
+<p>About seven o&#8217;clock that morning a gaunt, leather-faced
+Prussian officer, immaculate in his sombre uniform,
+entered the room without knocking. The young
+Countess turned in the depths of her chair; he bowed
+to her slightly, unfolded a printed sheet of paper which
+bore the arms of Prussia, hesitated, then said, looking
+directly at me:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Morsbronn is now German territory and will
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_92' name='page_92'></a>92</span>
+continue to be governed by military law, proclaimed under
+the state of siege, until the country is properly pacified.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Honest inhabitants will not be disturbed. Citizens
+are invited to return to their homes and peacefully
+continue their legitimate avocations, subject to and
+under the guarantee of the Prussian military government.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Monsieur, I have the honor to hand you a copy of
+regulations. I am the provost marshal; all complaints
+should be brought to me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I took the printed sheet and looked at the Prussian
+coat of arms.</p>
+<p>&#8220;A list of the inhabitants of Morsbronn will be made
+to-day. You will have the goodness to declare yourself&mdash;and
+you also, madame. There being other buildings
+better fitted, no soldiers will be quartered in this
+house.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The officer evidently mistook me for the owner of
+the house and not a prisoner. A blanket hid my hussar
+trousers and boots; he could only see my ragged shirt.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And now, madame,&#8221; he continued, &#8220;as monsieur
+appears to need the services of a physician, I shall
+send him a French doctor, brought in this morning
+from the Ch&acirc;teau de la Trappe. I wish him to get
+well; I wish the inhabitants of my district to return
+to their homes and resume the interrupted r&eacute;gimes
+which have made this province of Alsace so valuable
+to France. I wish Morsbronn to prosper; I wish it
+well. This is the German policy.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But, monsieur, let me speak plainly. I tolerate
+no treachery. The law is iron and will be applied
+with rigor. An inhabitant of my district who deceives
+me, or who commits an offence against the troops
+under my command, or who in any manner holds,
+or attempts to hold, communication with the enemy,
+will be shot without court-martial.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_93' name='page_93'></a>93</span></p>
+<p>He turned his grim, inflexible face to the Countess
+and bowed, then he bowed to me, swung squarely on
+his heel, and walked to the door.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Admit the French doctor,&#8221; he said to the soldier
+on guard, and marched out, his curved sabre banging
+behind his spurred heels.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It must be Dr. Delmont!&#8221; I said, looking at the
+Countess as there came a low knock at the door.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am very thankful!&#8221; she said, her voice almost
+breaking. She rose unsteadily from her chair; somebody
+entered the room behind me and I turned, calling
+out, &#8220;Welcome, doctor!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thank you,&#8221; replied the calm voice of John Buckhurst
+at my elbow.</p>
+<p>The Countess shrank aside as Buckhurst coolly
+passed before her, turned his slim back to the embers
+of the fire, and fixed his eyes on me&mdash;those pale, slow
+eyes, passionless as death.</p>
+<p>Here was a type of criminal I had never until recently
+known. Small of hand and foot&mdash;too small
+even for such a slender man&mdash;clean shaven, colorless
+in hair, skin, lips, he challenged instant attention
+by the very monotony of his bloodless symmetry.
+There was nothing of positive evil in his face, nothing
+of impulse, good or bad, nothing even superficially
+human. His spotless linen, his neat sack-coat and
+trousers of gray seemed part of him&mdash;like a loose outer
+skin. There was in his ensemble nothing to disturb
+the negative harmony, save perhaps an abnormal
+flatness of the instep and hands.</p>
+<p>&#8220;My friend,&#8221; he observed, in English, &#8220;do you think
+you will know me again when you have finished your
+scrutiny?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The Countess, face averted, passed behind my chair.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wait,&#8221; said Buckhurst; and turning directly to
+me, he added: &#8220;You were mistaken for a hussar at
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_94' name='page_94'></a>94</span>
+La Trappe; you were mistaken here for a hussar as
+long as the squad holding this house remained in
+Morsbronn. A few moments ago the provost mistook
+you for a civilian.&#8221; He looked across at the Countess,
+who already stood with her hand on the door-knob.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you disturb me,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I have only to tell
+the provost the truth. Members of the Imperial Police
+caught without proper uniform inside German lines
+are shot, s&eacute;ance tenante.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The Countess stood perfectly still a moment, then
+came straight to me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is that true?&#8221; she asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>She still leaned forward, looking down into my
+face. Then she turned to Buckhurst.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you want money?&#8221; she asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I want a chair&mdash;and your attention for the present,&#8221;
+he replied, and seated himself.</p>
+<p>The printed copy of the rules handed me by the
+provost marshal lay on the floor. Buckhurst picked
+up the sheet, glanced at the Prussian eagle, and
+thoughtfully began rolling the paper into a grotesque
+shape.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sit down, madame,&#8221; he said, without raising his
+eyes from the bit of paper which he had now fashioned
+into a cocked hat.</p>
+<p>After a moment&#8217;s silent hesitation the Countess
+drew a small gilt chair beside my sofa-chair and sat
+down, and again that brave, unconscious gesture of
+protection left her steady hand lying lightly on my arm.</p>
+<p>Buckhurst noted the gesture. And all at once I
+divined that whatever plan he had come to execute
+had been suddenly changed. He looked down at the
+paper in his hands, gave it a thoughtful twist, and,
+drawing the ends out, produced a miniature paper
+boat.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_95' name='page_95'></a>95</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;We are all in one like that,&#8221; he observed, holding
+it up without apparent interest. He glanced at the
+young Countess; her face was expressionless.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Madame,&#8221; said Buckhurst, in his peculiarly soft
+and persuasive voice, &#8220;I am not here to betray this
+gentleman; I am not here even to justify myself. I
+came here to make reparation, to ask your forgiveness,
+madame, for the wrong I have done you, and to
+deliver myself, if necessary, into the hands of the
+proper French authorities in expiation of my misguided
+zeal.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The Countess was looking at him now; he fumbled
+with the paper boat, gave it an unconscious twist,
+and produced a tiny paper box.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The cause,&#8221; he said, gently, &#8220;to which I have
+devoted my life must not suffer through the mistake
+of a fanatic; for in the cause of universal brotherhood
+I am, perhaps, a fanatic, and to aid that cause I have
+gravely compromised myself. I came here to expiate
+that folly and to throw myself upon your mercy,
+madame.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I do not exactly understand,&#8221; said I, &#8220;how you
+can expiate a crime here.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I can at least make restitution,&#8221; he said, turning
+the paper box over and over between his flat fingers.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Have you brought me the diamonds which belong
+to the state?&#8221; I inquired, amused.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; he said, and to my astonishment he drew a
+small leather pouch from his pocket and laid it on my
+blanket-covered knees. &#8220;How many diamonds were
+there?&#8221; he asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;One hundred and three,&#8221; I replied, incredulously,
+and opened the leather pouch. Inside was a bag of
+chamois-skin. This I stretched wide and emptied.</p>
+<p>Scores of little balls of tissue-paper rolled out on the
+blanket over my knees; I opened one; it contained a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_96' name='page_96'></a>96</span>
+diamond; I opened another, another, and another;
+diamonds lay blazing on my blanket, a whole handful,
+glittering in undimmed splendor.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Count them,&#8221; murmured Buckhurst, fashioning
+the paper box into a fly-trap with a lid.</p>
+<p>With a quick movement I swept them into my hands,
+then one by one dropped the stones while I counted
+aloud one hundred and two diamonds. The one hundred
+and third jewel was, of course, safely in Paris.</p>
+<p>When I had a second time finished the enumeration
+I leaned back in my chair, utterly at a loss to account
+for this man or for what he had done. As far as I
+could see there was no logic in it, nothing demonstrated,
+nothing proven. To me&mdash;and I am not either suspicious
+or obstinate by nature&mdash;Buckhurst was still
+an unrepentant thief and a dangerous one.</p>
+<p>I could see in him absolutely nothing of the fanatic,
+of the generous, feather-headed devotee, nothing of
+the hasty disciple or the impulsive martyr. In my
+eyes he continued to be the passionless master-criminal,
+the cold, slow-eyed source of hidden evil, the designer
+of an intricate and viewless intrigue against the state.</p>
+<p>His head remained bent over the paper toy in his
+hands. Was his hair gray with age or excesses, or
+was it only colorless like the rest of his exterior?</p>
+<p>&#8220;Restitution is not expiation,&#8221; he said, sadly, without
+looking up. &#8220;I loved the cause; I love it still;
+I practised deception, and I am here to ask this gentle
+lady to forgive me for an unworthy yet unselfish use
+of her money and her hospitality. If she can pardon
+me I welcome whatever punishment may be meted
+out.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The Countess dropped her elbow on the arm of my
+chair and rested her face in her hand.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Swept away by my passion for the cause of universal
+brotherhood,&#8221; said Buckhurst, in his low, caressing
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_97' name='page_97'></a>97</span>
+voice, &#8220;I ventured to spend this generous lady&#8217;s
+money to carry the propaganda into the more violent
+centres of socialism&mdash;into the clubs in Montmartre
+and Belleville. There I urged non-resistance; I pleaded
+moderation and patience. What I said helped a little,
+I think&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>He hesitated, twisting his fly-box into a paper creature
+with four legs.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I was eager; people listened. I thought that if
+I had a little more money I might carry on this work.... I could not come to you, madame&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why not?&#8221; said the Countess, looking at him quickly.
+&#8220;I have never refused you money!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; he said, &#8220;you never refused me. But I knew
+that La Trappe was mortgaged, that even this house
+in Morsbronn was loaded with debt. I knew, madame,
+that in all the world you had left but one small roof
+to cover you&mdash;the house in Morbihan, on Point Paradise.
+I knew that if I asked for money you would sell Paradise,... and I could not ask so much,... I could
+not bring myself to ask that sacrifice.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And so you stole the crucifix of Louis XI.,&#8221; I suggested,
+pleasantly.</p>
+<p>He did not look at me, but the Countess did.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Bon,&#8221; I thought, watching Buckhurst&#8217;s deft fingers;
+&#8220;he means to be taken back into grace. I wonder
+exactly why? And ... is it worth this fortune in
+diamonds to him to be pardoned by a penniless girl
+whom he and his gang have already stripped?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Could you forgive me, madame?&#8221; murmured Buckhurst.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Would you explain that stick of dynamite first?&#8221;
+I interposed.</p>
+<p>The Countess turned and looked directly at Buckhurst.
+He sat with humble head bowed, nimbly constructing
+a paper bird.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_98' name='page_98'></a>98</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;That was not dynamite; it was concentrated phosphorus,&#8221;
+he said, without resentment. &#8220;Naturally it
+burned when you lighted it, but if you had not burned
+it I could easily have shown Madame la Comtesse what
+it really was.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I also,&#8221; said I, &#8220;if I had thrown it at your feet,
+Mr. Buckhurst.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you not believe me?&#8221; he asked, meekly, looking
+up at the Countess.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Buckhurst,&#8221; said the young Countess, turning
+to me, &#8220;has aided me for a long time in experiments.
+We hoped to find some cheap method of restoring
+nitrogen and phosphorus to the worn-out soil which
+our poor peasants till. Why should you doubt that
+he speaks the truth? At least he is guiltless of any
+connection with the party which advocated violence.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I looked at Buckhurst. He was engaged in constructing
+a multi-pointed paper star. What else was
+he busy with? Perhaps I might learn if I ceased to
+manifest distrust.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Does concentrated phosphorus burn like dynamite?&#8221;
+I asked, as if with newly aroused interest.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did you not know it?&#8221; he said, warily.</p>
+<p>But was he deceived by my manner? Was that
+the way for me to learn anything?</p>
+<p>There was perhaps another way. Clearly this extraordinary
+man depended upon his persuasive eloquence
+for his living, for the very shoes on his little,
+flat feet, as do all such chevaliers of industry. If he
+would only begin to argue, if I could only induce him
+to try his eloquence on me, and if I could convince him
+that I myself was but an ignorant, self-centred, bullet-headed
+gendarme, doing my duty only because of perspective
+advancement, ready perhaps to take bribes&mdash;perhaps
+even weakly, covetously, credulous&mdash;well,
+perhaps I might possibly learn why he desired to cling
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_99' name='page_99'></a>99</span>
+to this poor young lady, whose life had evidently gone
+dreadfully to smash, to land her among such a coterie
+of thieves and lunatics.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Buckhurst,&#8221; I said, pompously, &#8220;in bringing
+these diamonds to me you have certainly done all
+in your power to repair an injury which concerned all
+France.</p>
+<p>&#8220;As I am situated, of course I cannot now ask you
+to accompany me to Paris, where doubtless the proper
+authorities would gladly admit extenuating circumstances,
+and credit you with a sincere repentance.
+But I put you on your honor to surrender at the first
+opportunity.&#8221;</p>
+<p>It was as stupidly trite a speech as I could think of.</p>
+<p>Buckhurst glanced up at me. Was he taking my
+measure anew, judging me from my bray?</p>
+<p>&#8220;I could easily aid you to leave Morsbronn,&#8221; he
+said, stealthily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;O-ho,&#8221; thought I, &#8220;so you&#8217;re a German agent, too,
+as I suspected.&#8221; But I said, aloud, simulating astonishment:
+&#8220;Do you mean to say, Mr. Buckhurst, that
+you would deliberately risk death to aid a police officer
+to bring you before a military tribunal in Paris?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I do not desire to pose as a hero or a martyr,&#8221; he
+said, quietly, &#8220;but I regret what I have done, and I
+will do what an honest man can do to make the fullest
+reparation&mdash;even if it means my death.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I gazed at him in admiration&mdash;real admiration&mdash;because
+the gross bathos he had just uttered betrayed a
+weakness&mdash;vanity. Now I began to understand him;
+vanity must also lead him to undervalue men. True,
+with the faintest approach to eloquence he could no
+doubt hold the &#8220;Clubs&#8221; of Belleville spellbound; with
+self-effacing adroitness to cover stealthy persuasion,
+he had probably found little difficulty in dominating
+this inexperienced girl, who, touched to the soul with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_100' name='page_100'></a>100</span>
+pity for human woe, had flung herself and her fortune
+to the howling proletariat.</p>
+<p>But that he should so serenely undervalue me at my
+first bray was more than I hoped for. So I brayed
+again, the good, old, sentimental bray, for which all
+Gallic lungs are so marvellously fashioned:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Monsieur, such sentiments honor you. I am
+only a rough soldier of the Imperial Police, but I am
+profoundly moved to find among the leaders of the
+proletariat such delicate and chivalrous emotions&mdash;&#8221; I
+hesitated. Was I buttering the sop too thickly?</p>
+<p>Buckhurst, eyes bent on the floor, began picking
+to pieces his paper toy. Presently he looked up, not
+at me, but at the Countess, who sat with hands clasped
+earnestly watching him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If&mdash;if the state pardons me, can ... you?&#8221; he
+murmured.</p>
+<p>She looked at him with intense earnestness. I saw
+he was sailing on the wrong tack.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I have nothing to pardon,&#8221; she said, gravely.
+&#8220;But I must tell you the truth, Mr. Buckhurst, I cannot
+forget what you have done. It was something&mdash;the
+one thing that I cannot understand&mdash;that I can
+never understand&mdash;something so absolutely alien to me
+that it&mdash;somehow&mdash;leaves me stunned. Don&#8217;t ask me
+to forget it.... I cannot. I do not mean to be harsh
+and cruel, or to condemn you. Even if you had taken
+the jewels from me, and had asked my forgiveness,
+I would have given it freely. But I could not be as I
+was, a comrade to you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was a silence. The Countess, looking perfectly
+miserable, still gazed at Buckhurst. He dropped
+his gray, symmetrical head, yet I felt that he was listening
+to every minute sound in the room.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You must not care what I say,&#8221; she said. &#8220;I am
+only an unhappy woman, unused to the liberty I have
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_101' name='page_101'></a>101</span>
+given myself, not yet habituated to the charity of those
+blameless hearts which forgive everything! I am a
+novice, groping my way into a new and vast world, a
+limitless, generous, forgiving commune, where love
+alone dominates.... And if I had lived among my
+brothers long enough to be purged of those traditions
+which I have drawn from generations, I might now be
+noble enough and wise enough to say I do forgive and
+forget that you&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That you were once a thief,&#8221; I ended, with the
+genial officiousness of the hopelessly fat-minded.</p>
+<p>In the stillness I heard Buckhurst draw in his breath&mdash;once.
+Some day he would try to kill me for that; in
+the mean time my crass stupidity was no longer a
+question in his mind. I had hurt the Countess, too,
+with what she must have believed a fool&#8217;s needless
+brutality. But it had to be so if I played at Jaques
+Bonhomme.</p>
+<p>So I put the finishing whine to it&mdash;&#8220;Our Lord died
+between two thieves&#8221;&mdash;and relapsed into virtuous contemplation
+of my finger-tips.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Madame,&#8221; said Buckhurst, in a low voice, &#8220;your
+contempt of me is part of my penalty. I must endure
+it. I shall not complain. But I shall try to live a life
+that will at least show you my deep sincerity.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I do not doubt it,&#8221; said the Countess, earnestly.
+&#8220;Don&#8217;t think that I mean to turn away from you or
+to push you away. There is nothing of the Pharisee
+in me. I would gladly trust you with what I have.
+I will consult you and advise with you, Mr. Buckhurst&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And ... despise me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The unhappy Countess looked at me. It goes hard
+with a woman when her guide and mentor falls.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you return to Paradise, in Morbihan,... as we
+had planned, may I go,&#8221; he asked, humbly, &#8220;only as
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_102' name='page_102'></a>102</span>
+an obscure worker in the cause? I beg, madame, that
+you will not cast me off.&#8221;</p>
+<p>So he wanted to go to Morbihan&mdash;to the village of
+Paradise? Why?</p>
+<p>The Countess said: &#8220;I welcome all who care for the
+cause. You will never hear an unkind word from me
+if you desire to resume the work in Paradise. Dr.
+Delmont will be there; Monsieur Tavernier also, I
+hope; and they are older and wiser than I, and they
+have reached that lofty serenity which is far above
+my troubled mind. Ask them what you have asked
+of me; they are equipped to answer you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>It was time for another discord from me, so I said:
+&#8220;Madame, you have seen a thousand men lay down
+their lives for France. Has it not shaken your allegiance
+to that ghost of patriotism which you call the
+&#8217;Internationale&#8217;?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Here was food for thought, or rather fodder for
+asses&mdash;the Police Oracle turned missionary under the
+nose of the most cunning criminal in France and the
+vainest. Of course Buckhurst&#8217;s contempt for me at
+once passed all bounds, and, secure in that contempt,
+he felt it scarcely worth while to use his favorite
+weapon&mdash;persuasion. Still, if the occasion should require
+it, he was quite ready, I knew, to loose his eloquence
+on the Countess, and on me too.</p>
+<p>The Countess turned her troubled eyes to me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What I have seen, what I have thought since yesterday
+has distressed me dreadfully,&#8221; she said. &#8220;I
+have tried to include all the world in a broader pity, a
+broader, higher, and less selfish love than the jealous,
+single-minded love for one country&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The mother-land,&#8221; I said, and Buckhurst looked
+up, adding, &#8220;The world is the true mother-land.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Whereupon I appeared profoundly impressed at such
+a novel and epigrammatic view.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_103' name='page_103'></a>103</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;There is much to be argued on both sides,&#8221; said
+the young Countess, &#8220;but I am utterly unfitted to
+struggle with this new code of ethics. If it had been
+different&mdash;if I had been born among the poor, in
+misery!&mdash;But you see I come a pilgrim among the
+proletariat, clothed in conservatism, cloaked with tradition,
+and if at heart I burn with sorrow for the miserable,
+and if I gladly give what I have to help, I
+cannot with a single gesture throw off those inherited
+garments, though they tortured my body like the garment
+of Nessus.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I did not smile or respect her less for the stilted
+phrases, the pathetic poverty of metaphor. Profoundly
+troubled, struggling with a reserve the borders
+of which she strove so bravely to cross, her distress
+touched me the more because I knew it aroused the
+uneasy contempt of Buckhurst. Yet I could not spare
+her.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You saw the cuirassiers die in the street below,&#8221;
+I repeated, with the obstinacy of a limited intellect.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes&mdash;and my heart went out to them,&#8221; she replied,
+with an emphasis that pleased me and startled Buckhurst.</p>
+<p>Buckhurst began to speak, but I cut him short.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then, madame, if your heart went out to the soldiers
+of France, it went out to France, too!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes&mdash;to France,&#8221; she repeated, and I saw her lip
+begin to quiver.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wherein does love for France conflict with our
+creed, madame?&#8221; asked Buckhurst, gently. &#8220;It is
+only hate that we abjure.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She turned her gray eyes on him. &#8220;I will tell you:
+in that dreadful moment when the cavalry of France
+cheered Death in his own awful presence, I loved them
+and their country&mdash;<i>my</i> country!&mdash;as I had never loved
+in all my life.... And I hated, too! I hated the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_104' name='page_104'></a>104</span>
+men who butchered them&mdash;more!&mdash;I hated the country
+where the men came from; I hated race and country
+and the blows they dealt, and the evil they wrought
+on France&mdash;<i>my France</i>! That is the truth; and I
+realize it!&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was a silence; Buckhurst slowly unrolled the
+wrinkled paper he had been fingering.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And now?&#8221; he asked, simply.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now?&#8221; she repeated. &#8220;I don&#8217;t know&mdash;truly, I do
+not know.&#8221; She turned to me sorrowfully. &#8220;I had
+long since thought that my heart was clean of hate,
+and now I don&#8217;t know.&#8221; And, to Buckhurst, again:
+&#8220;Our creed teaches us that war is vile&mdash;a savage betrayal
+of humanity by a few dominant minds; a dishonorable
+ingratitude to God and country. But from
+that window I saw men die for honor of France with
+God&#8217;s name on their lips. I saw one superb cuirassier,
+trapped down there in the street, sit still on his
+horse, while they shot at him from every window, and
+I heard him call up to a Prussian officer who had just
+fired at him: &#8216;My friend, you waste powder; the heart
+of France is cuirassed by a million more like me!&#8217;&#8221;
+A rich flush touched her face; her gray eyes grew
+brighter.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is there a Frenchwoman alive whose blood would
+not stir at such a scene?&#8221; she said. &#8220;They shot him
+through his armor, his breastplate was riddled, he
+clung to his horse, always looking up at the riflemen,
+and I heard the bullets drumming on his helmet and
+his cuirass like hailstones on a tin roof, and I could
+not look away. And all the while he was saying, quietly:
+&#8216;It is quite useless, friends; France lives! You
+waste your powder!&#8217; and I could not look away or
+close my eyes&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>She bent her head, shivering, and her interlocked
+fingers whitened.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_105' name='page_105'></a>105</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;I only know this,&#8221; she said: &#8220;I will give all I have&mdash;I
+will give my poor self to help the advent of that
+world-wide brotherhood which must efface national
+frontiers and end all war in this sad world. But if
+you ask me, in the presence of war, to look on with
+impartiality, to watch my own country battling for
+breath, to stop my ears when a wounded mother-land
+is calling, to answer the supreme cry of France with
+a passionless cry, &#8216;Repent!&#8217; I cannot do it&mdash;I will not!
+I was not born to!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Deeply moved, she had risen, confronting Buckhurst,
+whose stone-cold eyes were fixed on her.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You say I hold you unworthy,&#8221; she said. &#8220;Others
+may hold me, too, unworthy because I have not reached
+that impartial equipoise whence, impassive, I can balance
+my native land against its sins and watch blind
+justice deal with it all unconcerned.</p>
+<p>&#8220;In theory I have done it&mdash;oh, it is simple to teach
+one&#8217;s soul in theory! But when my eyes saw my
+own land blacken and shrivel like a green leaf in the
+fire, and when with my own eyes I saw the best, the
+noblest, the crown of my country&#8217;s chivalry fall rolling
+in the mud of Morsbronn under the feet of Prussia,
+every drop of blood in my body was French&mdash;hot and
+red and French! And it is now; and it will always
+be&mdash;as it has always been, though I did not understand.&#8221;</p>
+<p>After a silence Buckhurst said: &#8220;All that may be,
+madame, yet not impair your creed.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What!&#8221; she said, &#8220;does not hatred of the stranger
+impair my creed?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It will die out and give place to reason.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;When? When I attain the lofty, dispassionate
+level I have never attained? That will not be while
+this war endures.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who knows?&#8221; said Buckhurst, gently.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_106' name='page_106'></a>106</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;I know!&#8221; replied the Countess, the pale flames in
+her cheeks deepening again.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And yet,&#8221; observed Buckhurst, patiently, &#8220;you are
+going to Paradise to work for the Internationale.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I shall try to do my work and love France,&#8221; she
+said, steadily. &#8220;I cannot believe that one renders the
+other impossible.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yet,&#8221; said I, &#8220;if you teach the nation non-resistance,
+what would become of the armies of France?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I shall not teach non-resistance until we are at
+peace,&#8221; she said&mdash;&#8220;until there is not a German soldier
+left in France. After that I shall teach acquiescence
+and personal liberty.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I looked at her very seriously; logic had no dwelling-place
+within her tender and unhappy heart.</p>
+<p>And what a hunting-ground was that heart for men
+like Buckhurst! I could begin to read that mouse-colored
+gentleman now, to follow, after a fashion, the
+intricate policy which his insolent mind was shaping&mdash;shaping
+in stealthy contempt for me and for this
+young girl. Thus far I could divine the thoughts of
+Mr. Buckhurst, but there were other matters to account
+for. Why did he choose to spare my life when a word
+would have sent me before the peloton of execution?
+Why had he brought to me the fortune in diamonds
+which he had stolen? Why did he eat humble-pie
+before a young girl from whom he and his companions
+had wrung the last penny? Why did he desire to go
+to Morbihan and be received among the elect in the
+Breton village of Paradise?</p>
+<p>I said, abruptly: &#8220;So you are not going to denounce
+me to the Prussian provost?&#8221;</p>
+<p>He lifted his well-shaped head and gazed at the
+Countess with an admirable pathos which seemed a
+mute appeal for protection from brutality.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That question is a needless one,&#8221; said the Countess,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_107' name='page_107'></a>107</span>
+quietly. &#8220;It was a cruel one, also, Monsieur Scarlett.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I did not mean it as an offensive question,&#8221; said I.
+&#8220;I was merely reciting a fact, most creditable to Mr.
+Buckhurst. Mon Dieu, madame, I am an officer of
+Imperial Police, and I have lived to hear blunt questions
+and blunter answers. And if it be true that
+Monsieur Buckhurst desires to atone for&mdash;for what
+has happened, then it is perfectly proper for me, even
+as a prisoner myself, to speak plainly.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I meant this time to thoroughly convince Buckhurst
+of my ability to gabble platitude. My desire that he
+should view me as a typical gendarme was intense.</p>
+<p>So I coughed solemnly behind my hand, knit my
+eyebrows, and laid one finger alongside of my nose.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is it not my duty, as a guardian of national interests,
+to point out to Mr. Buckhurst his honest errors?
+Certainly it is, madame, and this is the proper time.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Turning pompously to Buckhurst, I fancied I could
+almost detect a sneer on that inexpressive mask he
+wore&mdash;at least I hoped I could, and I said, heavily:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Monsieur, for a number of years there has passed
+under our eyes here in France certain strange phenomena.
+Thousands of Frenchmen have, so to speak,
+separated themselves from the rest of the nation.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All the sentiments that the nation honors itself
+by professing these other Frenchmen rebuke&mdash;the love
+of country, public spirit, accord between citizens, social
+repose, and respect for communal law and order&mdash;these
+other Frenchmen regard as the hallucinations
+of a nation of dupes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Separated by such unfortunate ideas from the nation
+within whose boundaries they live, they continue
+to abuse, even to threaten, the society and the country
+which gives them shelter.</p>
+<p>&#8220;France is only a name to them; they were born there,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_108' name='page_108'></a>108</span>
+they live there, they derive their nourishment from her
+without gratitude. But France is nothing to them;
+<i>their mother-land is the Internationale</i>!&#8221;</p>
+<p>I was certain now that the shadow of a sneer had
+settled in the corners of Buckhurst&#8217;s thin lips.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I do not speak of anarchists or of terrorists,&#8221; I
+continued, nodding as though profoundly impressed
+by my own sagacity. &#8220;I speak of socialists&mdash;that
+dangerous society to which the cry of Karl Marx was
+addressed with the warning, &#8216;Socialists! Unite!&#8217;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The government has reason to fear socialism, not
+anarchy, for it will never happen in France, where the
+passion for individual property is so general, that a
+doctrine of brutal destruction could have the slightest
+chance of success.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But wait, here is the point, Monsieur Buckhurst.
+Formerly the name of &#8217;terrorist&#8217; was a shock to the
+entire civilized world; it evoked the spectres of a year
+that the world can never forget. And so our modern
+reformers, modestly desiring to evade the inconveniences
+of such memories among the people, call themselves
+the &#8217;Internationale.&#8217; Listen to them; they are
+adroit, they blame and rebuke violence, they condemn
+anarchy, they would not lay their hands on public or
+individual property&mdash;no, indeed!</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ah, madame, but you should hear them in their
+own clubs, where the ladies and gentlemen of the gutters,
+the barriers, and the abattoirs discuss &#8216;individual
+property,&#8217; &#8217;the tyranny of capital,&#8217; and similar subjects
+which no doubt they are peculiarly fitted to discuss.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Believe me, madame, the little coterie which you
+represent is already the dupe and victim of this
+terrible Internationale. Their leaders work their will
+through you; a vast conspiracy against all social
+peace is spread through your honest works of mercy.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_109' name='page_109'></a>109</span>
+The time is coming when the whole world will rise to
+combat this Internationale; and when the mask is
+dragged from its benignant visage, there, grinning behind,
+will appear the same old &#8217;Spectre Rouge,&#8217; torch
+in one hand, gun in the other, squatting behind a
+barricade of paving-blocks.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I wagged my head dolefully.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I could not have rested had I not warned Mr. Buckhurst
+of this,&#8221; I said, sentimentally.</p>
+<p>Which was fairly well done, considering that I was
+figuratively lamenting over the innocence of the most
+accomplished scoundrel that ever sat in the supreme
+council of the Internationale.</p>
+<p>Buckhurst looked thoughtfully at the floor.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If I thought,&#8221; he murmured&mdash;&#8220;if I believed for one
+instant&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Believe me, my dear sir,&#8221; I said, &#8220;that you are
+playing into the hands of the wickedest villains on
+earth!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Your earnestness almost converts me,&#8221; he said,
+lifting his stealthy eyes.</p>
+<p>The Countess appeared weary and perplexed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;At all events,&#8221; she said, &#8220;we must do nothing to
+embarrass France now; we must do nothing until this
+frightful war is ended.&#8221;</p>
+<p>After a silence Buckhurst said, &#8220;But you will go to
+Paradise, madame?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; replied the Countess, listlessly.</p>
+<p>Now, what in Heaven&#8217;s name attracted that rogue
+to Paradise?</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_110' name='page_110'></a>110</span>
+<a name='VII_A_STRUGGLE_FORESHADOWED' id='VII_A_STRUGGLE_FORESHADOWED'></a>
+<h2>VII</h2>
+<h3>A STRUGGLE FORESHADOWED</h3>
+</div>
+<p>I took my breakfast by the window, watching the
+German soldiery cleaning up Morsbronn. For that
+wonderful Teutonic administrative mania was already
+manifesting itself while ruined houses still smoked;
+method replaced chaos, order marched on the heels of
+the Prussian rear-guard, which enveloped Morsbronn in
+a whirlwind of Uhlans, and left it a silent, blackened
+landmark in the August sunshine.</p>
+<p>Soldiers in canvas fatigue-dress, wearing soft, round,
+visorless caps, were removing the d&eacute;bris of the fatal
+barricade; soldiers with shovel and hoe filled in the
+trenches and raked the long, winding street clean of
+all litter; soldiers with trowel and mortar were perched
+on shot-torn houses, mending chimneys and slated
+roofs so that their officers might enjoy immunity from
+rain and wind and defective flues.</p>
+<p>In the court-yards and stables I could see cavalrymen
+in stable-jackets, whitewashing walls and out-buildings
+and ill-smelling stalls, while others dug shovelfuls
+of slaked lime from wheelbarrows and spread
+it through stable-yards and dirty alleys. Everywhere
+quiet, method, order, prompt precision reigned;
+I even noticed a big, red-fisted artilleryman tying up
+tall, blue larkspurs, dahlias, and phlox in a trampled
+garden, and he touched the ragged masses of bloom
+with a tenderness peculiar to a flower-loving and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_111' name='page_111'></a>111</span>
+sentimental people, whose ultimate ambition is a quart of
+beer, a radish, and a green leaf overhead.</p>
+<p>At the corners of the walls and blind alleys, placards
+in French and German were posted, embodying
+regulations governing the village under Prussian
+military rule. The few inhabitants of Morsbronn
+who had remained in cellars during the bombardment
+shuffled up to read these notices, or to loiter stupidly,
+gaping at the Prussian eagles surmounting the
+posters.</p>
+<p>A soldier came in and started the fire in my fireplace.
+When he went out I drew my code-book from
+my breeches-pocket and tossed it into the fire. After
+it followed my commission, my memoranda, and every
+scrap of writing. The diamonds I placed in the bosom
+of my flannel shirt.</p>
+<p>Toward one o&#8217;clock I heard the shrill piping of a
+goat-herd, and I saw him, a pallid boy, clumping along
+in his wooden shoes behind his two nanny-goats, while
+the German soldiers, peasants themselves, looked after
+him with curious sympathy.</p>
+<p>A little later a small herd of cattle passed, driven to
+pasture by a stolid Alsatian, who replied to the soldiers&#8217;
+questions in German patois and shrugged his heavy
+shoulders like a Frenchman.</p>
+<p>A cock crowed occasionally from some near dunghill;
+once I saw a cat serenely following the course of
+a stucco wall, calm, perfectly self-composed, ignoring
+the blandishments of the German soldiers, who called,
+&#8220;Komm mitz! mitz!&#8221; and held out bits of sausage
+and black bread.</p>
+<p>A German ambulance surgeon arrived to see me in
+the afternoon. The Countess was busy somewhere
+with Buckhurst, who had come with news for her, and
+the German surgeon&#8217;s sharp double rap at the door
+did not bring her, so I called out, &#8220;Entrez donc!&#8221; and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_112' name='page_112'></a>112</span>
+he stalked in, removing his fatigue-cap, which action
+distinguished him from his brother officers.</p>
+<p>He was a tall, well-built man, perfectly uniformed
+in his double-breasted frocked tunic, blue-eyed, blond-bearded,
+and immaculate of hand and face, a fine type
+of man and a credit to any army.</p>
+<p>After a brief examination he sat down and resumed
+a very bad cigar, which had been smouldering between
+his carefully kept fingers.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you know,&#8221; he said, admiringly, &#8220;that I have
+never before seen just such a wound. The spinal column
+is not even grazed, and if, as I understand from
+you, you suffered temporarily from complete paralysis
+of the body below your waist, the case is not only interesting
+but even remarkable.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is the superficial lesion at all serious?&#8221; I asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not at all. As far as I can see the blow from the
+bullet temporarily paralyzed the spinal cord. There
+is no fracture, no depression. I do not see why you
+should not walk if you desire to.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;When? Now?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Try it,&#8221; he said, briefly.</p>
+<p>I tried. Apart from a certain muscular weakness
+and a great fatigue, I found it quite possible to stand,
+even to move a few steps. Then I sat down again,
+and was glad to do so.</p>
+<p>The doctor was looking at my legs rather grimly,
+and it suddenly flashed on me that I had dropped my
+blanket and he had noticed my hussar&#8217;s trousers.</p>
+<p>&#8220;So,&#8221; he said, &#8220;you are a military prisoner? I understood
+from the provost marshal that you were a
+civilian.&#8221;</p>
+<p>As he spoke Buckhurst appeared at the door, and
+then sauntered in, quietly greeting the surgeon, who
+looked around at the sound of his footsteps on the stone
+floor. There was no longer a vestige of doubt in my
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_113' name='page_113'></a>113</span>
+mind that Buckhurst was a German agent, or at least
+that the Germans <i>believed</i> him to be in their pay. And
+doubtless he was in their pay, but to whom he was
+faithful nobody could know with any certainty.</p>
+<p>&#8220;How is our patient, doctor?&#8221; he asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Convalescent,&#8221; replied the doctor, shortly, as though
+not exactly relishing the easy familiarity of this pale-eyed
+gentleman in gray.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Can he travel to-day?&#8221; inquired Buckhurst, without
+apparent interest.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Before he travels,&#8221; said the officer, &#8220;it might be
+well to find out why he wears part of a hussar uniform.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve explained that to the provost,&#8221; observed Buckhurst,
+examining his well-kept finger-nails. &#8220;And I
+have a pass for him also&mdash;if he is in a fit condition to
+travel.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The officer gave him a glance full of frank dislike,
+adjusted his sabre, pulled on his white gloves, and,
+bowing very slightly to me, marched straight out of
+the room and down the stairs without taking any notice
+of Buckhurst. The latter looked after the officer, then
+his indifferent eyes returned to me. Presently he sat
+down and produced a small slip of paper, which he very
+carefully twisted into a cocked hat.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I suppose you doubt my loyalty to France,&#8221; he
+said, intent on his bit of paper.</p>
+<p>Then, logically continuing my r&ocirc;le of the morning,
+I began to upbraid him for a traitor and swear that I
+would not owe my salvation to him, and all the while
+he was calmly transforming his paper from one toy
+into another between deft, flat fingers.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are unjust and a trifle stupid,&#8221; he said. &#8220;I
+am paid by Prussia for information which I never give.
+But I have the entre of their lines. I do it for the sake
+of the Internationale. The Internationale has a few
+people in its service ... <i>And it pays them well</i>.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_114' name='page_114'></a>114</span></p>
+<p>He looked squarely at me as he said this. I almost
+trembled with delight: the man undervalued me, he
+had taken me at my own figure, and now, holding me
+in absolute contempt, he was going to begin on me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Scarlett,&#8221; he said, &#8220;what does the government pay
+you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>I began to protest in a torrent of patriotism and sentimentality.
+He watched me impassively while I called
+Heaven to witness and proclaimed my loyalty to France,
+ending through sheer breathlessness in a maundering,
+tearful apotheosis where mixed metaphors jostled each
+other&mdash;the government, the Emperor, and the French
+flag, consecrated in blood&mdash;and finally, calling his attention
+to the fact that twenty centuries had once looked
+down on this same banner, I collapsed in my chair and
+gave him his chance.</p>
+<p>He took it. With subtle flattery he recognized in me
+a powerful arm of a corrupt Empire, which Empire he
+likened to the old man who rode Sindbad the Sailor.
+He admitted my noble loyalty to France, pointing out,
+however, that devotion to the Empire was not devotion
+to France, but the contrary. Skilfully he pictured the
+unprepared armies of the Empire, huddled along the
+frontier, seized and rent to fragments, one by one;
+adroitly he painted the inevitable ending, the armies
+that remained cut off and beaten in detail.</p>
+<p>And as I listened I freely admitted to myself that I
+had undervalued him; that he was no crude Belleville
+orator, no sentimental bathos-peddling reformer, no
+sansculotte with brains ablaze, squalling for indiscriminate
+slaughter and pillage; he was a cool student
+in crime, taking no chances that he was not forced to
+take, a calm, adroit, methodical observer, who had established
+a theory and was carefully engaged in proving
+it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Scarlett,&#8221; he said, in English, &#8220;let us come to the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_115' name='page_115'></a>115</span>
+point. I am a mercenary American; you are an American
+mercenary, paid by the French government. You
+care nothing for that government or for the country;
+you would drop both to-day if your pay ceased. You
+and I are outsiders; we are in the world to watch our
+chances. And our chance is here.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He unfolded the creased bit of paper and spread it
+out on his knees, smoothing it thoughtfully.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What do I care for the Internationale?&#8221; he asked,
+blandly. &#8220;I am high in its councils; Karl Marx knows
+less about the Internationale than do I. As for Prussia
+and France&mdash;bah!&mdash;it&#8217;s a dog-fight to me, and I lack
+even the interest to bet on the German bull-dog.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You will know me better some day, and when you
+do you will know that I am a man who has determined
+to get rich if I have to set half of France against the
+other half and sack every bank in the Empire.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And now the time is coming when the richest city
+in Europe will be put to the sack. You don&#8217;t believe
+it? Yet you shall live to see Paris besieged, and you
+shall live to see Paris surrender, and you shall live to
+see the Internationale rise up from nowhere, seize the
+government by the throat, and choke it to death under
+the red flag of universal&mdash;ahem!... license&#8221;&mdash;the
+faintest sneer came into his pallid face&mdash;&#8220;and every
+city of France shall be a commune, and we shall pass
+from city to city, leisurely, under the law&mdash;<i>our</i> laws,
+which we will make&mdash;and I pity the man among us
+who cannot place his millions in the banks of England
+and America!&#8221;</p>
+<p>He began to worry the creased bit of paper again,
+stealthy eyes on the floor.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The revolt is as certain as death itself,&#8221; he said.
+&#8220;The Society of the Internationale honeycombs Europe&mdash;your
+police archives show you that&mdash;and I tell you
+that, of the two hundred thousand soldiers of the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_116' name='page_116'></a>116</span>
+national guard in Paris to-day, ninety per cent. are ours&mdash;<i>ours</i>,
+soul and body. You don&#8217;t believe it? Wait!</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yet, for a moment, suppose I am right? Where
+are the government forces? Who can stop us from
+working our will? Not the fragments of beaten and
+exhausted armies! Not the thousands of prisoners
+which you will see sent into captivity across the Rhine!
+What has the government to lean on&mdash;a government
+discredited, impotent, beaten! What in the world can
+prevent a change, an uprising, a revolution? Why,
+even if there were no such thing as the Internationale
+and its secret Central Committee&mdash;to which I have the
+honor to belong&#8221;&mdash;and here his sneer was frightful&mdash;&#8220;I
+tell you that before a conquering German army
+had recrossed the Rhine this land of chattering apes
+would be tearing one another for very want of a universal
+scape-goat.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But that is exactly where we come into the affair.
+We find the popular scape-goat and point him out&mdash;the
+government, my friend. And all we have to do is
+to let the mob loose, stand back, and count profits.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He leaned forward in his chair, idly twisting his
+crumpled bit of paper in one hand.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am not fool enough to believe that our reign will
+last,&#8221; he said. &#8220;It may last a month, two months,
+perhaps three. Then we leaders will be at one another&#8217;s
+throats&mdash;and the game is up! It&#8217;s always so&mdash;mob
+rule can&#8217;t last&mdash;it never has lasted and never will. But
+the prudent man will make hay before the brief sunshine
+is ended; I expect to economize a little, and set
+aside enough&mdash;well, enough to make it pay, you see.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He looked up at me quietly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am perfectly willing to tell you this, even if you
+used your approaching liberty to alarm the entire country,
+from the Emperor to the most obscure scullion in
+the Tuileries. Nothing can stop us now, nothing in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_117' name='page_117'></a>117</span>
+the world can prevent our brief reign. Because these
+things are certain, the armies of France will be beaten&mdash;they
+are already beaten. Paris will hold out; Paris
+will fall; and with Paris down goes France! And as
+sure as the sun shall rise on a conquered people, so
+sure shall rise that red spectre we call the Internationale.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The man astonished me. He put into words a
+prophecy which had haunted me from the day that
+war was declared&mdash;a prophetic fear which had haunted
+men higher up in the service of the Empire&mdash;thinking
+men who knew what war meant to a country whose
+government was as rotten as its army was unprepared,
+whose political chiefs were as vain, incompetent, ignorant,
+and weak as were the chiefs of its brave army&mdash;an
+army riddled with politics, weakened by intrigue
+and neglect&mdash;an army used ignobly, perverted, cheated,
+lied to, betrayed, abandoned.</p>
+<p>That, for once, Buckhurst spoke the truth as he
+foresaw it, I did not question. That he was right in
+his infernal calculations, I was fearsomely persuaded.
+And now the game had advanced, and I must display
+what cards I had, or pretended to have.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are you trying to bribe me?&#8221; I blurted out, weakly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Bribe you,&#8221; he repeated, in contempt. &#8220;No. If
+the prospect does not please you, I have only to say
+a word to the provost marshal.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wouldn&#8217;t that injure your prospects with the Countess?&#8221;
+I said, with fat-brained cunning. &#8220;You cannot
+betray me and hope for her friendship.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He glanced up at me, measured my mental capacity,
+then nodded.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t force you that way,&#8221; he admitted.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s bound to get to Paradise. Why?&#8221; I wondered,
+and said, aloud:</p>
+<p>&#8220;What do you want of me?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_118' name='page_118'></a>118</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;I want immunity from the secret police, Mr. Scarlett.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wherever I may be.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;In Morbihan?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;In Paradise?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I was silent for a moment, then, looking him in the
+eye, &#8220;What do I gain?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Ah, the cat was out now. Buckhurst did not move,
+but I saw the muscles of his face relax, and he drew a
+deep, noiseless breath.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; he said, coolly, &#8220;you may keep those diamonds,
+for one thing.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Presently I said, &#8220;And for the next thing?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are high-priced, Mr. Scarlett,&#8221; he observed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, very,&#8221; I said, with that offensive, swaggering
+menace in my voice which is peculiar to the weak
+criminal the world over.</p>
+<p>So I asserted myself and scowled at him and told
+him I was no fool and taunted him with my importance
+to his schemes and said I was not born yesterday,
+and that if Paris was to be divided I knew what part
+I wanted and meant to stand no nonsense from him
+or anybody.</p>
+<p>All of which justified the opinion he had already
+formed of me, and justified something else, too&mdash;his
+faith in his own eloquence, logic, and powers of persuasion.
+Not that I meant to make his mistake and
+undervalue him; he was an intelligent, capable, remarkable
+criminal&mdash;with the one failing&mdash;an overconfident
+contempt of <i>all</i> men.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There is one thing I want to ask you,&#8221; said I.
+&#8220;Why do you desire to go to Paradise?&#8221;</p>
+<p>He did not answer me at once, and I studied his
+passionless profile as he gazed out of the window.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_119' name='page_119'></a>119</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; he said, slowly, &#8220;I shall not tell you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why not?&#8221; I demanded.</p>
+<p>&#8220;&mdash;But I&#8217;ll say this,&#8221; he continued. &#8220;I want you to
+come to Paradise with me and that fool of a woman.
+I want you to report to your government that you are
+watching the house in Paradise, and that you are
+hoping to catch me there.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;How can I do that?&#8221; I asked. &#8220;As soon as the
+government catches the Countess de Vassart she will
+be sent across the frontier.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not if you inform your government that you desire
+to use her and the others as a bait to draw me to Paradise.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, that&#8217;s it, is it?&#8221; I asked, thoughtfully.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said Buckhurst, &#8220;that&#8217;s it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And you do not desire to inform me why you are
+going to stay in Paradise?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you think you&#8217;ll be clever enough to find
+out?&#8221; he asked, with a sneer.</p>
+<p>I did think so; more than that, I let him see that
+I thought so, and he was contented with my conceit.</p>
+<p>&#8220;One thing more,&#8221; I said, blustering a little, &#8220;I want
+to know whether you mean any harm to that innocent
+girl?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who? The Countess? What do you mean? Harm
+her? Do you think I waste my thoughts on that little
+fool? She is not a factor in anything&mdash;except that
+just now I&#8217;m using her and mean to use her house in
+Paradise.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Haven&#8217;t you stripped her of every cent she has?&#8221;
+I asked. &#8220;What do you want of her now?&#8221; And I
+added something about respect due to women.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh yes, of course,&#8221; he said, with a vague glance at
+the street below. &#8220;You need not worry; nobody&#8217;s
+going to hurt her&mdash;&#8221; He suddenly shifted his eyes to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_120' name='page_120'></a>120</span>
+me. &#8220;You haven&#8217;t taken a fancy to her, have you?&#8221;
+he asked, in faint disgust.</p>
+<p>I saw that he thought me weak enough for any sentiment,
+even a noble one.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you think it pays,&#8221; he muttered, &#8220;marry her and
+beat her, for all I care; but don&#8217;t play loose with me, my
+friend; as a plain matter of business it won&#8217;t pay you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is that a threat?&#8221; I asked, in the bullying tone of a
+born coward.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, not a threat, a plain matter of profit and loss,
+a simple business proposition. For, suppose you betray
+me&mdash;and, by a miracle, live to boast of it? What
+is your reward? A colonelcy in the Military Police
+with a few thousand francs salary, and, in your old
+age, a pension which might permit you to eat meat
+twice a week. Against that, balance what I offer&mdash;free
+play in a helpless city, and no one to hinder you
+from salting away as many millions as you can carry
+off!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Presently I said, weakly, &#8220;And what, once more, is
+the service you ask of me?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I ask you to notify the government that you are
+watching Paradise, that you do not arrest the Countess
+and Dr. Delmont because you desire to use them as a
+bait to catch me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is that all?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is all. We will start for Paris together; I
+shall leave you before we get there. But I&#8217;ll see you
+later in Paradise.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You refuse to tell me why you wish to stay at the
+house in Paradise?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,... I refuse. And, by-the-way, the Countess
+is to think that I have presented myself in Paris and
+that the government has pardoned me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are willing to believe that I will not have you
+arrested?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_121' name='page_121'></a>121</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t ask you to promise. If you are fool enough
+to try it&mdash;try it! But I&#8217;m not going to give you the
+chance in Paris&mdash;only in Paradise.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t require my word of honor?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Word of&mdash;what? Well&mdash;no;... it&#8217;s a form I can
+dispense with.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But how can you protect yourself?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If all the protection I had was a &#8217;word of honor,&#8217;
+I&#8217;d be in a different business, my friend.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And you are willing to risk me, and you are perfectly
+capable of taking care of yourself?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think so,&#8221; he said, quietly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Trusting to my common-sense as a business man
+not to be fool enough to cut my own throat by cutting
+yours?&#8221; I persisted.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Exactly, and trusting to a few other circumstances,
+the details of which I beg permission to keep to myself,&#8221;
+he said, with a faint sneer.</p>
+<p>He rose and walked to the window; at the same moment
+I heard the sound of wheels below.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I believe that is our carriage,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Are you
+ready to start, Mr. Scarlett?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now?&#8221; I exclaimed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why not? I&#8217;m not in the habit of dawdling over
+anything. Come, sir, there is nothing very serious
+the matter with you, is there?&#8221;</p>
+<p>I said nothing; he knew, of course, the exact state of
+the wound I had received, that the superficial injury
+was of no account, that the shock had left me sound
+as a silver franc though a trifle weak in the hips and
+knees.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is the Countess de Vassart to go with us?&#8221; I asked,
+trying to find a reason for these events which were
+succeeding one another too quickly to suit me.</p>
+<p>He gave me an absent-minded nod; a moment later
+the Countess entered. She had mended her black
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_122' name='page_122'></a>122</span>
+cr&ecirc;pe gown where I tore it when I hung in the shadow
+of death under the battlements of La Trappe. She
+wore black gloves, a trifle shabby, and carried a worn
+satchel in her hands.</p>
+<p>Buckhurst aided me to rise, the Countess threw my
+hussar jacket over my shoulders and buttoned it; I
+felt the touch of her cool, little fingers on my hot, unshaved
+throat.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I congratulate you on your convalescence,&#8221; she
+said, in a low voice. &#8220;Lean on me, monsieur.&#8221;</p>
+<p>My head swam; hips and knees were without
+strength; she aided me down the stairway and out
+into the pale sunshine, where stood the same mud-splashed,
+rusty vehicle which had brought us hither
+from La Trappe.</p>
+<p>The Countess had only a satchel and a valise; Buckhurst&#8217;s
+luggage comprised a long, flat, steel-bound box,
+a satchel, and a parcel. I had nothing. My baggage,
+which I had left in Morsbronn, had without doubt
+been confiscated long since; my field-glasses, sabre,
+and revolver were gone; I had only what clothes I
+was wearing&mdash;a dirty, ragged, gray-blue flannel shirt,
+my muddy jacket, scarlet riding-breeches, and officer&#8217;s
+boots. But in one of the hip-pockets of my breeches
+I carried a fortune in diamonds.</p>
+<p>As I stood beside the carriage, wondering how I
+was going to get in, I felt an arm slip under my neck
+and another slide gently under my knees, and Buckhurst
+lifted me. Beneath the loose, gray coat-sleeves
+his bent arms were rigid as steel; his supple frame
+straightened; he moved a step forward and laid me
+on the shabby cushions.</p>
+<p>The Countess looked at me, turned and glanced up
+at her smoke-blackened house, where a dozen Prussian
+soldiers leaned from the lower windows smoking their
+long porcelain pipes and the provost marshal stood in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_123' name='page_123'></a>123</span>
+the doorway, helmeted, spurred, immaculate from golden
+cheek-guard to the glittering tip of his silver scabbard.
+An Uhlan, dismounted, stood on guard below the steps,
+his lance at a &#8220;present,&#8221; the black-and-white swallow-tailed
+pennon drooping from the steel point.</p>
+<p>The Countess bent her pretty head under its small
+black hat; the provost&#8217;s white-gloved hand flew to his
+helmet peak.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Fear nothing, madame,&#8221; he said, pompously.
+&#8220;Your house and its contents are safe until you return.
+This village is now German soil.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The Countess looked at him steadily, gravely.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I thank you, monsieur, but frontiers are not changed
+in a day.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But she was mistaken. Alsace henceforth must
+be written Elsass, and the devastated province called
+Lothringen was never again to be written Lorraine.</p>
+<p>The Countess stepped into the carriage and took her
+place beside me; Buckhurst followed, seating himself
+opposite us, and the Alsatian driver mounted to the
+box.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Your safe-conduct carries you to the French outposts
+at Saverne,&#8221; said the provost, dryly. &#8220;If there
+are no longer French outposts at Saverne, you may
+demand a vis&eacute; for your pass and continue south to
+Strasbourg.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Buckhurst half turned towards the driver. &#8220;Allez,&#8221;
+he said, quietly, and the two gaunt horses moved on.</p>
+<p>There was a chill in the white sunshine&mdash;the first
+touch of autumn. Not a trace of the summer&#8217;s balm
+remained in the air; every tree on the mountain outlines
+stood out sharp-cut in the crystalline light; the
+swift little streams that followed the road ran clear
+above autumn-brown pebbles and golden sands.</p>
+<p>Distant beachwoods were turning yellow; yellow
+gorse lay like patches of sunshine on the foot-hills;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_124' name='page_124'></a>124</span>
+oceans of yellow grain belted the terraced vineyards.
+Here and there long, velvety, black strips cut the green
+and gold, the trail of fire which had scarred the grain
+belts; here and there pillars of smoke floated, dominating
+blue woodlands, where the flames of exploding
+shells had set the forest afire.</p>
+<p>Already from the plateau I could see a streak of
+silver reflecting the intense blue sky&mdash;the Rhine, upon
+whose westward cliffs France had mounted guard but
+yesterday.</p>
+<p>And now the Rhine was lost, and the vast granite
+bastions of the Vosges looked out upon a sea of German
+forests. Above the Col du Pigeonnier the semaphore
+still glistened, but its signals now travelled eastward,
+and strange flags fluttered on its invisible halliards.
+And every bridge was guarded by helmeted men who
+halted us, and every tunnel was barred by mounted
+Uhlans who crossed their lances to the ominous shout:
+&#8220;Wer da? On ne basse bas!&#8221; The Vosges were literally
+crawling with armed men!</p>
+<p>Driving slowly along the base of the hills, I had
+glimpses of rocky defiles which pierced the mountain
+wall; and through every defile poured infantry
+and artillery in unbroken columns, and over every
+mountain pass streamed endless files of horsemen.
+Railroad tunnels were choked with slowly moving
+trains piled high with artillery; viaducts glistened
+with helmets all moving westward; every hillock, every
+crag, every height had its group of tiny dark dots or
+its solitary Uhlan.</p>
+<p>Very far away I heard cannon&mdash;so far away that the
+hum of the cannonade was no louder than the panting
+of our horses on the white hill-road, and I could hear
+it only when the carriage stopped at intervals.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do we take the railroad at Saverne?&#8221; I asked at
+last. &#8220;Is there a railroad there?&#8221;</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_6' id='linki_6'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-124.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 543px; height: 379px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 543px;'>
+&#8220;EVERY BRIDGE WAS GUARDED&#8221;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_125' name='page_125'></a>125</span></div>
+<p>Buckhurst looked up at me. &#8220;It is rather strange
+that a French officer should not know the railroads in
+his own country,&#8221; he said.</p>
+<p>I was silent. I was not the only officer whose shame
+was his ignorance of the country he had sworn to defend.
+Long before the war broke out, every German
+regimental officer, commissioned and non-commissioned,
+carried a better map of France than could be found in
+France itself. And the French government had issued
+to us a few wretched charts of Germany, badly printed,
+full of gross errors, one or two maps to a regiment,
+and a few scattered about among the corps headquarters&mdash;among
+officers who did not even know the general
+topography of their own side of the Rhine.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is there a railroad at Saverne?&#8221; I repeated, sullenly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You will take a train at Strasbourg,&#8221; replied Buckhurst.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And then?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And then you go to Avricourt,&#8221; he said. &#8220;I suppose
+at least you know where that is?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is on the route to Paris,&#8221; said I, keeping my
+temper. &#8220;Are we going direct to Paris?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Madame de Vassart desires to go there,&#8221; he said,
+glancing at her with a sort of sneaking deference which
+he now assumed in her presence.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is true,&#8221; said the Countess, turning to me. &#8220;I
+wish to rest for a little while before I go to Point Paradise.
+I am curiously tired of poverty, Monsieur Scarlett,&#8221;
+she added, and held out her shabby gloves with
+a gesture of despair; &#8220;I am reduced to very little&mdash;I
+have scarcely anything left,... and I am weak
+enough to long for the scent of the winter violets on
+the boulevards.&#8221;</p>
+<p>With a faint smile she touched the bright hair above
+her brow, where the wind had flung a gleaming tendril
+over her black veil.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_126' name='page_126'></a>126</span></p>
+<p>As I looked at her, I marvelled that she had found
+it possible to forsake all that was fair and lovely in
+life, to dare ignore caste, to deliberately face ridicule
+and insult and the scornful anger of her own kind,
+for the sake of the filthy scum festering in the sinkholes
+of the world.</p>
+<p>There are brave priests who go among lepers, there
+are brave missionaries who dispute with the devil over
+the souls of half-apes in the Dark Continent. Under
+the Cross they do the duty they were bred to.</p>
+<p>But she was bred to other things. Her lungs were
+never made to breathe the polluted atmosphere of the
+proletariat, yelping and slavering in their kennels;
+her strait young soul was never born for communion
+with the crooked souls of social pariahs, with the
+stunted and warped intelligence of fanatics, with the
+crippled but fierce minds which dominated the Internationale.</p>
+<p>Not that such contact could ever taint her; but it
+might break her heart one day.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You will think me very weak and cowardly to
+seek shelter and comfort at such a time,&#8221; she said,
+raising her gray eyes to me. &#8220;But I feel as though all
+my strength had slipped away from me. I mean to
+go back to my work; I only need a few days of quiet
+among familiar scenes&mdash;pleasant scenes that I knew
+when I was young. I think that if I could only see
+a single care-free face&mdash;only one among all those who&mdash;who
+once seemed to love me&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>She turned her head quickly and stared out at the
+tall pines which fringed the dusty road.</p>
+<p>Buckhurst blinked at her.</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>It was late in the afternoon when the last Prussian
+outpost hailed us. I had been asleep for hours, but
+was awakened by the clatter of horses, and I opened
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_127' name='page_127'></a>127</span>
+my eyes to see a dozen Uhlans come cantering up
+and surround our carriage.</p>
+<p>After a long discussion with Buckhurst and a rigid
+scrutiny of our permit to pass the lines, the slim officer
+in command vis&eacute;d the order. One of the troopers tied
+a white handkerchief to his lance-tip, wheeled his wiry
+horse, and, followed by a trumpeter, trotted off ahead
+of us. Our carriage creaked after them, slowly moving
+to the summit of a hill over which the road rose.</p>
+<p>Presently, very far away on the gray-green hill-side,
+I saw a bit of white move. The Uhlan flourished his
+lance from which the handkerchief fluttered; the trumpeter
+set his trumpet to his lips and blew the parley.</p>
+<p>One minute, two, three, ten passed. Then, distant
+galloping sounded along the road, nearer, nearer;
+three horsemen suddenly wheeled into view ahead&mdash;French
+dragoons, advancing at a solid gallop. The
+Uhlan with the flag spurred forward to meet them,
+saluted, wheeled his horse, and came back.</p>
+<p>Paid mercenary that I was, my heart began to beat
+very fast at sight of those French troopers with their
+steel helmets bound with leopard-hide and their horsehair
+plumes whipping the breeze, and their sun-bronzed,
+alert faces and pleasant eyes. I had had enough of
+the supercilious, near-sighted eyes of the Teuton.</p>
+<p>As for the young Countess, she sat there smiling,
+while the clumsy dragoons came rattling up, beaming
+at my red riding-breeches, and all saluting the Countess
+with a cheerful yet respectful swagger that touched
+me deeply as I noted the lines of hunger in their lean
+jaws.</p>
+<p>And now the brief ceremony was over and our rusty
+vehicle moved off down the hill, while the Uhlans turned
+bridle and clattered off, scattering showers of muddy
+gravel in the rising wind.</p>
+<p>The remains of our luncheon lay in a basket under
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_128' name='page_128'></a>128</span>
+our seat&mdash;plenty of bread and beef, and nearly a quart
+of red wine.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Call the escort&mdash;they are starving,&#8221; I said to Buckhurst.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think not,&#8221; he said, coolly. &#8220;I may eat again.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Call the escort!&#8221; I repeated, sharply.</p>
+<p>Buckhurst looked up at me in silence, then glanced
+warily at the Countess.</p>
+<p>A few moments later the gaunt dragoons were munching
+dry bread as they rode, passing the bottle from
+saddle to saddle.</p>
+<p>We were ascending another hill; the Countess, anxious
+to stretch her limbs, had descended to the road,
+and now walked ahead, one hand holding her hat,
+which the ever-freshening wind threatened.</p>
+<p>Buckhurst bent towards me and said: &#8220;My friend,
+your suggestion that we deprive ourselves to feed those
+cavalrymen was a trifle peremptory in tone. I am
+wondering how much your tone will change when we
+reach Paris.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You will see,&#8221; said I.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, of course I&#8217;ll see,&#8221; he said,... &#8220;and so will
+you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I thought you had means to protect yourself,&#8221; I
+observed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I have. Besides, I think you would rather keep
+those diamonds than give them up for the pleasure of
+playing me false.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I laughed in a mean manner, which reassured him.
+&#8220;Look here,&#8221; said I, &#8220;if I were to make trouble for
+you in Paris I&#8217;d be the most besotted fool in France,
+and you know it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He nodded.</p>
+<p>And so I should have been. For there was something
+vastly more important to do than to arrest John Buckhurst
+for theft; and before I suffered a hair of his sleek,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_129' name='page_129'></a>129</span>
+gray head to come to harm I&#8217;d have hung myself for a
+hopeless idiot. Oh no; my friend John Buckhurst had
+such colossal irons in the fire that I knew it would take
+many more men as strong as he to lift them out again.
+And I meant to know what those irons were for, and
+who were the gentlemen to aid him lift them. So not
+only must Buckhurst remain free as a lively black
+cricket in a bog, but he must not be frightened if I could
+help it.</p>
+<p>And to that end I leered at him knowingly, and
+presently bestowed a fatuous wink upon him.</p>
+<p>It was unpleasant for me to do this, for it implied that
+I was his creature; and, in spite of the remorseless requirements
+of my profession, I have an inborn hatred
+of falsehood in any shape. To lie in the line of duty
+is one of the disagreeable necessities of certain professions;
+and mine is not the only one nor the least
+respectable. The art of war is to deceive; strategy
+is the art of demonstrating falsehood plausibly; there
+is nothing respectable in the military profession except
+the manual&mdash;which is now losing importance in the
+eyes of advanced theorists. All men are liars&mdash;a few
+are unselfish ones.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You have given me your word of honor,&#8221; said
+Buckhurst.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Have I?&#8221; I had not, and he knew it. I hoped I
+might not be forced to.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Haven&#8217;t you?&#8221; asked Buckhurst.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You sneered at my word of honor,&#8221; I said, with all
+the spite of a coward; &#8220;now you don&#8217;t get it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He no longer wanted it, but all he said was: &#8220;Don&#8217;t
+take unnecessary offence; you&#8217;re smart enough to
+know when you&#8217;re well off.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>I dozed towards sunset, waking when the Countess
+stepped back into the carriage and seated herself by
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_130' name='page_130'></a>130</span>
+my side. Then, after a little, I slept again. And it
+was nearly dark when I was awakened by the startling
+whistle of a locomotive. The carriage appeared to be
+moving slowly between tall rows of poplars and telegraph-poles;
+a battery of artillery was clanking along
+just ahead. In the dark southern sky a luminous haze
+hung.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The lights of Strasbourg,&#8221; whispered the Countess,
+as I sat up, rubbing my hot eyes.</p>
+<p>I looked for Buckhurst; his place was empty.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Buckhurst left us at the railroad crossing,&#8221;
+she said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Left us!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes! He boarded a train loaded with wounded....
+He had business to transact in Colmar before
+he presented himself to the authorities in Paris....
+And we are to go by way of Avricourt.&#8221;</p>
+<p>So Buckhurst had already begun to execute his
+programme. But the abrupt, infernal precision of the
+man jarred me unpleasantly.</p>
+<p>In the dark I felt cautiously for my diamonds; they
+were safe in my left hip-pocket.</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>The wind had died out, and a fine rain began to filter
+down through a mist which lay over the flat plain as
+we entered the suburbs of Strasbourg.</p>
+<p>Again and again we were halted by sentinels, then
+permitted to proceed in the darkness, along deserted
+avenues lighted by gas-jets burning in tall bronze
+lamp-posts through a halo of iridescent fog.</p>
+<p>We passed deserted suburban villas, blank stretches
+of stucco walls enclosing gardens, patches of cabbages,
+thickets of hop-poles to which the drenched vines clung
+fantastically, and scores of abandoned houses, shutters
+locked, blinds drawn.</p>
+<p>High to the east the ramparts of the city loomed,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_131' name='page_131'></a>131</span>
+set at regular distances with electric lights; from the
+invisible citadel rockets were rising, spraying the fog
+with jewelled flakes, crumbling to golden powder in the
+starless void above.</p>
+<p>Presently our carriage stopped before a tremendous
+mass of masonry pierced by an iron, arched gate,
+through which double files of farm-wagons were rolling,
+escorted by customs guards and marines.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No room! no room!&#8221; shouted the soldiers. &#8220;This
+is the Porte de Pierre. Go to the Porte de Saverne!&#8221;</p>
+<p>So we passed on beneath the bastions, skirting the
+ramparts to the Porte de Saverne, where, after a harangue,
+the gate guards admitted us, and we entered
+Strasbourg in the midst of a crush of vehicles. At the
+railroad station hundreds of cars choked the tracks;
+loaded freight trains stalled in the confusion, trains
+piled with ammunition and provisions, trains crowded
+with horses and cattle and sheep, filling the air
+with melancholy plaints; locomotives backing and
+whistling, locomotives blowing off deafening blasts of
+steam; gongs sounding, bells ringing, station-masters&#8217;
+trumpets blowing; and, above all, the immense clamor
+of human voices.</p>
+<p>The Countess and our Alsatian driver helped me
+to the platform, I looked around with dread at the
+throng, being too weak to battle for a foothold; but the
+brave Alsatian elbowed a path for me, and the Countess
+warded off the plunging human cattle, and at length
+I found myself beside the cars where line-soldiers stood
+guard at every ten paces and gendarmes stalked about,
+shoving the frantic people into double files.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Last train for Paris!&#8221; bawled an official in gilt and
+blue; and to the anxious question of the Countess
+he shook his head, saying, &#8220;There is no room, madame;
+it is utterly impossible&mdash;pardon, I cannot discuss
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_132' name='page_132'></a>132</span>
+anything now; the Prussians are signalled at Ostwald,
+and their shells may fall here at any moment.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If that is so,&#8221; I said, &#8220;this lady cannot stay here!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t help that!&#8221; he shouted, starting off down the
+platform.</p>
+<p>I caught the sleeve of a captain of gendarmerie who
+was running to enter a first-class compartment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Eh&mdash;what do you want, monsieur?&#8221; he snapped,
+in surprise. Then, as I made him a sign, he regarded
+me with amazement. I had given the distress signal
+of the secret police.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Try to make room for this lady in your compartment,&#8221;
+I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Willingly, monsieur. Hasten, madame; the train is
+already moving!&#8221; and he tore open the compartment
+door and swung the Countess to the car platform.</p>
+<p>I suppose she thought I was to follow, for when the
+officer slammed the compartment door she stepped to
+the window and tried to open it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Quick!&#8221; she cried to the guard, who had just locked
+the door; &#8220;help that officer in! He is wounded&mdash;can&#8217;t
+you see he is wounded?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The train was gliding along the asphalt platform;
+I hobbled beside the locked compartment, where she
+stood at the window.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Will you unlock that door?&#8221; said the Countess to
+the guard. &#8220;I wish to leave the train!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The cars were rolling a little faster than I could move
+along.</p>
+<p>The Countess leaned from the open window; through
+the driving rain her face in the lamp-light was pitifully
+white. I made a last effort and caught up with her car.</p>
+<p>&#8220;A safe journey, madame,&#8221; I stammered, catching
+at the hand she held out and brushing the shabby-gloved
+fingers with my lips.</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_7' id='linki_7'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-132.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 365px; height: 543px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 365px;'>
+&#8220;SISTERS OF CHARITY WERE GIVING FIRST AID&#8221;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_133' name='page_133'></a>133</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;I shall never forgive this wanton self-sacrifice,&#8221;
+she said, unsteadily. Then the car rolled silently past
+me, swifter, swifter, and her white face faded from my
+sight. Yet still I stood there, bareheaded, in the rain,
+while the twin red lamps on the rear car grew smaller
+and smaller, until they, too, were shut out in the closing
+curtains of the fog.</p>
+<p>As I turned away into the lighted station a hospital
+train from the north glided into the yard and stopped.
+Soldiers immediately started carrying out the wounded
+and placing them in rows on mattresses ranged along
+the walls of the passenger depot; sisters of charity,
+hovering over the mutilated creatures, were already
+giving first aid to the injured; policemen kept the crowd
+from trampling the dead and dying; gendarmes began
+to clear the platforms, calling out sharply, &#8220;No more
+trains to-night! Move on! This platform is for government
+officials only!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Through the scrambling mob a file of wounded tottered,
+escorted by police; women were forced back and
+pushed out into the street, only to be again menaced by
+galloping military ambulances arriving, accompanied
+by hussars. The confusion grew into a tumult; men
+struggled and elbowed for a passage to the platforms,
+women sobbed and cried; through the uproar the treble
+wail of terrified children broke out.</p>
+<p>Jostled, shoved, pulled this way and that, I felt that
+I was destined to go down under the people&#8217;s feet, and
+I don&#8217;t know what would have become of me had not a
+violent push sent me against the door of the telegraph
+office. The door gave way, and I fell on my knees,
+staggered to my feet, and crept out once more to the
+platform.</p>
+<p>The station-master passed, a haggard gentleman
+in rumpled uniform and gilt cap; and as he left the
+office by the outer door the heavy explosion of a rampart
+cannon shook the station.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_134' name='page_134'></a>134</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Can you get me to Paris?&#8221; I asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Quick, then,&#8221; he muttered; &#8220;this way&mdash;lean on me,
+monsieur! I am trying to send another train out&mdash;but
+Heaven alone knows! Quick, this way!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The glare of a locomotive&#8217;s headlight dazzled me;
+I made towards it, clinging to the arm of the station-master;
+the ground under my feet rocked with the
+shock of the siege-guns. Suddenly a shell fell and
+burst in the yard outside; there was a cry, a rush of
+trainmen, a gendarme shouting; then the piercing
+alarm notes of locomotives, squealing like terrified
+leviathans.</p>
+<p>The train drawn up along the platform gave a jerk
+and immediately moved out towards the open country,
+compartment doors swinging wide, trainmen and
+guards running alongside, followed by a mob of frenzied
+passengers, who leaped into empty compartments,
+flinging satchels and rugs to the four winds. Crash!
+A shell fell through the sloping roof of the platform
+and blew up. Through the white cloud and brilliant
+glare I saw a porter, wheeling boxes and trunks, fall,
+buried under an avalanche of baggage, and a sister of
+charity throw up her arms as though to shield her face
+from the fragments.</p>
+<p>A car, doors swinging wide, glided past me; I caught
+the rail and fell forward into a compartment. The
+cushions of the seats were afire, and a policeman was
+hammering out the sparks with naked fists.</p>
+<p>I was too weak to aid him. Presently he hurled the
+last burning cushion from the open door and leaped
+out into the train-yard, where red and green lamps
+glowed and the brilliant flare of bursting shells lighted
+the fog. By this time the train was moving swiftly;
+the car windows shook with the thunder from the ramparts
+under which we were passing; then came inky
+darkness&mdash;a tunnel&mdash;then a rush of mist and wind
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_135' name='page_135'></a>135</span>
+from the open door as we swept out into the country.</p>
+<p>Passengers clinging to the platforms now made their
+way into the compartment where I lay almost senseless,
+and soon the little place was crowded, and somebody
+slammed the door.</p>
+<p>Then the flying locomotive, far ahead, shrieked,
+and the train leaped, rushing forward into the unknown.
+Blackness, stupefying blackness, outside; inside, unseen,
+the huddled passengers, breathing heavily with
+sudden stifled sobs, or the choked, indrawn breath of
+terror; but not a word, not a quaver of human voices;
+peril strangled speech as our black train flew onward
+through the night.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_136' name='page_136'></a>136</span>
+<a name='VIII_A_MAN_TO_LET' id='VIII_A_MAN_TO_LET'></a>
+<h2>VIII</h2>
+<h3>A MAN TO LET</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The train which bore me out of the arc of the
+Prussian fire at Strasbourg passed in between the
+fortifications of Paris the next morning about eleven
+o&#8217;clock. Ten minutes later I was in a closed cab on
+my way to the headquarters of the Imperial Military
+Police, temporarily housed in the Luxembourg Palace.</p>
+<p>The day was magnificent; sunshine flooded the
+boulevards, and a few chestnut-trees in the squares
+had already begun to blossom for the second time in
+the season; there seemed to be no prophecy of autumn
+in sky or sunlight.</p>
+<p>The city, as I saw it from the open window of my cab,
+appeared to be in a perfectly normal condition. There
+were, perhaps, a few more national-guard soldiers on
+the streets, a few more brightly colored posters, notices,
+and placards on the dead walls, but the life of the city
+itself had not changed at all; the usual crowds filled
+the boulevards, the usual street cries sounded, the
+same middle-aged gentlemen sat in front of the caf&eacute;s
+reading the same daily papers, the same waiters served
+them the same drinks; rows of cabs were drawn up
+where cabs are always to be found, and the same policemen
+dawdled in gossip with the same flower-girls.
+I caught the scent of early winter violets in the fresh
+Parisian breeze.</p>
+<p>Was this the city that Buckhurst looked upon as
+already doomed?
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_137' name='page_137'></a>137</span></p>
+<p>On the marble bridge gardeners were closing up the
+morning flower-market; blue-bloused men with jointed
+hose sprinkled the asphalt in front of the Palais de Justice;
+students strolled under the trees from the School
+of Medicine to the Sorbonne; the Luxembourg fountain
+tossed its sparkling sheets of spray among the lotus.</p>
+<p>All this I saw, yet a sinister foreboding oppressed
+me, and I could not shake it off even in this bright
+city where September was promising only a new lease
+of summer and the white spikes of chestnut blossoms
+hummed with eager bees.</p>
+<p>Physically I felt well enough; the cramped sleep in
+the dark compartment, far from exhausting me, had
+not only rested me, but had also brought me an appetite
+which I meant to satisfy as soon as might be. As for
+my back, it was simply uncomfortable, but all effects
+of the shock had disappeared&mdash;unless this heavy mental
+depression was due to it.</p>
+<p>My cab was now entering the Palace of the Luxembourg
+by the great arch facing the Rue de Tournon;
+the line sentinels halted us; I left the cab, crossed the
+parade in front of the guard-house, turned to the right,
+and climbed the stairs straight to my own quarters,
+which were in the west wing of the palace, and consisted
+of a bedroom, a working cabinet, and a dressing-room.</p>
+<p>But I did not enter my door or even glance at it; I
+continued straight on, down the corridor to a door,
+on the ground-glass panes of which was printed in
+red lettering:</p>
+<table summary='sign' style='padding: 0 15px; border:none; border:1px solid black'>
+<tr><td><p style='text-align:center; color:black'>
+HEADQUARTERS<br />
+IMPERIAL MILITARY POLICE<br />
+SAFE DEPOSIT</p>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_138' name='page_138'></a>138</span></div>
+<p>The sentinel interrogated me for form&#8217;s sake, although
+he knew me; I entered, passed rapidly along the face
+of the steel cage behind which some officers sat on high
+stools, writing, and presented myself at the guichet
+marked, &#8220;Foreign Division.&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was no military clerk in attendance there, and,
+to my surprise, the guichet was closed.</p>
+<p>However, a very elegant officer strolled up to the
+guichet as I laid my bag of diamonds on the glass shelf,
+languidly unlocked the steel window-gate, and picked
+up the bag of jewels.</p>
+<p>The officer was Mornac, the Emperor&#8217;s alter ego, or
+&acirc;me damn&eacute;e, who had taken over the entire department
+the very day I left Paris for the frontier. Officially, I
+could not recognize him until I presented myself to
+Colonel Jarras with my report; so I saluted his uniform,
+standing at attention in my filthy clothes, awaiting
+the usual question and receipt.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Name and number?&#8221; inquired Mornac, indolently.</p>
+<p>I gave both.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You desire to declare?&#8221;</p>
+<p>I enumerated the diamonds, and designated them as
+those lately stolen from the crucifix of Louis XI.</p>
+<p>Mornac handed me a printed certificate of deposit,
+opened a compartment in the safe, and tossed in the
+bag without sealing it. And, as I stood waiting, he
+lighted a scented cigarette, glanced over at me, puffed
+once or twice, and finally dismissed me with a discourteous
+nod.</p>
+<p>I went, because he was Mornac; I thought that I
+was entitled to a bureau receipt, but could scarcely
+demand one from the chief of the entire department
+who had taken over the bureau solely in order to reform
+it, root and branch. Doubtless his curt dismissal of
+me without the customary receipt and his failure to
+seal the bag were two of his reforms.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_139' name='page_139'></a>139</span></p>
+<p>I limped off past the glittering steel cage, thankful
+that the jewels were safe, turned into the corridor, and
+hastened back to my own rooms.</p>
+<p>To tear off my rags, bathe, shave, and dress in a light
+suit of civilian clothes took me longer than usual, for
+I was a trifle lame.</p>
+<p>Bath and clean clothes ought to have cheered me;
+but the contrary was the case, and I sat down to a
+breakfast brought by a palace servant, and ate it
+gloomily, thinking of Buckhurst, and the Countess,
+and of Morsbronn, and of the muddy dead lying under
+the rifle smoke below my turret window.</p>
+<p>I thought, too, of that astonishing conspiracy which
+had formed under the very shadow of the imperial
+throne, and through which already the crucifix and
+diamonds of Louis XI. had been so nearly lost to France.</p>
+<p>Who besides Buckhurst was involved? How far had
+Colonel Jarras gone in the investigation during my
+absence? How close to the imperial throne had the
+conspiracy burrowed?</p>
+<p>Pondering, I slowly retraced my steps through the
+bedroom and dressing-room, and out into the tiled hallway,
+where, at the end of the dim corridor, the door
+of Colonel Jarras&#8217;s bureau stood partly open.</p>
+<p>Jarras was sitting at his desk as I entered, and he
+gave me a leaden-eyed stare as I closed the door behind
+me and stood at attention.</p>
+<p>For a moment he said nothing, but presently he partly
+turned his ponderous body towards me and motioned
+me to a chair.</p>
+<p>As I sat down I glanced around and saw my old
+comrade, Speed, sitting in a dark corner, chewing a
+cigarette and watching me in alert silence.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are present to report?&#8221; suggested Colonel
+Jarras, heavily.</p>
+<p>I bowed, glancing across at Speed, who shrugged
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_140' name='page_140'></a>140</span>
+his shoulders and looked at the floor with an ominous
+smile.</p>
+<p>Mystified, I began my report, but was immediately
+stopped by Jarras with a peevish gesture: &#8220;All right,
+all right; keep all that for the Chief of Department.
+Your report doesn&#8217;t concern me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Doesn&#8217;t concern you!&#8221; I repeated; &#8220;are you not
+chief of this bureau, Colonel Jarras?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; snapped Jarras; &#8220;and there&#8217;s no bureau
+now&mdash;at least no bureau for the Foreign Division.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Speed leaned forward and said: &#8220;Scarlett, my friend,
+the Foreign Division of the Imperial Military Police
+is not in favor just now. It appears the Foreign Division
+is suspected.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Suspected? Of what?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Treason, I suppose,&#8221; said Speed, serenely.</p>
+<p>I felt my face begin to burn, but the astonishing
+news left me speechless.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I said,&#8221; observed Speed, &#8220;that the Foreign Division
+is suspected; that is not exactly the case; it is not suspected,
+simply because it has been abolished.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who the devil did that?&#8221; I asked, savagely.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mornac.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Mornac! The Emperor&#8217;s shadow! Then truly
+enough it was all up with the Foreign Division. But
+the shame of it!&mdash;the disgrace of as faithful a body
+of police, mercenaries though they were, as ever worked
+for any cause, good or bad.</p>
+<p>&#8220;So it&#8217;s the old whine of treason again, is it?&#8221; I said,
+while the blood beat in my temples. &#8220;Oh, very well,
+doubtless Monsieur Mornac knows his business. Are
+we transferred, Speed, or just kicked out into the
+street?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Kicked out,&#8221; replied Speed, rubbing his slim, bony
+hands together.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And you, sir?&#8221; I asked, turning to Jarras, who sat
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_141' name='page_141'></a>141</span>
+with his fat, round head buried in his shoulders, staring
+at the discolored blotter on his desk.</p>
+<p>The old Corsican straightened as though stung:
+&#8220;Since when, monsieur, have subordinates assumed
+the right to question their superiors?&#8221;</p>
+<p>I asked his pardon in a low voice, although I was
+no longer his subordinate. He had been a good and
+loyal chief to us all; the least I could do now was to
+show him respect in his bitter humiliation.</p>
+<p>I think he felt our attitude and that it comforted him,
+but all he said was: &#8220;It is a heavy blow. The Emperor
+knows best.&#8221;</p>
+<p>As we sat there in silence, a soldier came to summon
+Colonel Jarras, and he went away, leaning on his ivory-headed
+cane, head bowed over the string of medals on
+his breast.</p>
+<p>When he had gone, Speed came over and shut the
+door, then shook hands with me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s gone to see Mornac; it will be our turn next.
+Look out for Mornac, or he&#8217;ll catch you tripping in your
+report. Did you find Buckhurst?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Look here,&#8221; I said, angrily, &#8220;how can Mornac
+catch me tripping? I&#8217;m not under his orders.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are until you&#8217;re discharged. You see, they&#8217;ve
+taken it into their heads, since the crucifix robbery, to
+suspect everybody and anybody short of the Emperor.
+Mornac came smelling around here the day you left.
+He&#8217;s at the bottom of all this&mdash;a nice business to cast
+suspicion on our division because we&#8217;re foreigners.
+Gad, he looks like a pickpocket himself&mdash;he&#8217;s got the
+oblique trick of the eyes and the restless finger movement.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps he is,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>Speed looked at me sharply.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If I were in the service now I&#8217;d arrest Mornac&mdash;if
+I dared.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_142' name='page_142'></a>142</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;You might as well arrest the Emperor,&#8221; I said,
+wearily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s it,&#8221; observed Speed, throwing away his
+chewed cigarette. &#8220;Nobody dare touch Mornac; nobody
+dare even watch him. But if there&#8217;s a leak somewhere,
+it&#8217;s far more probable that Mornac did the dirty
+work than that there&#8217;s a traitor in our division.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Presently he added: &#8220;Did you catch Buckhurst?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t want to talk about it,&#8221; I said, disgusted.</p>
+<p>&#8220;&mdash;Because,&#8221; continued Speed, &#8220;if you&#8217;ve got him,
+it may save us. Have you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>How I wished that I had Buckhurst safely handcuffed
+beside me!</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you&#8217;ve got him,&#8221; persisted Speed, &#8220;we&#8217;ll shake
+him like a rat until he squeals. And if he names
+Mornac&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you think that Mornac would give him or us
+the chance?&#8221; I said. &#8220;Rubbish! He&#8217;d do the shaking
+<i>in camera</i>; and it would only be a hand-shaking
+if Buckhurst is really his creature. And he&#8217;s rid himself
+of our division, anyhow. Wait!&#8221; I added, sharply;
+&#8220;perhaps that is the excuse! Perhaps that is the very
+reason that he&#8217;s abolished the foreign division! We
+may have been getting too close to the root of this
+matter; I had already caught Buckhurst&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You had?&#8221; cried Speed, eagerly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But I&#8217;m not going to talk about it now,&#8221; I added,
+sullenly. &#8220;My troubles are coming; I&#8217;ve a story to
+tell that won&#8217;t please Mornac, and I have an idea that
+he means mischief to me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Speed looked curiously at me, and I went on:</p>
+<p>&#8220;I used my own judgment&mdash;supposing that Jarras
+was my chief. I knew he&#8217;d let me take my own way&mdash;but
+I don&#8217;t know what Mornac will say.&#8221;</p>
+<p>However, I was soon to know what Mornac had to
+say, for a soldier appeared to summon us both, and we
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_143' name='page_143'></a>143</span>
+followed to the temporary bureau which looked out to
+the east over the lovely Luxembourg gardens.</p>
+<p>Jarras passed us as we entered; his heavy head was
+bent, and I do not suppose that he saw either us or our
+salutes, for he shuffled off down the dark passage,
+tapping his slow way like a blind man; and Speed and
+I entered, saluting Mornac.</p>
+<p>The personage whom we saluted was a symmetrical,
+highly colored gentleman, with black mustache and
+Oriental eyes. His skin was too smooth&mdash;there was
+not a line or a wrinkle visible on hand or face, nothing
+but plump flesh pressing the golden collar of his light-blue
+tunic and the half-dozen gold rings on his carefully
+kept, restless fingers. His light, curved sabre
+hung by its silver chain from a nail on a wall behind
+him; beside it, suspended by the neck cord, was his
+astrakhan-trimmed dolman of palest turquoise-blue,
+and over that hung his scarlet cap.</p>
+<p>As he raised his heavy-lidded, insolent eyes to me, I
+thought I had never before appreciated the utter falseness
+of his visage as I did at that moment. Instantly
+I decided that he meant evil to me; and I instinctively
+glanced at Speed, standing beside me at attention, his
+clear blue eyes alert, his lank limbs and lean head
+fairly tremulous with comprehension.</p>
+<p>At a careless nod from Mornac I muttered the formal
+&#8220;I have to report, sir&mdash;&#8221; and began mumbling a perfunctory
+account of my movements since leaving Paris.
+He listened, idly contemplating a silver penknife which
+he alternately snapped open and closed, the click of
+the spring punctuating my remarks.</p>
+<p>I told the truth as far as I went, which brought me to
+my capture by Uhlans and the natural escape of my
+prisoner, Buckhurst. I merely added that I had secured
+the diamonds and had managed to reach Paris
+via Strasbourg.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_144' name='page_144'></a>144</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Is that all?&#8221; inquired Mornac, listlessly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All I have to report, sir.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Permit me to be the judge of how much you have
+to report,&#8221; said Mornac. &#8220;Continue.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I was silent.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you prefer that I draw out information by questions?&#8221;
+asked Mornac, looking up at me.</p>
+<p>I was already in his net; I ought not to have placed
+myself in the position of concealing anything, yet I
+distrusted him and wished to avoid giving him a chance
+to misunderstand me. But now it was too late; if the
+error could be wiped out at all, the only way to erase
+it was by telling him everything and giving him his
+chance to misinterpret me if he desired it.</p>
+<p>He listened very quietly while I told of my encounter
+with Buckhurst in Morsbronn, of our journey to
+Saverne, to Strasbourg, and finally my own arrival in
+Paris.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where is Buckhurst?&#8221; he asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I do not know,&#8221; I replied, doggedly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is to say that you had him in your power
+within the French lines yet did not secure him?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Your orders were to arrest him?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And shoot him if he resisted?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But you let him go?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;There was something more important to do than
+to arrest Buckhurst. I meant to find out what he had
+on hand in Paradise.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;So you disobeyed orders?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you care to so interpret my action.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why did you not arrest the Countess de Vassart?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I did; the Uhlans made me prisoner as I reported
+to you.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_145' name='page_145'></a>145</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;I mean, why did you not arrest her after you left
+Morsbronn?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That would have prevented Buckhurst from going
+to Paradise.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Your orders were to arrest the Countess?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did you obey those orders?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; I said, between my teeth.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I had every reason to believe that an important
+conspiracy was being ripened somewhere near Paradise.
+I had every reason to believe that the robbery
+of the crown jewels might furnish funds for the plotters.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The arrest of one man could not break up the conspiracy;
+I desired to trap the leaders; and to that end
+I deliberately liberated this man Buckhurst as a stool-pigeon.
+If my judgment has been at fault, I accept the
+blame.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Mornac&#8217;s silver penknife closed. Presently he opened
+the blade again and tested the edge on his plump
+forefinger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I beg to call your attention to the fact,&#8221; I continued,
+&#8220;that a word from Buckhurst to the provost at Morsbronn
+would have sent me before the squad of execution.
+In a way, I bought my freedom. But,&#8221; I added,
+slowly, &#8220;I should never have bought it if the bargain
+by which I saved my own skin had been a betrayal
+of France. Nobody wants to die; but in my profession
+we discount that. No man in my division is a physical
+coward. I purchased my freedom not only without
+detriment to France, but, on the contrary, to the advantage
+of France.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;At the expense of your honor,&#8221; observed Mornac.</p>
+<p>My ears were burning; I advanced a pace and looked
+Mornac straight between the eyes; but his eyes did
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_146' name='page_146'></a>146</span>
+not meet mine&mdash;they were fixed on his silver penknife.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I did the best I could do in the line of duty,&#8221; I said.
+&#8220;You ask me why I did not break my word and arrest
+Buckhurst after we left the German lines. And
+I answer you that I had given my word not to arrest
+him, in pursuance of my plan to use him further.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Mornac examined his carefully kept finger-tips in
+detail.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You say he bribed you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I said that he attempted to do so,&#8221; I replied, sharply.</p>
+<p>&#8220;With the diamonds?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You have them?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I deposited them as usual.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Bring them.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Angry as I was, I saluted, wheeled, and hastened off
+to the safe deposit. The jewel-bag was delivered when
+I presented my printed slip; I picked it up and marched
+back, savagely biting my mustache and striving to
+control my increasing exasperation. Never before had
+I endured insolence from a superior officer.</p>
+<p>Mornac was questioning Speed as I entered, and that
+young man, who has much self-control to learn, was
+already beginning to answer with disrespectful impatience,
+but my advent suspended matters, and Mornac
+took the bag of jewels from my hands and examined it.
+He seemed to be in no hurry to empty it; he lolled in
+his chair with an absent-minded expression like the
+expression of a cat who pretends to forget the mouse
+between her paws. Danger was written all over him;
+I squared my shoulders and studied him, braced for a
+shock.</p>
+<p>The shock came almost immediately, for, without a
+word, he suddenly emptied the jewel-bag on the desk
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_147' name='page_147'></a>147</span>
+before him. The bag contained little pebbles wrapped
+in tissue-paper.</p>
+<p>I heard Speed catch his breath sharply; I stared
+stupidly at the pebbles. Mornac made a careless, sweeping
+gesture, spreading the pebbles out before us with
+his restless, ringed fingers.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Suppose you explain this farce?&#8221; he suggested,
+unmoved.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Suppose <i>you</i> explain it!&#8221; I stammered.</p>
+<p>He raised his delicately arched eyebrows. &#8220;What
+do you mean?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I mean that an hour ago that bag contained the
+diamonds from the crucifix of Louis XI! I mean that
+I handed them over to you on my arrival at this bureau!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Doubtless you can prove what you say,&#8221; he observed,
+and his silver penknife snapped shut like the
+click of a trap, and he lay back in his padded chair
+and slipped the knife into his pocket.</p>
+<p>I looked at Speed; his sandy hair fairly bristled, but
+his face was drawn and tense. I looked at Mornac;
+his heavy, black eyes met mine steadily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It seems to me,&#8221; he said, &#8220;that it was high time
+we abolished the Foreign Division, Imperial Military
+Police.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I refuse to be discharged!&#8221; I said, hoarsely. &#8220;It
+is your word against mine; I demand an investigation!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Certainly,&#8221; he replied, almost wearily, and touched
+a bell. &#8220;Bring that witness,&#8221; he added to the soldier
+who appeared in answer to the silvery summons.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I mean an official inquiry,&#8221; I said&mdash;&#8220;a court-martial.
+It is my right where my honor is questioned.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is my right, when you question my honor, to
+throw you into Mont Val&eacute;rien, neck and heels,&#8221; he
+said, showing his teeth under his silky, black mustache.</p>
+<p>Almost stunned by his change of tone, I stood like
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_148' name='page_148'></a>148</span>
+a stone. Somebody entered the room behind me,
+passed me; there was an odor of violets in the air, a
+faint rustle of silk, and I saw Mornac rise and bow
+to his guest and conduct her to a chair.</p>
+<p>His guest was the young Countess de Vassart.</p>
+<p>She looked up at me brightly, gave me a pretty nod
+of recognition, then turned expectantly to Mornac, who
+was still standing at her elbow, saying, &#8220;Then it is no
+longer a question of my exile, monsieur?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, madame; there has been a mistake. The
+government has no reason to suspect your loyalty.&#8221;
+He turned directly on me. &#8220;Madame, do you know
+this officer?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said the Countess, smiling.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did you see him receive a small sack of diamonds
+in Morsbronn?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The Countess gave me a quick glance of surprise.
+&#8220;Yes,&#8221; she said, wonderingly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thank you, madame; that is sufficient,&#8221; he replied;
+and before I could understand what he was about he
+had conducted the Countess to the next room and had
+closed the door behind him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Quick!&#8221; muttered Speed at my elbow; &#8220;let&#8217;s back
+out of this trap. There&#8217;s no use; he&#8217;s one of them,
+and he means to ruin you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I won&#8217;t go!&#8221; I said, in a cold fury; &#8220;I&#8217;ll choke the
+truth out of him, I tell you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Man! Man! He&#8217;s the Emperor&#8217;s shadow! You&#8217;re
+done for; come on while there&#8217;s time. I tell you there&#8217;s
+no hope for you here.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hope! What do I care?&#8221; I said, harshly. &#8220;Why,
+Speed, that man is a common thief.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What of it?&#8221; whispered Speed. &#8220;Doesn&#8217;t everybody
+know that the conspiracy runs close to the
+throne? What do you care? Come on, I tell you;
+I&#8217;ve had enough of this rotten government. So have
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_149' name='page_149'></a>149</span>
+you. And we&#8217;ve both seen enough to ruin us. Come
+on!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But he&#8217;s got those diamonds! Do you think I can
+stand that?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think you&#8217;ve got to,&#8221; muttered Speed, savagely.
+&#8220;Do you want to rot in Cayenne? If you do, stay
+here and bawl for a court-martial!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But the government&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let the government go to the devil! It&#8217;s going
+fast enough, anyhow. Come, don&#8217;t let Mornac find
+us here when he returns. He may be coming now&mdash;quick,
+Scarlett! We&#8217;ve got to cut for it!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Speed,&#8221; I said, unsteadily, &#8220;it&#8217;s enough to make
+an honest man strike hands with Buckhurst in earnest.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Speed took my arm with a cautious glance at the
+door of the next room, and urged me toward the corridor.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The government has kicked us out into the street,&#8221;
+he muttered; &#8220;be satisfied that the government didn&#8217;t
+kick us into Biribi. And it will yet if you don&#8217;t come.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come? Where? I haven&#8217;t any money, and now
+they&#8217;ve got my honor&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Rubbish!&#8221; he whispered, fairly dragging me into
+the hallway. &#8220;Here! No&mdash;don&#8217;t go to your rooms.
+Leave everything&mdash;get clear of this rat-pit, I tell you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He half pushed, half dragged me to the parade; then,
+dropping my arm, he struck a jaunty pace through the
+archway, not even glancing at the sentinels. I kept
+pace with him, scarcely knowing what I did.</p>
+<p>In the Rue de Seine I halted suddenly, crying out
+that I must go back, but he seized me with a growl of
+&#8220;Idiot! come on!&#8221; and fairly shoved me through the
+colonnades of the Institute, along the quay, down the
+river-wall, to a dock where presently a swift river-boat
+swung in for passengers. And when the bateau mouche
+shot out again into mid-stream, Speed and I stood
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_150' name='page_150'></a>150</span>
+silently on deck, watching the silver-gray fa&ccedil;ades of
+Paris fly past above us under the blue sky.</p>
+<p>We sat far forward, quite alone, and separated from
+the few passengers by the pilot-house and jointed funnel.
+And there, carelessly lounging, with one of his
+lank legs crossed over the other and a cigar between
+his teeth, my comrade coolly recounted to me the infamous
+history of the past week:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Jarras put his honest, old, square-toed foot in it by
+accident; I don&#8217;t know how he managed to do it, but
+this is certain: he suddenly found himself on a perfectly
+plain trail which could only end at Mornac&#8217;s
+threshold.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then he did a stupid thing&mdash;he called Mornac in
+and asked him, in perfect faith, to clear up the affair,
+never for a moment suspecting that Mornac was the
+man.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That occurred the day you started to catch Buckhurst.
+And on that day, too, I had found out something;
+and like a fool I told Jarras.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Speed chewed his cigar and laughed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;In twenty-four hours Jarras was relieved of his
+command; I was requested not to leave the Luxembourg&mdash;in
+other words, I was under arrest, and Mornac
+took over the entire department and abolished the
+Foreign Division &#8217;for the good of the service,&#8217; as
+the <i>Official</i> had it next day.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then somebody&mdash;Mornac probably&mdash;let loose a
+swarm of those shadowy lies called rumors&mdash;you know
+how that is done!&mdash;and people began to mutter, and the
+caf&eacute;s began to talk of treason among the foreign police.
+Of course Rochefort took it up; of course the <i>Official</i>
+printed a half-hearted denial which was far worse than
+an avowal. Then the division was abolished, and the
+illustrated papers made filthy caricatures of us, and
+drew pictures of Mornac, sabre in hand, decapitating
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_151' name='page_151'></a>151</span>
+a nest full of American rattlesnakes and British
+cobras, and Rochefort printed a terrible elaboration
+of the fable of the farmer and the frozen serpent.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, that&#8217;s enough,&#8221; I said, sick with rage and
+disgust. &#8220;Let them look out for their own country
+now. I pity the Empress; I pity the Emperor. I don&#8217;t
+know what Mornac means to do, but I know that the
+Internationale boa-constrictor is big enough to swallow
+government, dynasty, and Empire, and it is going to
+try.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am certain of one thing,&#8221; said Speed, staring out
+over the sun-lit water with narrowing eyes. &#8220;I know
+that Mornac is using Buckhurst.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps it is Buckhurst who is using Mornac,&#8221;
+I suggested.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think both those gentlemen have the same view
+in end&mdash;to feather their respective nests under cover
+of a general smash,&#8221; said Speed. &#8220;It would not do
+for Mornac to desert the Empire under any circumstances.
+But he can employ Buckhurst to squeeze
+it dry and then strike an attitude as its faithful defender
+in adversity.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But why does Buckhurst desire to go to Paradise?&#8221;
+I asked.</p>
+<p>The boat swung into a dock near the Point du Jour;
+a few passengers left, a few came aboard; the boat
+darted on again under the high viaduct of masonry,
+past bastions on which long siege cannon glistened in
+the sunshine, past lines of fresh earthworks, past grassy
+embankments on which soldiers moved to the rumble
+of drums.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I know something about Paradise,&#8221; said Speed,
+in a low voice.</p>
+<p>I waited; Speed chewed his cigar grimly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Look here, Scarlett,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Do you know what
+has become of the crown jewels of France?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_152' name='page_152'></a>152</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, I&#8217;ll tell you. You know, of course, that the
+government is anxious; you know that Paris is preparing
+to stand siege if the Prussians double up Bazaine
+and the army of Ch&acirc;lons in the north. But you don&#8217;t
+know what a pitiable fright the authorities are in. Why,
+Scarlett, they are scared almost to the verge of idiocy.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;They&#8217;ve passed that verge,&#8221; I observed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, they have. They have had a terrible panic
+over the safety of the crown jewels&mdash;they were nervous
+enough before the robbery. And this is what they&#8217;ve
+done in secret:</p>
+<p>&#8220;The crown jewels, the bars of gold of the reserve,
+the great pictures from the Louvre, the antiques of
+value, including the Venus of Milo, have been packed
+in cases and loaded on trains under heavy guard.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Twelve of these trains have already left Paris for
+the war-port of Lorient. The others are to follow, one
+every twenty-four hours at midnight.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Whether these treasures are to be locked up in
+Lorient, or whether they are to be buried in the sand-dunes
+along the coast, I don&#8217;t know. But I know this:
+a swift cruiser&mdash;the <i>Fer-de-Lance</i>&mdash;is lying off Paradise,
+between the light-house and the Ile de Groix,
+with steam up night and day, ready to receive the
+treasures of the government at the first alarm and
+run for the French possessions in Cochin-China.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And now, perhaps, you may guess why Buckhurst
+is so anxious to hang around Paradise.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Of course I was startled. Speed&#8217;s muttered information
+gave me the keys to many doors. And behind
+each door were millions and millions and millions of
+francs&#8217; worth of plunder.</p>
+<p>Our eyes met in mute interrogation; Speed smiled.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of course,&#8221; said I, with dry lips, &#8220;Buckhurst is
+devil enough to attempt anything.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_153' name='page_153'></a>153</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Especially if backed by Mornac,&#8221; said Speed.</p>
+<p>Suddenly the professional aspect of the case burst
+on me like a shower of glorious sunshine.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, for the chance!&#8221; I said, brokenly. &#8220;Speed!
+Think of it! Think how completely we have the thing
+in hand!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; he said, with a shrug, &#8220;only we have just
+been kicked out of the service in disgrace, and we are
+now going to be fully occupied in running away from
+the police.&#8221;</p>
+<p>That was true enough; I had scarcely had time to
+realize our position as escaped suspects of the department.
+And with the recognition of my plight came a
+rush of hopeless rage, of bitter regret, and soul-sickening
+disappointment.</p>
+<p>So this was the end of my career&mdash;a fugitive, disgraced,
+probably already hunted. This was my reward
+for faithful service&mdash;penniless, almost friendless,
+liable to arrest and imprisonment with no hope of justice
+from Emperor or court-martial&mdash;a banned, ruined,
+proscribed outcast, in blind flight.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve thought of the possibility of this,&#8221; observed
+Speed, quietly. &#8220;We&#8217;ve got to make a living somehow.
+In fact, I&#8217;m to let&mdash;and so are you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I looked at him, too miserable to speak.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I had an inkling of it,&#8221; he said. A shrewd twinkle
+came into his clear, Yankee eyes; he chewed his wrecked
+cigar and folded his lank arms.</p>
+<p>&#8220;So,&#8221; he continued, tranquilly, blinking at the
+sparkling river, &#8220;I drew out all my money&mdash;and
+yours, too.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mine!&#8221; I stammered. &#8220;How could you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Forged an order,&#8221; he admitted. &#8220;Can you forgive
+me, Scarlett?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Forgive you! Bless your generous heart!&#8221; I muttered,
+as he handed me a sealed packet.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_154' name='page_154'></a>154</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Not at all,&#8221; he said, laughing; &#8220;a crime in time
+saves nine&mdash;eh, Scarlett? Pocket it; it&#8217;s all there.
+Now listen. I have made arrangements of another
+kind. Do you remember an application for license
+from the manager of a travelling American show&mdash;a
+Yankee circus?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Byram&#8217;s Imperial American Circus?&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s it. They went through Normandy last
+summer. Well, Byram&#8217;s agent is going to meet us
+at Saint-Cloud. We&#8217;re engaged; I&#8217;m to do ballooning&mdash;you
+know I worked one of the military balloons
+before Petersburg. You are to do sensational riding.
+You were riding-master in the Spahis&mdash;were you
+not?&#8221;</p>
+<p>I looked at him, almost laughing. Suddenly the
+instinct of my vagabond days returned like a sweet
+wind from the wilds, smiting me full in the face.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I tamed three lions for my regiment at Constantine,&#8221;
+I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good lad! Then you can play with Byram&#8217;s lions,
+too. Oh, what the devil!&#8221; he cried, recklessly; &#8220;it&#8217;s
+all in a lifetime. Quand m&ecirc;me, and who cares? We&#8217;ve
+life before us and an honest living in view, and Byram
+has packed two of his men back to England and I&#8217;ve
+tinkered up their passports to suit us. So we&#8217;re reasonably
+secure.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Will you tell me, Speed, why you were wise enough
+to do all this while I was gone?&#8221; I asked, in astonishment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Because,&#8221; said Speed, deliberately, &#8220;I distrusted
+Mornac from the hour he entered the department.&#8221;</p>
+<p>A splendid officer of police was spoiled when Mornac
+entered the department.</p>
+<p>Presently the deck guard began to shout: &#8220;Saint-Cloud!
+Saint-Cloud!&#8221; and the little boat glided up
+alongside the floating pier. Speed rose; I followed him
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_155' name='page_155'></a>155</span>
+across the gang-plank; and, side by side, we climbed
+the embankment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you mean to say that Byram is going travelling
+about with his circus in spite of the war?&#8221; I whispered.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, indeed. We start south from Chartres to-morrow.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Presently I said: &#8220;Do you suppose we will go to
+Lorient or&mdash;Paradise?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We will if I have anything to say about it,&#8221; replied
+Speed, throwing away his ragged cigar.</p>
+<p>And I walked silently beside him, thinking of the
+young Countess and of Buckhurst.</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h3>PART SECOND</h3>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_159' name='page_159'></a>159</span>
+<a name='IX_THE_ROAD_TO_PARADISE' id='IX_THE_ROAD_TO_PARADISE'></a>
+<h2>IX</h2>
+<h3>THE ROAD TO PARADISE</h3>
+</div>
+<p>On the 3d of November Byram&#8217;s American Circus,
+travelling slowly overland toward the Spanish
+frontier, drew up for an hour&#8217;s rest at Quimperl&eacute;. I,
+however, as usual, prepared to ride forward to select a
+proper place for our night encampment, and to procure
+the necessary license.</p>
+<p>The dusty procession halted in the town square,
+which was crowded, and as I turned in my saddle I
+saw Byram stand up on the red-and-gold band-wagon
+and toss an armful of circulars and bills into the throng.</p>
+<p>The white bits of paper fluttered wide and disappeared
+in the sea of white Breton head-dresses; there was a
+rhythmic clatter of wooden shoes, an undulation of
+snowy coiffes, then a low murmur as the people slowly
+read the circulars aloud, their musical monotone accompanying
+the strident nasal voice of Byram, who
+stood on the tarnished band-wagon shouting his crowd
+around him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mossoors et madams! Ecooty see voo play! J&#8217;ai
+l&#8217;honnoor de vous presenter le ploo magnifique cirque&mdash;&#8221;
+And the invariable r&eacute;clame continued to the stereotyped
+finis; the clown bobbed up behind Byram and made
+his usual grimaces, and the band played &#8220;The Cork
+Leg.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The Bretons looked on in solemn astonishment:
+my comrade, Speed, languidly stood up on the elephant
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_160' name='page_160'></a>160</span>
+and informed the people that our circus was travelling
+to Lorient to fill a pressing engagement, and if we
+disappointed the good people of Lorient a riot would
+doubtless result, therefore it was not possible to give
+any performance before we reached Lorient&mdash;and the
+admission was only ten sous.</p>
+<p>Our clown then picked up the tatters of his threadbare
+comic speech. Speed, munching a stale sandwich,
+came strolling over to where I stood sponging
+out my horse&#8217;s mouth with cool water.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll ride into Paradise in full regalia, I suppose,&#8221;
+he observed, munching away reflectively; &#8220;it&#8217;s the
+cheapest r&eacute;clame.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I dashed a bucket of water over my horse&#8217;s legs.
+&#8220;You&#8217;d better look out for your elephant; those drunken
+Bretons are irritating him,&#8221; I said. &#8220;Mahouts are
+born, not made.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Speed turned; the elephant was squealing and thrusting
+out a prehensile trunk among the people. There
+would be trouble if any fool gave him tobacco.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hi!&#8221; cried Speed, &#8220;tobah! Let the mem-log alone!
+Ai! he&#8217;s snatched a coiffe! Drop it, Djebe! C&#8217;hast
+buhan! Don&#8217;t be afraid, mesdames; the elephant is
+not ugly! Chomit oll en ho trankilite!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The elephant appeared to understand the mixture
+of Hindu, French, and Breton&mdash;or perhaps it was the
+sight of the steel ankus that Speed flourished in his
+quality of mahout. The crowd pressed forward again,
+reassured by the &#8220;Chomit oll en ho trankilite!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Speed swallowed the last crumb of his sandwich,
+wiped his hands on his handkerchief, and shoved
+them into his shabby pockets; the ankus dangled from
+his wrist.</p>
+<p>We were in seedy circumstances; an endless chain of
+bad luck had followed us from Chartres&mdash;bad weather,
+torrents of rain, flooded roads, damaging delays on
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_161' name='page_161'></a>161</span>
+railways already overcrowded with troops and war
+material, and, above all, we encountered everywhere
+that ominous apathy which burdened the whole land,
+even those provinces most remote from the seat of war.
+The blockade of Paris had paralyzed France.</p>
+<p>The fortune that Byram had made in the previous
+year was already gone; we no longer travelled by rail;
+we no longer slept at inns; we could barely pay for
+the food for our animals.</p>
+<p>As for the employ&eacute;s, the list had been cut down below
+the margin of safety, yet for a month no salaries had
+been paid.</p>
+<p>As I stood there in the public square of Quimperl&eacute;,
+passing the cooling sponge over my horse&#8217;s nose, old
+Byram came out of the hotel on the corner, edged his
+way through the stolid crowd that surrounded us gaunt
+mountebanks, and shuffled up to me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I guess we ain&#8217;t goin&#8217; to push through to-night,
+Scarlett,&#8221; he observed, wiping his sweating forehead
+on the sleeve of his linen duster.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, governor, it&#8217;s too far,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll be all right, anyway,&#8221; added Speed; &#8220;there&#8217;s
+a change in the moon and this warm weather ought
+to hold, governor.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I dunno,&#8221; said Byram, with an abstracted glance
+at the crowd around the elephant.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Cheer up, governor,&#8221; I said, &#8220;we ought at least to
+pay expenses to the Spanish frontier. Once out of
+France we&#8217;ll find your luck again for you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mebbe,&#8221; he said, almost wearily.</p>
+<p>I glanced at Speed. This was the closest approach
+to a whine that we had heard from Byram. But the
+man had changed within a few days; his thin hair,
+brushed across his large, alert ears, was dusty and
+unkempt; hollows had formed under his shrewd eyes;
+his black broadcloth suit was as soiled as his linen,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_162' name='page_162'></a>162</span>
+his boots shabby, his silk hat suitable only for the
+stage property of our clown.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t ride too far,&#8221; said Byram, as I set foot to
+stirrup, &#8220;them band-wagon teams is most done up,
+an&#8217; that there camuel gits meaner every minute.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I wheeled my horse out into the road to Paradise,
+cursing the &#8220;camuel,&#8221; the bane of our wearied caravan.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Got enough cash for the license?&#8221; asked Byram,
+uneasily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Plenty, governor; don&#8217;t worry. Speed, don&#8217;t let
+him mope. We&#8217;ll be in Lorient this time to-morrow,&#8221;
+I called back, with a swagger of assumed cheerfulness.</p>
+<p>Speed stepped swiftly across the square and laid his
+hand on my stirrup.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What are you going to do if you see Buckhurst?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nothing.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Or the Countess?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I suppose you will go out of your way to find her
+if she&#8217;s in Paradise?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And tell her the truth about Buckhurst?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I expect to.&#8221;</p>
+<p>After a moment&#8217;s silence he said: &#8220;Don&#8217;t do anything
+until I see you to-night, will you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right,&#8221; I replied, and set my horse at a gallop
+over the old stone bridge.</p>
+<p>The highway to the sea which winds down through
+acres of yellow gorse and waving broom to the cliffs
+of Paradise is a breezy road, swept by the sweet winds
+that blow across Brittany from the C&ocirc;te d&#8217;Or to the
+Pyrenees.</p>
+<p>It is a land of sea-winds; and when in the still noontide
+of midsummer the winds are at play far out at
+sea, their traces remain in the furrowed wheat, in the
+incline of solitary trees, in the breezy trend of the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_163' name='page_163'></a>163</span>
+cliff-clover and the blackthorn and the league-wide sweep
+of the moorlands.</p>
+<p>And through this land whose inland perfume always
+savored the unseen sea I rode down to Paradise.</p>
+<p>It was not until I had galloped through the golden
+forest of Kerselec that I came in sight of the ocean, although
+among the sunbeams and the dropping showers
+of yellow beech-leaves I fancied I could hear the sound
+of the surf.</p>
+<p>And now I rode slowly, in full sight of the sea where
+it lay, an immense gray band across the world, touching
+a looming horizon, and in throat and nostril the
+salt stung sweetly, and the whole world seemed younger
+for the breath of the sea.</p>
+<p>From the purple mystery of the horizon to the landward
+cliffs the ocean appeared motionless; it was only
+when I had advanced almost to the cliffs that I saw the
+movement of waves&mdash;that I perceived the contrast between
+inland inertia and the restless repose of the
+sea, stirring ceaselessly since creation.</p>
+<p>The same little sparkling river I had crossed in
+Quimperl&eacute; I now saw again, spreading out a wide,
+flat current which broke into waves where it tumbled
+seaward across the bar; I heard the white-winged gulls
+mewing, the thunderous monotone of the surf, and a
+bell in some unseen chapel ringing sweetly.</p>
+<p>I passed a stone house, another; then the white road
+curved under the trees and I rode straight into the
+heart of Paradise, my horse&#8217;s hoofs awaking echoes
+in the silent, stone-paved square.</p>
+<p>Never had I so suddenly entered a place so peaceful,
+so quiet in the afternoon sun&mdash;yet the silence was not
+absolute, it was thrilling with exquisite sound, lost
+echoes of the river running along its quay of stone,
+half-heard harmonies of the ocean where white surf
+seethed over the sands beyond the headland.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_164' name='page_164'></a>164</span></p>
+<p>There was a fountain, too, dripping melodiously
+under the trees; I heard the breathless humming of a
+spinning-wheel from one of the low houses of gray
+stone which enclosed the square, and a young girl
+singing, and the drone of bees in a bed of resida.</p>
+<p>So this was Paradise! Truly the name did not seem
+amiss here, under the still vault of blue above; Paradise
+means peace to so many of us&mdash;surcease of care and
+sound and the brazen trample of nations&mdash;not the
+quiet of palace corridors or the tremendous silence of
+a cathedral, but the noiselessness of pleasant sounds,
+moving shadows of trees, wordless quietude, simplicity.</p>
+<p>A young girl with a face like the Madonna stole
+across the square in her felt shoes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Can you tell me where the mayor lives?&#8221; I asked,
+looking down at her from my horse.</p>
+<p>She raised her white-coiffed head with an innocent
+smile: &#8220;Eman&#8217; barz ar sal o leina.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you speak French?&#8221; I asked, appalled.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ho! ia; oui, monsieur, s&#8217;il faut bien. The mayor
+is at breakfast in his kitchen yonder.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thank you, my child.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I turned my horse across the shady square to a stone
+house banked up with bed on bed of scarlet geraniums.
+The windows were open; a fat man with very small
+eyes sat inside eating an omelet.</p>
+<p>He watched me dismount without apparent curiosity,
+and when I had tied my horse and walked in at the
+open door he looked at me over the rim of a glass of
+cider, and slowly finished his draught without blinking.
+Then he said, &#8220;Bonjour.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I told him that I wanted a license for the circus to
+camp for one night; that I also desired permission to
+pitch camp somewhere in the vicinity. He made out
+the license, stamped it, handed it to me, and I paid
+him the usual fee.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_165' name='page_165'></a>165</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve heard of circuses,&#8221; he said; &#8220;they&#8217;re like
+those shows at country fairs, I suppose.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes&mdash;in a way. We have animals.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What kind?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Lions, tigers&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve seen them.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;&mdash;a camel, an elephant&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Alive?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Certainly.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ma dou&eacute;!&#8221; he said, with slow emotion, &#8220;have you
+a live elephant?&#8221;</p>
+<p>I admitted that fact.</p>
+<p>Presently I said, &#8220;I hope the people of Paradise will
+come to the circus when we get to Lorient.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Eh? Not they,&#8221; said the mayor, wagging his
+head. &#8220;Do you think we have any money here in
+Paradise? And then,&#8221; he added, cunningly, &#8220;we
+can all see your elephant when your company arrives.
+Why should we pay to see him again? War does not
+make millionaires out of the poor.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I looked miserably around. It was quite true that
+people like these had no money to spend on strolling
+players. But we had to live somehow, and our animals
+could not exist on air, even well-salted air.</p>
+<p>&#8220;How much will it cost to have your town-crier announce
+the coming of the circus?&#8221; I inquired.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That will cost ten sous if he drums and reads the
+announcement from here to the ch&acirc;teau.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I gave the mayor ten copper pennies.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What ch&acirc;teau?&#8221; I asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dame, the ch&acirc;teau, monsieur.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh,&#8221; said I, &#8220;where the Countess lives?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The Countess? Yes, of course. Who else?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is the Countess there?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oui, dame, and others not to my taste.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I asked no more questions, but the mayor did, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_166' name='page_166'></a>166</span>
+when he found it might take some time to pump me,
+he invited me to share his omelet and cider and afterwards
+to sit in the sun among his geraniums and
+satisfy his curiosity concerning the life of a strolling
+player.</p>
+<p>I was glad of something to eat. After I had unsaddled
+my horse and led him to the mayor&#8217;s stable
+and had paid for hay and grain, I returned to sit in
+the mayor&#8217;s garden and sniff longingly at his tobacco
+smoke and answer his impertinent questions as good-naturedly
+as they were intended.</p>
+<p>But even the mayor of Paradise grew tired of asking
+questions in time; the bees droned among the flowers,
+the low murmur of the sea stole in on our ears, the
+river softly lapped the quay. The mayor slept.</p>
+<p>He was fat, very fat; his short, velvet jacket hung
+heavy with six rows of enormous silver buttons, his
+little, round hat was tilted over his nose. A silver
+buckle decorated it in front; behind, two little velvet
+ribbons fluttered in futile conflict with the rising sea-breeze.</p>
+<p>Men in embroidered knee-breeches, with bare feet
+thrust into straw-filled sabots, sat sunning on the quay
+under the purple fig-trees; one ragged fellow in soiled
+velvet bolero and embossed leggings lay in the sun,
+chin on fists, wooden shoes crossed behind him, watching
+the water with the eyes of a poacher.</p>
+<p>This mild, balmy November weather, this afterglow
+of summer which in my own country we call Indian
+summer, had started new blossoms among the climbing
+tea-roses, lovely orange-tinted blossoms, and some
+of a clear lemon color, and their fragrance filled the air.
+Nowhere do roses blow as they blow near the sea, nowhere
+have I breathed such perfume as I breathed that
+drowsy afternoon in Paradise, where in every door-yard
+thickets of clove-scented pinks carpeted the ground
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_167' name='page_167'></a>167</span>
+and tall spikes of snowy phlox glimmered silver-white
+in the demi-light.</p>
+<p>Where on earth could a more peaceful scene be found
+than in this sea-lulled land, here in the subdued light
+under aged, spreading oaks, where moss crept over the
+pavements and covered the little fountain as though
+it had been the stony brink of a limpid forest spring?</p>
+<p>The mayor woke up toward five o&#8217;clock and stared
+at me with owlish gravity as though daring me to say
+that he had been asleep.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Um&mdash;ah&mdash;ma fois oui!&#8221; he muttered, blowing his
+nose loudly in a purple silk bandanna. Then he
+shrugged his shoulders and added: &#8220;C&#8217;est la vie,
+monsieur. Que voulez-vous?&#8221;</p>
+<p>And it was one kind of life after all&mdash;a blessed release
+from the fever of that fierce farandole which we
+of the outer world call &#8220;life.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The mayor scratched his ear, yawned, stretched one
+leg, then the other, and glanced at me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Paris still holds out?&#8221; he asked, with another yawn.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh yes,&#8221; I replied.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And the war&mdash;is it still going badly for us?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;There is always hope,&#8221; I answered.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hope,&#8221; he grumbled; &#8220;oh yes, we know what hope
+is&mdash;we of the coast live on it when there&#8217;s no bread;
+but hope never yet filled my belly for me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Has the war touched you here in Paradise?&#8221; I asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Touched us? Ho! Say it has crushed us and
+I&#8217;ll strike palms with you. Why, not a keel has passed
+out of the port since August. Where is the fishing-fleet?
+Where are the sardine sloops that ought to have
+sailed from Algiers? Where are the Icelanders?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, where are they?&#8221; I suggested.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where? Ask the semaphore yonder. Where are
+our salt schooners for the Welsh coast? I don&#8217;t know.
+They have not sailed, that&#8217;s all I know. You do well
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_168' name='page_168'></a>168</span>
+to come with your circus and your elephant! You
+can peddle diamonds in the poor-house, too, if it suits
+your taste.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Have the German cruisers frightened all your craft
+from the sea?&#8221; I asked, astonished.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, partly. Then there&#8217;s an ugly French cruiser
+lying off Groix, yonder, and her black stacks are dribbling
+smoke all day and all night. We have orders
+to keep off and use Lorient when we want a port.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you know why the cruiser warns your fishing-boats
+from this coast?&#8221; I inquired.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; he said, shortly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you know the name of the cruiser?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;She's a new one, the <i>Fer-de-Lance</i>. And if I were
+not a patriot and a Breton I&#8217;d say: &#8216;May Sainte-Anne
+rot her where she lies; she&#8217;s brought a curse on the
+coast from Lorient to the Saint-Julien Light!&mdash;and the
+ghosts of the Icelanders will work her evil yet.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+<p>The mayor&#8217;s round, hairless face was red; he thumped
+the arm of his chair with pudgy fists and wagged his
+head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We have not seen the end of this,&#8221; he said&mdash;&#8220;oh
+no! There&#8217;s a curse coming on Paradise&mdash;the cruiser
+brought it, and it&#8217;s coming. H&eacute;! did a Bannalec man
+not hear the were-wolf in Kerselec forest a week since?
+Pst! Not a word, monsieur. But old Kloark, of Roscoff,
+heard it too&mdash;oui dame!&mdash;and he knows the howl
+of the Loup-Garou! Besides, did I not with my own
+eyes see a black cormorant fly inland from the sea?
+And, by Sainte-&Eacute;line of Paradise! the gulls squeal when
+there&#8217;s no storm brewing and the lan&ccedil;ons prick the dark
+with flames along the coast till you&#8217;d swear the witches
+of Ker-Is were lighting death-candles from Paradise
+to Pont-Aven.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you believe in witches, monsieur the mayor?&#8221;
+I asked, gravely.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_169' name='page_169'></a>169</span></p>
+<p>He gave me a shrewd glance. &#8220;Not at all&mdash;not even
+in bed and the light out,&#8221; he said, with a fat swagger.
+&#8220;<i>I</i> believe in magic? Ho! foi non! But many do.
+Oui dame! Many do.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Here in Paradise?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Parbleu! Men of parts, too, monsieur. Now there&#8217;s
+Terrec, who has the evil eye&mdash;not that I believe it, but,
+damn him, he&#8217;d better not try any tricks on me!</p>
+<p>&#8220;Others stick twigs of aub&eacute;pine in their pastures;
+the apothecary is a man of science, yet every year he
+makes a bonfire of dried gorse and drives his cattle
+through the smoke. It may keep off witches and lightning&mdash;or
+it may not. I myself do not do such things.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Still you believe the cruiser out at sea yonder is
+going to bring you evil?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;She has brought it. But it&#8217;s all the same to me.
+I am mayor, and exempt, and I have cider and tobacco
+and boudin for a few months yet.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He caressed his little, selfish chin, which hung between
+his mottled jowls, peered cunningly at me, and opened
+his mouth to say something, but at that moment we
+both caught sight of a peasant running and waving a
+packet of blue papers in the air. &#8220;Monsieur the mayor!
+Monsieur the mayor!&#8221; he called, while still far away.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Cr&eacute; cochon de malheur!&#8221; muttered the mayor, turning
+pale. &#8220;He&#8217;s got a telegram!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The man came clattering across the square in his
+wooden shoes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;A telegram,&#8221; repeated the mayor, wiping the sudden
+sweat from his forehead. &#8220;I never get telegrams. I
+don&#8217;t want telegrams!&#8221;</p>
+<p>He turned to me, almost bursting with suppressed
+prophecy.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It has come&mdash;the evil that the black cruiser brings
+us! You laughed! Tenez, monsieur; there&#8217;s your
+bad luck in these blue morsels of paper!&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_170' name='page_170'></a>170</span></p>
+<p>And he snatched the telegram from the breathless
+messenger, reading it with dilating eyes.</p>
+<p>For a long while he sat there studying the telegram,
+his fat forefinger following the scrawl, a crease deepening
+above his eyebrows, and all the while his lips moved
+in noiseless repetition of the words he spelled with difficulty
+and his labored breathing grew louder.</p>
+<p>When at length the magistrate had mastered the contents
+of his telegram, he looked up with a stupid stare.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I want my drummer. Where&#8217;s the town-crier?&#8221;
+he demanded, as though dazed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He has gone to Lorient, m&#8217;sieu the mayor,&#8221; ventured
+the messenger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;To get drunk. I remember. Imbecile! Why did
+he go to-day? Are there not six other days in this
+cursed week? Who is there to drum? Nobody. Nobody
+knows how in Paradise. Seigneur, Dieu! the
+ignorance of this town!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;M&#8217;sieu the mayor,&#8221; ventured the messenger,
+&#8220;there&#8217;s Jacqueline.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ho! Vrai. The Lizard&#8217;s young one! She can
+drum, they say. She stole my drum once. Why did
+she steal it but to drum upon it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The little witch can drum them awake in Ker-Is,&#8221;
+muttered the messenger.</p>
+<p>The mayor rose, looked around the square, frowned.
+Then he raised his voice in a bellow: &#8220;Jacqueline!
+Jacqueline! <i>Thou</i> Jacqueline!&#8221;</p>
+<p>A far voice answered, faintly breaking across the
+square from the bridge: &#8220;She is on the rocks with her
+sea-rake!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The mayor thrust the blue telegram into his pocket
+and waddled out of his garden, across the square, and
+up the path to the cliffs.</p>
+<p>Uninvited, I went with him.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_171' name='page_171'></a>171</span>
+<a name='X_THE_TOWNCRIER' id='X_THE_TOWNCRIER'></a>
+<h2>X</h2>
+<h3>THE TOWN-CRIER</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The bell in the unseen chapel ceased ringing as
+we came out on the cliffs of Paradise, where, on
+the horizon, the sun hung low, belted with a single
+ribbon of violet cloud.</p>
+<p>Over acres of foaming shoals the crimson light flickered
+and spread, painting the eastern cliffs with sombre
+fire. The ebb-tide, red as blood, tumbled seaward
+across the bar, leaving every ledge a glowing cinder
+under the widening conflagration in the west.</p>
+<p>The mayor carried his silver-buttoned jacket over
+his arm; the air had grown sultry. As we walked our
+gigantic shadows strode away before us across the
+kindling stubble, seeming to lengthen at every stride.</p>
+<p>Below the cliffs, on a crescent of flat sand, from which
+sluggish, rosy rivulets crawled seaward, a man stood
+looking out across the water. And the mayor stopped
+and called down to him: &#8220;Oh&eacute;, the Lizard! What do
+you see on the ocean&mdash;you below?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I see six war-ships speeding fast in column,&#8221; replied
+the man, without looking up.</p>
+<p>The mayor hastily shaded his eyes with one fat hand,
+muttering: &#8220;All poachers have eyes like sea-hawks.
+There is a smudge of smoke to the north. Holy Virgin,
+what eyes the rascal has!&#8221;</p>
+<p>As for me, strain my eyes as I would, I saw nothing
+save the faintest stain of smoke on the horizon.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_172' name='page_172'></a>172</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;H&eacute;, Lizard! Are they German, your six war-ships?&#8221;
+bawled the mayor. His voice had suddenly
+become tremulous.</p>
+<p>&#8220;They are French,&#8221; replied the poacher, tranquilly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then Sainte-&Eacute;line keep them from the rocks!&#8221;
+sang out the mayor. &#8220;Oh&eacute;, Lizard, I want somebody to
+drum and read a proclamation. Where&#8217;s Jacqueline?&#8221;</p>
+<p>At that instant a young girl, a mere child, appeared
+on the beach, dragging a sea-rake over the ground
+behind her. She was a lithe creature, bare-limbed
+and ragged, with the sea-tan on throat and knee. The
+blue tatters of her skirt hung heavy with brine; the
+creamy skin on her arms glittered with wet spray, and
+her hair was wet, too, clustering across her cheeks in
+damp elf-locks.</p>
+<p>The mayor glanced at her with that stolid contempt
+which Finist&egrave;re Bretons cherish toward those women
+who show their hair&mdash;an immodesty unpardonable in
+the eyes of most Bretons.</p>
+<p>The girl caught sight of the mayor and gave him a
+laughing greeting which he returned with a shrug.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you want a town-crier,&#8221; she called up, in a deliciously
+fresh voice, scarcely tinged with the accent,
+&#8220;I&#8217;ll cry your edicts and I&#8217;ll drum for you, too!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Can your daughter beat the drum?&#8221; asked the
+mayor of the poacher, ignoring the girl&#8217;s eager face
+upturned.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said the poacher, indifferently, &#8220;and she can
+also beat the devil with two sticks.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The girl threw her rake into a boat and leaped upon
+the rocks at the base of the cliff.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Jacqueline! Don&#8217;t come up that way!&#8221; bawled
+the mayor, horrified. &#8220;Hey! Robert! Oh&eacute;! Lizard!
+Stop her or she&#8217;ll break her neck!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The poacher looked up at his daughter then shrugged
+his shoulders and squatted down on his ragged
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_173' name='page_173'></a>173</span>
+haunches, restless eyes searching the level ocean, as
+sea-birds search.</p>
+<p>Breathless, hot, and laughing, the girl pulled herself
+up over the edge of the cliff. I held out my hand to aid
+her, but she pushed it away, crying, &#8220;Thank you all
+the same, but here I am!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Spawn of the Lizard,&#8221; I heard the mayor mutter
+to himself, &#8220;like a snake you wriggle where honest
+folk fall to destruction!&#8221; But he spoke condescendingly
+to the bright-eyed, breathless child. &#8220;I&#8217;ll pay six
+sous if you&#8217;ll drum for me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll do it for love,&#8221; she said, saucily&mdash;&#8220;for the love
+of drumming, not for your beaux yeux, m&#8217;sieu le maire.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The mayor looked at her angrily, but, probably remembering
+he was at her mercy, suppressed his wrath
+and held out the telegram. &#8220;Can you read that, my
+child?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The girl, still breathing rapidly from her scramble,
+rested her hands on her hips and, head on one side,
+studied the blue sheets of the telegram over the mayor&#8217;s
+outstretched arm.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I can read it. Why not? Can&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Read? I the mayor of Paradise!&#8221; repeated the
+outraged magistrate. &#8220;What do you mean, lizard of
+lizards! gorse cat!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now if you are going to say such things I won&#8217;t
+drum for you,&#8221; said the child, glancing at me out of
+her sea-blue eyes and giving a shake to her elf-locks.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, you will!&#8221; bawled the angry mayor. &#8220;Shame
+on your manners, Jacqueline Garenne! Shame on your
+hair hanging where all the world can see it! Shame on
+your bare legs&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not at all,&#8221; said the child, unabashed. &#8220;God made
+my legs, m&#8217;sieu the mayor, and my hair, too. If my
+coiffe does not cover my hair, neither does the small
+Paris hat of the Countess de Vassart cover her hair.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_174' name='page_174'></a>174</span>
+Complain of the Countess to m&#8217;sieu the cur&eacute;, then I
+will listen to you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The mayor glared at her, but she tossed her head and
+laughed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ho fois! Everybody knows what you are,&#8221; sniffed
+the mayor&mdash;&#8220;and nobody cares, either,&#8221; he muttered,
+waddling past me, telegram in hand.</p>
+<p>The child, quite unconcerned, fell into step beside
+me, saying, confidentially: &#8220;When I was little I used
+to cry when they talked to me like that. But I don&#8217;t
+now; I&#8217;ve made up my mind that they are no better
+than I.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know why anybody should abuse you,&#8221;
+I said, loudly enough for the mayor to hear. But that
+functionary waddled on, puffing, muttering, stopping
+every now and then in the narrow cliff-path to strike
+flint to tinder or to refill the tiny bowl of his pipe, which
+a dozen puffs always exhausted.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, they all abuse us,&#8221; said the child, serenely.
+&#8220;You see, you are a stranger and don&#8217;t understand;
+but you will if you live here.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why is everybody unkind to you?&#8221; I asked, after
+a moment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why? Oh, because I am what I am and my father
+is the Lizard.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A poacher?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ah,&#8221; she said, looking up at me with delicious
+malice, &#8220;what is a poacher, monsieur?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sometimes he&#8217;s a fine fellow gone wrong,&#8221; I said,
+laughing. &#8220;So I don&#8217;t believe any ill of your father,
+or of you, either. Will you drum for me, Jacqueline?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;For you, monsieur? Why, yes. What am I to read
+for you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>I gave her a hand-bill; at the first glance her eyes
+sparkled, the color deepened under her coat of amber
+tan; she caught her breath and read rapidly to the end.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_175' name='page_175'></a>175</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, how beautiful,&#8221; she said, softly. &#8220;Am I to
+read this in the square?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I will give you a franc to read it, Jacqueline.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, no&mdash;only&mdash;oh, do let me come in and see the
+heavenly wonders! Would you, monsieur? I&mdash;I cannot
+pay&mdash;but would&mdash;<i>could</i> you let me come in? I
+will read your notice, anyway,&#8221; she added, with a
+quaver in her voice.</p>
+<p>The flushed face, the eager, upturned eyes, deep blue
+as the sea, the little hands clutching the show-bill,
+which fairly quivered between the tanned fingers&mdash;all
+these touched and amused me. The child was mad
+with excitement.</p>
+<p>What she anticipated, Heaven only knows. Shabby
+and tarnished as we were, the language of our hand-bills
+made up in gaudiness for the dingy reality.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come whenever you like, Jacqueline,&#8221; I said.
+&#8220;Ask for me at the gate.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And who are you, monsieur?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;My name is Scarlett.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Scarlett,&#8221; she whispered, as though naming a sacred
+thing.</p>
+<p>The mayor, who had toddled some distance ahead of
+us, now halted in the square, looking back at us through
+the red evening light.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Jacqueline, the drum is in my house. I&#8217;ll lend you
+a pair of sabots, too. Come, hasten little idler!&#8221;</p>
+<p>We entered the mayor&#8217;s garden, where the flowers
+were glowing in the lustre of the setting sun. I sat
+down in a chair; Jacqueline waited, hands resting on
+her hips, small, shapely toes restlessly brushing the
+grass.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Truly this coming wonder-show will be a peep into
+paradise,&#8221; she murmured. &#8220;Can all be true&mdash;really
+true as it is printed here in this bill&mdash;I wonder&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>Before she had time to speculate further, the mayor
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_176' name='page_176'></a>176</span>
+reappeared with drum and drum-sticks in one hand
+and a pair of sabots in the other. He flung the sabots
+on the grass, and Jacqueline, quite docile now, slipped
+both bare feet into them.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You may keep them,&#8221; said the mayor, puffing out
+his mottled cheeks benevolently; &#8220;decency must be
+maintained in Paradise, even if it beggars me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thank you,&#8221; said Jacqueline, sweetly, slinging the
+drum across her hip and tightening the cords. She
+clicked the ebony sticks, touched the tightly drawn
+parchment, sounding it with delicate fingers, then looked
+up at the mayor for further orders.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Go, my child,&#8221; said the mayor, amiably, and
+Jacqueline marched through the garden out into the
+square by the fountain, drum-sticks clutched in one
+tanned fist, the scrolls of paper in the other.</p>
+<p>In the centre of the square she stood a moment, looking
+around, then raised the drum-sticks; there came
+a click, a flash of metal, and the quiet square echoed
+with the startling outcrash. Back from roof and
+wall bounded the echoes; the stony pavement rang
+with the racket. Already a knot of people had gathered
+around her; others came swiftly to windows and doorsteps;
+the loungers left their stone benches by the river,
+the maids of Paradise flocked from the bridge. Even
+Robert the Lizard drew in his dripping line to listen.
+The drum-roll ceased.</p>
+<p>&#8220;<i>Attention! Men of Finist&egrave;re!</i> By order of the governor
+of Lorient, all men between the ages of twenty
+and forty, otherwise not exempt, are ordered to report
+at the navy-yard barracks, war-port of Lorient, on the
+5th of November of the present year, to join the army
+of the Loire.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Whosoever is absent at roll-call will be liable
+to the punishment provided for such delinquents
+under the laws governing the state of siege now
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_177' name='page_177'></a>177</span>
+declared in Morbihan and Finist&egrave;re. <i>Citizens, to
+arms!</i></p>
+<p>&#8220;The enemy is on the march! Though Metz has
+fallen through treachery, Paris holds firm! Let the
+provinces rise and hurl the invader from the soil of the
+mother-land!</p>
+<p>&#8220;<i>Bretons!</i> France calls! Answer with your ancient
+battle-cry, &#8216;Sainte-Anne! Sainte-Anne!&#8217; The eyes of
+the world are on Armorica! <i>To arms!</i>&#8221;</p>
+<p>The girl&#8217;s voice ceased; a dead silence reigned in the
+square. The men looked at one another stupidly; a
+woman began to whimper.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The curse is on Paradise!&#8221; cried a hoarse voice.</p>
+<p>The drummer was already drawing another paper
+from her ragged pocket, and again in the same clear,
+emotionless voice, but slightly drawling her words, she
+read:</p>
+<p>&#8220;To the good people of Paradise! The manager of
+the famous American travelling circus, lately returned
+from a tour of the northern provinces, with camels,
+elephants, lions, and a magnificent company of artists,
+announces a stupendous exhibition to be held in Lorient
+at greatly reduced prices, thus enabling the intelligent
+and appreciative people of Paradise to honor the Republican
+Circus, recently known as the Imperial Circus, with
+their benevolent and discerning patronage! Long live
+France! Long live the Republic! Long live the Circus!&#8221;</p>
+<p>A resounding roll of the drum ended the announcements;
+the girl slung the drum over her shoulder, turned
+to the right, and passed over the stone bridge, sabots
+clicking. Presently from the hamlet of Alincourt over
+the stream came the dull roll of the drum again and
+the faint, clear voice:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Attention! Men of Finist&egrave;re! By order of the
+governor of Lorient, all men&mdash;&#8221; The wind changed
+and her voice died away among the trees.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_178' name='page_178'></a>178</span></p>
+<p>The maids of Paradise were weeping now by the
+fountain; the men gathered near, and their slow,
+hushed voices scarcely rose above the ripple of the
+stream where Robert the Lizard fished in silence.</p>
+<p>It was after sunset before Jacqueline finished her
+rounds. She had read her proclamation in Alincourt
+hamlet, she had read it in Sainte-Ysole, her drum had
+aroused the inert loungers on the breakwater at Trinit&eacute;-on-Sea.
+Now, with her drum on her shoulder and
+her sabots swinging in her left hand, she came down
+the cliffs beside the Chapel of Our Lady of Paradise,
+excited and expectant.</p>
+<p>Of the first proclamation which she had read she
+apparently understood little. When she announced
+the great disaster at Metz in the north, and when her
+passionless young voice proclaimed the lev&eacute;e en masse&mdash;the
+call to arms for the men of the coast from Sainte-Ysole
+to Trinit&eacute; Beacon&mdash;she scarcely seemed to realize
+what it meant, although all around her women turned
+away sobbing, or clung, deathly white, to sons and
+husbands.</p>
+<p>But there was certainly something in the other proclamation
+which thrilled her and set her heart galloping
+as she loitered on the cliff.</p>
+<p>I walked across to the Quimperl&eacute; road and met
+her, dancing along with her drum; and she promptly
+confided her longings and desires to me as we stood
+together for an instant on the high-road. The circus!
+Once, it appeared, she had seen&mdash;very far off&mdash;a glittering
+creature turning on a trapeze. It was at the
+fair near Bannalec, and it was so long ago that she
+scarcely remembered anything except that somebody
+had pulled her away while she stood enchanted, and
+the flashing light of fairyland had been forever shut
+from her eyes.</p>
+<p>At times, when the maids of Paradise were sociable
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_179' name='page_179'></a>179</span>
+at the well in the square, she had listened to stories of
+the splendid circus which came once to Lorient. And
+now it was coming again!</p>
+<p>We stood in the middle of the high-road looking
+through the dust haze, she doubtless dreaming of the
+splendors to come, I very, very tired. The curtain of
+golden dust reddened in the west; the afterglow lit up
+the sky once more with brilliant little clouds suspended
+from mid-zenith. The moorland wind rose and tossed
+her elf-locks in her eyes and whipped her skirt till the
+rags fluttered above her smooth, bare knees.</p>
+<p>Suddenly, straight out of the flaming gates of the
+sunset, the miracle was wrought. Celestial shapes in
+gold and purple rose up in the gilded dust, chariots of
+silver, milk-white horses plumed with fire.</p>
+<p>Breathless, she shrank back among the weeds, one
+hand pressed to her throbbing throat. But the vision
+grew as she stared; there was heavenly music, too, and
+the clank of metal chains, and the smothered pounding
+of hoofs. Then she caught sight of something through
+the dust that filled her with a delicious terror, and she
+cried out. For there, uptowering in the haze, came
+trudging a great, gray creature, a fearsome, swaying
+thing in crimson trappings, flapping huge ears. It
+shuffled past, swinging a dusty trunk; the sparkling
+horsemen cantered by, tin armor blazing in the fading
+glory; the chariots dragged after, and the closed dens
+of beasts rolled behind in single file, followed by the
+band-wagon, where Heaven-inspired musicians played
+frantically and a white-faced clown balanced his hat
+on a stick and shrieked.</p>
+<p>So the circus passed into Paradise; and I turned and
+followed in the wake of dust, stale odors, and clamorous
+discord, sick at heart of wandering over a world
+I had not found too kind.</p>
+<p>And at my heels stole Jacqueline.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_180' name='page_180'></a>180</span>
+<a name='XI_IN_CAMP' id='XI_IN_CAMP'></a>
+<h2>XI</h2>
+<h3>IN CAMP</h3>
+</div>
+<p>We went into camp under the landward glacis of
+the cliffs, in a field of clover which was to be
+ploughed under in a few days. We all were there except
+Kelly Eyre, who had gone to telegraph the governor
+of Lorient for permission to enter the port with
+the circus. Another messenger also left camp on private
+business for me.</p>
+<p>It was part of my duty to ration the hay for the elephant
+and the thrice-accursed camel. The latter had
+just bitten Mr. Grigg, our clown&mdash;not severely&mdash;and
+Speed and Horan the &#8220;Strong Man&#8221; were hobbling the
+brute as I finished feeding my lions and came up to
+assist the others.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Watch that darn elephant, too, Mr. Grigg,&#8221; said
+Byram, looking up from a plate of fried ham that Miss
+Crystal, our &#8220;Trapeze Lady,&#8221; had just cooked for him
+over our gypsy fires of driftwood.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Look at that elephant! Look at him!&#8221; continued
+Byram, with a trace of animation lighting up his careworn
+face&mdash;&#8220;look at him now chuckin&#8217; hay over his
+back. Scrape it up, Mr. Scarlett; hay&#8217;s thirty a ton
+in this war-starved country.&#8221;</p>
+<p>As I started to clean up the precious hay, the elephant
+gave a curious grunt and swung his trunk toward
+me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s somethin&#8217; paltry about that elephant,&#8221; said
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_181' name='page_181'></a>181</span>
+Byram, in a complaining voice, rising, with plate of
+ham in one hand, fork in the other. &#8220;He&#8217;s gittin&#8217; as
+mean as that crafty camuel. Make him move, Mr.
+Speed, or he&#8217;ll put his foot on the trombone.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;H&ocirc; Djebe! M&acirc;il!&#8221; said Speed, sharply.</p>
+<p>The elephant obediently shuffled forward; Byram
+sat down again, and wearily cut himself a bit of fried
+ham; and presently we were all sitting around the long
+camp-table in the glare of two smoky petroleum torches,
+eating our bread and ham and potatoes and drinking
+Breton cider, a jug of which Mr. Horan had purchased
+for a few coppers.</p>
+<p>Some among us were too tired to eat, many too tired
+for conversation, yet, from habit we fell into small talk
+concerning the circus, the animals, the prospects of better
+days.</p>
+<p>The ladies of the company, whatever quarrels they
+indulged in among themselves, stood loyally by Byram
+in his anxiety and need. Miss Crystal and Miss Delany
+displayed edifying optimism; Mrs. Horan refrained
+from nagging; Mrs. Grigg, a pretty little creature, who
+was one of the best equestriennes I ever saw, declared
+that we were living too well and that a little dieting
+wouldn&#8217;t hurt anybody.</p>
+<p>McCadger, our band-master, came over from the other
+fire to say that the men had finished grooming the
+horses, and would I inspect the picket-line, as Kelly
+Eyre was still absent.</p>
+<p>When I returned, the ladies had retired to their
+blankets under their shelter-tent; poor little Grigg lay
+asleep at the table, his tired, ugly head resting among
+the unwashed tin plates; Speed sprawled in his chair,
+smoking a short pipe; Byram sat all hunched up, his
+head sunk, eyes vacantly following the movements
+of two men who were washing dishes in the flickering
+torch-light.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_182' name='page_182'></a>182</span></p>
+<p>He looked up at me, saying: &#8220;I guess Mr. Speed is
+right. Them lions o&#8217; yourn is fed too much horse-meat.
+Overeatin&#8217; is overheatin&#8217;; we&#8217;ve got to give &#8217;em
+beef or they&#8217;ll be clawin&#8217; you. Yes, sir, they&#8217;re all het
+up. Hear &#8217;em growl!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s a fable, governor,&#8221; I said, smiling and dropping
+into a chair. &#8220;I&#8217;ve heard that theory before, but
+it isn&#8217;t true.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The trouble with your lions is that you play with
+them too much and they&#8217;re losing respect for you,&#8221;
+said Speed, drowsily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The trouble with my lions,&#8221; said I, &#8220;is that they
+were born in captivity. Give me a wild lion, caught
+on his native heath, and I&#8217;ll know what to expect from
+him when I tame him. But no man on earth can tell
+what a lion born in captivity will do.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The hard cider had cheered Byram a little; he drew
+a cherished cigar from his vest-pocket, offered it to me,
+and when I considerately refused, he carefully set it
+alight with a splinter from the fire. Its odor was indescribable.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Luck&#8217;s a curious phenomena, ain&#8217;t it, Mr. Scarlett?&#8221;
+he said.</p>
+<p>I agreed with him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Luck,&#8221; continued Byram, waving his cigar toward
+the four quarters of the globe, &#8220;is the rich man&#8217;s slave
+an&#8217; the poor man&#8217;s tyrant. It&#8217;s also a see-saw. When
+the devil plays in luck the cherubim git spanked&mdash;or
+words to that effec&#8217;&mdash;not meanin&#8217; no profanity.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s about like that, governor,&#8221; admitted Speed,
+lazily.</p>
+<p>Byram leaned back and sucked meditatively at his
+cigar. The new moon was just rising over the elephant&#8217;s
+hindquarters, and the poetry of the incident
+appeared to move the manager profoundly. He turned
+and surveyed the dim bivouac, the two silent tents, the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_183' name='page_183'></a>183</span>
+monstrous, shadowy bulk of the elephant, rocking
+monotonously against the sky. &#8220;Kind of Silurian
+an&#8217; solemn, ain&#8217;t it,&#8221; he murmured, &#8220;the moon shinin&#8217;
+onto the rump of that primeval pachyderm. It&#8217;s like
+the dark ages of the behemoth an&#8217; the cony. I tell
+you, gentlemen, when them fearsome an&#8217; gigantic
+mamuels was aboundin&#8217; in the dawn of creation, the
+public missed the greatest show on earth&mdash;by a few
+million years!&#8221;</p>
+<p>We nodded sleepily but gravely.</p>
+<p>Byram appeared to have recovered something of his
+buoyancy and native optimism.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Gentlemen,&#8221; he said, &#8220;let&#8217;s kinder saunter over to
+the inn and have a night-cap with Kelly Eyre.&#8221;</p>
+<p>This unusual and expensive suggestion startled us
+wide awake, but we were only too glad to acquiesce in
+anything which tended to raise his spirits or ours.
+Dog tired but smiling we rose; Byram, in his shirt-sleeves
+and suspenders, wearing his silk hat on the
+back of his head, led the way, fanning his perspiring
+face with a red-and-yellow bandanna.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Luck,&#8221; said Byram, waving his cigar toward the
+new moon, &#8220;is bound to turn one way or t&#8217;other&mdash;like
+my camuel. Sometimes, resemblin&#8217; the camuel, luck
+will turn on you. Look out it don&#8217;t bite you. I once
+made up a piece about luck:</p>
+<table style='margin: auto' summary=''><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;&#8216;Don&#8217;t&nbsp;buck<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;Bad&nbsp;luck<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;Or&nbsp;you&#8217;ll&nbsp;get&nbsp;stuck&mdash;&#8217;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>I disremember the rest, but it went on to say a few
+other words to that effec&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The lighted door of the inn hung ajar as we crossed
+the star-lit square; Byram entered and stood a moment
+in the doorway, stroking his chin. &#8220;Bong joor the
+company!&#8221; he said, lifting his battered hat.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_184' name='page_184'></a>184</span></p>
+<p>The few Bretons in the wine-room returned his
+civility; he glanced about and his eye fell on Kelly
+Eyre, Speed&#8217;s assistant balloonist, seated by the window
+with Horan.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, gents,&#8221; said Byram, hopefully, &#8220;an&#8217; what aire
+the prospects of smilin&#8217; fortune when rosy-fingered
+dawn has came again to kiss us back to life?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Rotten,&#8221; said Eyre, pushing a telegram across the
+oak table.</p>
+<p>Byram&#8217;s face fell; he picked up the telegram and
+fumbled in his coat for his spectacles with unsteady
+hand.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let me read it, governor,&#8221; said Speed, and took the
+blue paper from Byram&#8217;s unresisting, stubby fingers.</p>
+<p>&#8220;O-ho!&#8221; he muttered, scanning the message; &#8220;well&mdash;well,
+it&#8217;s not so bad as all that&mdash;&#8221; He turned abruptly
+on Kelly Eyre&mdash;&#8220;What the devil are you scaring the
+governor for?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, he&#8217;s got to be told&mdash;I didn&#8217;t mean to worry
+him,&#8221; said Eyre, stammering, ashamed of his thoughtlessness.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now see here, governor,&#8221; said Speed, &#8220;let&#8217;s all
+have a drink first. H&eacute; ma belle!&#8221;&mdash;to the big Breton
+girl knitting in the corner&mdash;&#8220;four little swallows of
+eau-de-vie, if you please! Ah, thank you, I knew you
+were from Bannalec, where all the girls are as clever
+as they are pretty! Come, governor, touch glasses!
+There is no circus but the circus, and Byram is it&#8217;s
+prophet! Drink, gentlemen!&#8221;</p>
+<p>But his forced gayety was ominous; we scarcely
+tasted the liqueur. Byram wiped his brow and squared
+his bent shoulders. Speed, elbows on the table, sat
+musing and twirling his half-empty glass.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, sir?&#8221; said Byram, in a low voice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, governor? Oh&mdash;er&mdash;the telegram?&#8221; asked
+Speed, like a man fighting for time.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_185' name='page_185'></a>185</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, the telegram,&#8221; said Byram, patiently.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, you see they have just heard of the terrible
+smash-up in the north, governor. Metz has surrendered
+with Bazaine&#8217;s entire army. And they&#8217;re naturally
+frightened at Lorient.... And I rather fear that
+the Germans are on their way toward the coast.... And ... well ... they
+won&#8217;t let us pass the Lorient
+fortifications.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Won&#8217;t let us in?&#8221; cried Byram, hoarsely.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m afraid not, governor.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Byram stared at us. We had counted on Lorient to
+pull us through as far as the frontier.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now don&#8217;t take it so hard, governor,&#8221; said Kelly
+Eyre; &#8220;I was frightened myself, at first, but I&#8217;m
+ashamed of it now. We&#8217;ll pull through, anyhow.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Certainly,&#8221; said Speed, cheerily, &#8220;we&#8217;ll just lay up
+here for a few days and economize. Why can&#8217;t we try
+one performance here, Scarlett?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We can,&#8221; said I. &#8220;We&#8217;ll drum up the whole district
+from Pontivy to Auray and from Penmarch Point to
+Plouharnel! Why should the Breton peasantry not
+come? Don&#8217;t they walk miles to the Pardons?&#8221;</p>
+<p>A gray pallor settled on Byram&#8217;s sunken face; with
+it came a certain dignity which sorrow sometimes
+brings even to men like him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Young gentlemen,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I&#8217;m obliged to you.
+These here reverses come to everybody, I guess. The
+Lord knows best; but if He&#8217;ll just lemme run my show
+a leetle longer, I&#8217;ll pay my debts an&#8217; say, &#8216;Thy will be
+done, amen!&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We all must learn to say that, anyway,&#8221; said
+Speed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mebbe,&#8221; muttered Byram, &#8220;but I must pay my
+debts.&#8221;</p>
+<p>After a painful silence he rose, steadying himself
+with his hand on Eyre&#8217;s broad shoulder, and shambled
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_186' name='page_186'></a>186</span>
+out across the square, muttering something about his
+elephant and his camuel.</p>
+<p>Speed paid the insignificant bill, emptied his glass,
+and nodded at me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s all up,&#8221; he said, soberly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let&#8217;s come back to camp and talk it over,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>Together we traversed the square under the stars,
+and entered the field of clover. In the dim, smoky
+camp all lights were out except one oil-drenched torch
+stuck in the ground between the two tents. Byram
+had gone to rest, so had Kelly Eyre. But my lions
+were awake, moving noiselessly to and fro, eyes shining
+in the dusk; and the elephant, a shapeless pile of
+shadow against the sky, stood watching us with little,
+evil eyes.</p>
+<p>Speed had some cigarettes, and he laid the pink
+package on the table. I lighted one when he did.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you really think there&#8217;s a chance?&#8221; he asked,
+presently.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, we can try.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Speed dropped his elbows on the table. &#8220;Poor old
+governor,&#8221; he said.</p>
+<p>Then he began to talk of our own prospects, which
+were certainly obscure if not alarming; but he soon
+gave up speculation as futile, and grew reminiscent,
+recalling our first acquaintance as discharged soldiers
+from the African battalions, our hand-to-mouth existence
+as gentlemen farmers in Algiers, our bankruptcy
+and desperate struggle in Marseilles, first as dock-workmen,
+then as government horse-buyers for the
+cavalry, then as employ&eacute;s of the Hippodrome in Paris,
+where I finally settled down as bareback rider, lion-tamer,
+and instructor in the haute-&eacute;cole; and he accepted
+a salary as aid to Monsieur Gaston Tissandier, the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_187' name='page_187'></a>187</span>
+scientist, who was experimenting with balloons at Saint-Cloud.</p>
+<p>He spoke, too, of our enlistment in the Imperial Police,
+and the hopes we had of advancement, which not
+only brought no response from me, but left us both
+brooding sullenly on our wrongs, crouched there over
+the rough camp-table under the stars.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, hell!&#8221; muttered Speed, &#8220;I&#8217;m going to bed.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But he did not move. Presently he said, &#8220;How did
+you ever come to handle wild animals?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve always been fond of animals; I broke colts
+at home; I had bear cubs and other things. Then, in
+Algiers, the regiment caught a couple of lions and kept
+them in a cage, and&mdash;well, I found I could do what I
+liked with them.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;They&#8217;re afraid of your eyes, aren&#8217;t they?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know&mdash;perhaps it&#8217;s that; I can&#8217;t explain it&mdash;or,
+rather, I could partly explain it by saying that I
+am not afraid of them. But I never trust them.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You drag them all around the cage! You shove
+them about like sacks of meal!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,... but I don&#8217;t trust them.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It seems to me,&#8221; said Speed, &#8220;that your lions are
+getting rather impudent these days. They&#8217;re not very
+much afraid of you now.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nor I of them,&#8221; I said, wearily; &#8220;I&#8217;m much more
+anxious about you when you go sailing about in that
+patched balloon of yours. Are you never nervous?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nervous? When?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;When you&#8217;re up there?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Rubbish.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Suppose the patches give way?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I never think of that,&#8221; he said, leaning on the table
+with a yawn. &#8220;Oh, Lord, how tired I am!... but I
+shall not be able to sleep. I&#8217;m actually too tired to
+sleep. Have you got a pack of cards, Scarlett? or a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_188' name='page_188'></a>188</span>
+decent cigar, or a glass of anything, or anything to
+show me more amusing than that nightmare of an
+elephant? Oh, I&#8217;m sick of the whole business&mdash;sick!
+sick! The stench of the tan-bark never leaves my
+nostrils except when the odor of fried ham or of that
+devilish camel replaces it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m too old to enjoy a gypsy drama when it&#8217;s acted
+by myself; I&#8217;m tired of trudging through the world
+with my entire estate in my pocket. I want a home,
+Scarlett. Lord, how I envy people with homes!&#8221;</p>
+<p>He had been indulging in this outburst with his back
+partly turned toward me. I did not say anything, and,
+after a moment, he looked at me over his shoulder to
+see how I took it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d like to have a home, too,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I suppose homes are not meant for men like you and
+me,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Lord, how I would appreciate one,
+though&mdash;anything with a bit of grass in the yard
+and a shovelful of dirt&mdash;enough to grow some damn
+flower, you know.... Did you smell the posies in
+the square to-night?... Something of that kind,... anything,
+Scarlett&mdash;anything that can be called
+a home!... But you can&#8217;t understand.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh yes, I can,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>He went on muttering, half to himself: &#8220;We&#8217;re of
+the same breed&mdash;pariahs; fortunately, pariahs don&#8217;t
+last long,... like the wild creatures who never die
+natural deaths,... old age is one of the curses they
+can safely discount,... and so can we, Scarlett, so
+can we.... For you&#8217;ll be mauled by a lion or kicked
+into glory by a horse or an ox or an ass,... and I&#8217;ll
+fall off a balloon,... or the camel will give me tetanus,
+or the elephant will get me in one way or another,... or
+something....&#8221;</p>
+<p>Again he twisted around to look at me. &#8220;Funny,
+isn&#8217;t it?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_189' name='page_189'></a>189</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Rather funny,&#8221; I said, listlessly.</p>
+<p>He leaned over, pulled another cigarette from the
+pink packet, broke a match from the card, and lighted
+it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I feel better,&#8221; he observed.</p>
+<p>I expressed sleepy gratification.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh yes, I&#8217;m much better. This isn&#8217;t a bad life, is
+it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh no!&#8221; I said, sarcastically.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, it&#8217;s all right, and we&#8217;ve got to pull the poor old
+governor through and give a jolly good show here and
+start the whole country toward the tent door! Eh?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Certainly. Don&#8217;t let me detain you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll tell you what,&#8221; he said, &#8220;if we only had that
+poor little girl, Miss Claridge, we&#8217;d catch these Bretons.
+That&#8217;s what took the coast-folk all over Europe, so
+Grigg says.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Miss Claridge had performed in a large glass tank
+as the &#8220;Leaping Mermaid.&#8221; It took like wildfire according
+to our fellow-performers. We had never seen
+her; she was killed by diving into her tank when the
+circus was at Antwerp in April.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Can&#8217;t we get up something like that?&#8221; I suggested,
+hopelessly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who would do it? Miss Claridge&#8217;s fish-tights are
+in the prop-box; who&#8217;s to wear them?&#8221;</p>
+<p>He began to say something else, but stopped suddenly,
+eyes fixed. We were seated nearly opposite each
+other, and I turned around, following the direction of
+his eyes.</p>
+<p>Jacqueline stood behind me in the smoky light of the
+torch&mdash;Jacqueline, bare of arm and knee, with her sea-blue
+eyes very wide and the witch-locks clustering
+around the dim oval of her face. After a moment&#8217;s
+absolute silence she said: &#8220;I came from Paradise.
+Don&#8217;t you remember?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_190' name='page_190'></a>190</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;From Paradise?&#8221; said Speed, smiling; &#8220;I thought
+it might be from elf-land.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And I said: &#8220;Of course I remember you, Jacqueline.
+And I have an idea you ought to be in bed.&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was another silence.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Won&#8217;t you sit down?&#8221; asked Speed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thank you,&#8221; said Jacqueline, gravely.</p>
+<p>She seated herself on a sack of sawdust, clasping
+her slender hands between her knees, and looked
+earnestly at the elephant.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He won&#8217;t harm you,&#8221; I assured her.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you think I am afraid of <i>that</i>,&#8221; she said, &#8220;you are
+mistaken, Monsieur Scarlett.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think you are afraid of anything,&#8221; observed
+Speed, smiling; &#8220;but I know you are capable of astonishment.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;How do you know that?&#8221; demanded the girl.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Because I saw you with your drum on the high-road
+when we came past Paradise. Your eyes were similar
+to saucers, and your mouth was not closed, Mademoiselle
+Jacqueline.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh&mdash;pour &ccedil;a&mdash;yes, I was astonished,&#8221; she said.
+Then, with a quick, upward glance: &#8220;Were you riding,
+in armor, on a horse?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said Speed; &#8220;I was on that elephant&#8217;s head.&#8221;</p>
+<p>This appeared to make a certain impression on Jacqueline.
+She became shyer of speech for a while, until he
+asked her, jestingly, why she did not join the circus.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is what I wish,&#8221; she said, under her breath.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And ride white horses?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Will you take me?&#8221; she cried, passionately, springing
+to her feet.</p>
+<p>Amazed at her earnestness, I tried to explain that
+such an idea was out of the question. She listened
+anxiously at first, then her eyes fell and she stood
+there in the torch-light, head hanging.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_191' name='page_191'></a>191</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you know,&#8221; said Speed, kindly, &#8220;that it takes
+years of practice to do what circus people do? And the
+life is not gay, Jacqueline; it is hard for all of us. We
+know what hunger means; we know sickness and want
+and cold. Believe me, you are happier in Paradise than
+we are in the circus.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It may be,&#8221; she said, quietly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of course it is,&#8221; he insisted.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But,&#8221; she flashed out, &#8220;I would rather be unhappy
+in the circus than happy in Paradise!&#8221;</p>
+<p>He protested, smiling, but she would have her
+way.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I once saw a man, in spangles, turning, turning,
+and ever turning upon a rod. He was very far away,
+and that was very long ago&mdash;at the fair in Bannalec.
+But I have not forgotten! No, monsieur! In our net-shed
+I also have fixed a bar of wood, and on it I turn,
+turn continually. I am not ignorant of twisting. I
+can place my legs over my neck and cross my feet under
+my chin. Also I can stand on both hands, and I can
+throw scores of handsprings&mdash;which I do every morning
+upon the beach&mdash;I, Jacqueline!&#8221;</p>
+<p>She was excited; she stretched out both bare arms
+as though preparing to demonstrate her ability then
+and there.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I should like to see a circus,&#8221; she said. &#8220;Then I
+should know what to do. That I can swing higher
+than any girl in Paradise has been demonstrated often,&#8221;
+she went on, earnestly. &#8220;I can swim farther, I can
+dive deeper, I can run faster, with bare feet or with
+sabots, than anybody, man or woman, from the Beacon
+to Our Lady&#8217;s Chapel! At bowls the men will not allow
+me because I have beaten them all, monsieur, even the
+mayor, which he never forgave. As for the farandole,
+I tire last of all&mdash;and it is the biniou who cries out for
+mercy!&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_192' name='page_192'></a>192</span></p>
+<p>She laughed and pushed back her hair, standing
+straight up in the yellow radiance like a moor-sprite.
+There was something almost unearthly in her lithe
+young body and fearless sea-blue eyes, sparkling from
+the shock of curls.</p>
+<p>&#8220;So you can dive and swim?&#8221; asked Speed, with a
+glance at me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Like the salmon in the L&auml;ita, monsieur.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Under water?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Parbleu!&#8221;</p>
+<p>After a pause I asked her age.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Fifteen, M&#8217;sieu Scarlett.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t look thirteen, Jacqueline.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think I should grow faster if we were not so poor,&#8221;
+she said, innocently.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You mean that you don&#8217;t get enough to eat?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not always, m&#8217;sieu. But that is so with everybody
+except the wealthy.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Suppose we try her,&#8221; said Speed, after a silence.
+&#8220;You and I can scrape up a little money for her if
+worst comes to worst.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;How about her father?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You can see him. What is he?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A poacher, I understand.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, then it&#8217;s easy enough. Give him a few francs.
+He&#8217;ll take the child&#8217;s salary, anyway, if this thing
+turns out well.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Jacqueline,&#8221; I said, &#8220;we can&#8217;t afford to pay you
+much money, you know.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Money?&#8221; repeated the child, vacantly. &#8220;<i>Money!</i>
+If I had my arms full&mdash;so!&mdash;I would throw it into
+the world&mdash;so!&#8221;&mdash;she glanced at Speed&mdash;&#8220;reserving
+enough for a new skirt, monsieur, of which I stand
+in some necessity.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The quaint seriousness, the resolute fearlessness of
+this little maid of Paradise touched us both, I think,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_193' name='page_193'></a>193</span>
+as she stood there restlessly, balancing on her slim
+bare feet, finger-tips poised on her hips.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Won&#8217;t you take me?&#8221; she asked, sweetly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll tell you what I&#8217;ll do, Jacqueline,&#8221; said I. &#8220;Very
+early in the morning I&#8217;ll go down to your house and
+see your father. Then, if he makes no objection, I&#8217;ll
+get you to put on a pretty swimming-suit, all made out
+of silver scales, and you can show me, there in the sea,
+how you can dive and swim and play at mermaid.
+Does that please you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>She looked earnestly at me, then at Speed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is it a promise?&#8221; she asked, in a quivering voice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, Jacqueline.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then I thank you, M&#8217;sieu Scarlett,... and you,
+m&#8217;sieur, who ride the elephant so splendidly.... And
+I will be waiting for you when you come.... We
+live in the house below the Saint-Julien Light.... My
+father is pilot of the port.... Anybody will tell
+you.&#8221; ...</p>
+<p>&#8220;I will not forget,&#8221; said I.</p>
+<p>She bade us good-night very prettily, stepped back
+out of the circle of torch-light, and vanished&mdash;there
+is no other word for it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Gracious,&#8221; said Speed, &#8220;wasn&#8217;t that rather sudden?
+Or is that the child yonder? No, it&#8217;s a bush. Well,
+Scarlett, there&#8217;s an uncanny young one for you&mdash;no,
+not uncanny, but a spirit in its most delicate sense.
+I&#8217;ve an idea she&#8217;s going to find poor Byram&#8217;s lost luck
+for him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Or break her neck,&#8221; I observed.</p>
+<p>Speed was quiet for a long while.</p>
+<p>&#8220;By-the-way,&#8221; he said, at last, &#8220;are you going to
+tell the Countess about that fellow Buckhurst?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I sent a note to her before I fed my lions,&#8221; I replied.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are you going to see her?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If she desires it.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_194' name='page_194'></a>194</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Who took the note, Scarlett?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Jacqueline&#8217;s father,... that Lizard fellow.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, don&#8217;t let&#8217;s stir up Buckhurst now,&#8221; said Speed.
+&#8220;Let&#8217;s do what we can for the governor first.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of course,&#8221; said I. &#8220;And I&#8217;m going to bed. Good-night.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good-night,&#8221; said Speed, thoughtfully. &#8220;I&#8217;ll join
+you in a moment.&#8221;</p>
+<p>When I was ready for bed and stood at the tent door,
+peering out into the darkness, I saw Speed curled up on
+a blanket between the elephant&#8217;s forefeet, sound asleep.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_195' name='page_195'></a>195</span>
+<a name='XII_JACQUELINE' id='XII_JACQUELINE'></a>
+<h2>XII</h2>
+<h3>JACQUELINE</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The stars were still shining when I awoke in my
+blanket, lighted a candle, and stepped into the
+wooden tub of salt-water outside the tent.</p>
+<p>I shaved by candle-light, dressed in my worn riding-breeches
+and jacket, then, candle in hand, began groping
+about among the faded bits of finery and tarnished
+properties until I found the silver-scaled swimming-tights
+once worn by the girl of whom we had heard so
+much.</p>
+<p>She was very young when she leaped to her death
+in Antwerp&mdash;a slim slip of a creature, they said&mdash;so I
+thought it likely that her suit might fit Jacqueline.</p>
+<p>The stars had begun to fade when I stepped out
+through the dew-soaked clover, carrying in one hand a
+satchel containing the swimming-suit, in the other
+a gun-case, in which, carefully oiled and doubly cased
+in flannel, reposed my only luxury&mdash;my breech-loading
+shot-gun.</p>
+<p>The silence, intensified by the double thunder of the
+breakers on the sands, was suddenly pierced by a far
+cock-crow; vague gray figures passed across the square
+as I traversed it; a cow-bell tinkled near by, and I
+smelt the fresh-blown wind from the downs.</p>
+<p>Presently, as I turned into the cliff-path, I saw a
+sober little Breton cow plodding patiently along ahead;
+beside her moved a fresh-faced maid of Paradise in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_196' name='page_196'></a>196</span>
+snowy collarette and white-winged head-dress, knitting
+as she walked, fair head bent.</p>
+<p>As I passed her she glanced up with tear-dimmed
+eyes, murmuring the customary salutation: &#8220;Bonjour
+d&#8217;ac&#8217;h, m&#8217;sieu!&#8221; And I replied in the best patois
+I could command: &#8220;Bonjour d&#8217;ec&#8217;h a laran, na &oelig;led
+Ket! Why do you cry, mademoiselle?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Cry, m&#8217;sieu? They are taking the men of Paradise
+to the war. France must know how cruel she is to
+take our men from us.&#8221;</p>
+<p>We had reached the green crest of the plateau; the
+girl tethered her diminutive cow, sat down on a half-imbedded
+stone, and continued her knitting, crying
+softly all the while.</p>
+<p>I asked her to direct me to the house where Robert,
+the Lizard, lived; she pointed with her needles to a large
+stone house looming up in the gray light, built on the
+rocks just under the beacon. It was white with sea-slime
+and crusted salt, yet heavily and solidly built as
+a fort, and doubtless very old, judging from the traces
+of sculptured work over portal and windows.</p>
+<p>I had scarcely expected to find the ragged Lizard and
+more ragged Jacqueline housed in such an anciently
+respectable structure, and I said so to the girl beside me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The house is bare as the bones of Sainte-Anne,&#8221;
+she said. &#8220;There is nothing within&mdash;not even crumbs
+enough for the cliff-rats, they say.&#8221;</p>
+<p>So I went away across the foggy, soaking moorland,
+carrying my gun and satchel in their cases, descended
+the grassy cleft, entered a cattle-path, and picked my
+way across the wet, black rocks toward the abode of
+the poacher.</p>
+<p>The Lizard was standing on his doorsill when I
+came up; he returned my greeting sullenly, his keen
+eyes of a sea-bird roving over me from head to foot.
+A rumpled and sulky yellow cat, evidently just awake,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_197' name='page_197'></a>197</span>
+sat on the doorstep beside him and yawned at intervals.
+The pair looked as though they had made a night of it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You took my letter last night?&#8221; I asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Was there an answer for me?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Couldn&#8217;t you have come to the camp and told me?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I could, but I had other matters to concern me,&#8221;
+he replied. &#8220;Here&#8217;s your letter,&#8221; and he fished it out
+of his tattered pocket.</p>
+<p>I was angry enough, but I did not wish to anger
+him at that moment. So I took the letter and read it&mdash;a
+formal line saying the Countess de Vassart would
+expect me at five that afternoon.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are not noted for your courtesy, are you?&#8221;
+I inquired, smiling.</p>
+<p>Something resembling a grin touched his sea-scarred
+visage.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I knew you&#8217;d come for your answer,&#8221; he said,
+coolly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Look here, Lizard,&#8221; I said, &#8220;I intend to be friends
+with you, and I mean to make you look on me as a
+friend. It&#8217;s to my advantage and to yours.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;To mine?&#8221; he inquired, sneeringly, amused.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And this is the first thing I want,&#8221; I continued;
+and without further preface I unfolded our plans concerning
+Jacqueline.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Entendu,&#8221; he said, drawling the word, &#8220;is that
+all?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you consent?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is that all?&#8221; he repeated, with Breton obstinacy.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, not all. I want you to be my messenger in
+time of need. I want you to be absolutely faithful to
+me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is that all?&#8221; he drawled again.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, that is all.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_198' name='page_198'></a>198</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;And what is there in this, to my advantage,
+m&#8217;sieu?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;This, for one thing,&#8221; I said, carelessly, picking
+up my gun-case. I slowly drew out the barrels of
+Damascus, then the rose-wood stock and fore-end,
+assembling them lovingly; for it was the finest weapon
+I had ever seen, and it was breaking my heart to give
+it away.</p>
+<p>The poacher&#8217;s eyes began to glitter as I fitted the
+double bolts and locked breech and barrel with the
+extension rib. Then I snapped on the fore-end; and
+there lay the gun in my hands, a fowling-piece fit for
+an emperor.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Give it?&#8221; muttered the poacher, huskily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Take it, my friend the Lizard,&#8221; I replied, smiling
+down the wrench in my heart.</p>
+<p>There was a silence; then the poacher stepped
+forward, and, looking me square in the eye, flung out
+his hand. I struck my open palm smartly against his,
+in the Breton fashion; then we clasped hands.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You mean honestly by the little one?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; I said; &#8220;strike palms by Sainte Thekla of
+Yc&ocirc;ne!&#8221;</p>
+<p>We struck palms heavily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;She is a child,&#8221; he said; &#8220;there is no vice in her;
+yet I&#8217;ve seen them nearly finished at her age in Paris.&#8221;
+And he swore terribly as he said it.</p>
+<p>We dropped hands in silence; then, &#8220;Is this gun
+mine?&#8221; he demanded, hoarsely.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Strike!&#8221; he cried; &#8220;take my friendship if you want
+it, on this condition&mdash;what I am is my own concern,
+not yours. Don&#8217;t interfere, m&#8217;sieu; it would be useless.
+I should never betray you, but I might kill you.
+Don&#8217;t interfere. But if you care for the good-will of a
+man like me, take it; and when you desire a service
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_199' name='page_199'></a>199</span>
+from me, tell me, and I&#8217;ll not fail you, by Sainte-&Eacute;line
+of Paradise!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Strike palms,&#8221; said I, gravely; and we struck palms
+thrice.</p>
+<p>He turned on his heel, kicking off his sabots on the
+doorsill. &#8220;Break bread with me; I ask it,&#8221; he said,
+gruffly, and stalked before me into the house.</p>
+<p>The room was massive and of noble proportion, but
+there was scarcely anything in it&mdash;a stained table, a
+settle, a little pile of rags on the stone floor&mdash;no, not
+rags, but Jacqueline&#8217;s clothes!&mdash;and there at the end
+of the great chamber, built into the wall, was the ancient
+Breton bed with its Gothic carving and sliding panels
+of black oak, carved like the lattice-work in a chapel
+screen.</p>
+<p>Outside dawn was breaking through a silver shoal
+of clouds; already its slender tentacles of light were
+probing the shadows behind the lattice where Jacqueline
+lay sleeping.</p>
+<p>From the ashes on the hearth a spiral of smoke
+curled. The yellow cat walked in and sat down, contemplating
+the ashes.</p>
+<p>Slowly a saffron light filled the room; Jacqueline
+awoke in the dim bed.</p>
+<p>She pushed the panels aside and peered out, her
+sea-blue eyes heavy with slumber.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ma dou&eacute;!&#8221; she murmured; &#8220;it is M&#8217;sieu Scarlett!
+Aie! Aie! Am I a countess to sleep so late? Bonjour,
+m&#8217;sieu! Bonjour, pa-pa!&#8221; She caught sight of
+the yellow cat, &#8220;Et bien le bonjour, Ange Pitou!&#8221;</p>
+<p>She swathed herself in a blanket and sat up, looking
+at me sleepily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You came to see me swim,&#8221; she said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And I&#8217;ve brought you a fish&#8217;s silver skin to swim
+in,&#8221; I replied, pointing at the satchel.</p>
+<p>She cast a swift glance at her father, who, with the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_200' name='page_200'></a>200</span>
+gun on his knees, sat as though hypnotized by the
+beauty of its workmanship. Her bright eyes fell on
+the gun; she understood in a flash.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then you&#8217;ll take me?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you swim as well as I hope you can.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Turn your back!&#8221; she cried.</p>
+<p>I wheeled about and sat down on the settle beside the
+poacher. There came a light thud of small, bare feet
+on the stone floor, then silence. The poacher looked up.</p>
+<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s gone to the ocean,&#8221; he said; &#8220;she has the
+mania for baths&mdash;like you English.&#8221; And he fell to
+rubbing the gunstock with dirty thumb.</p>
+<p>The saffron light in the room was turning pink when
+Jacqueline reappeared on the threshold in her ragged
+skirt and stained velvet bodice half laced, with the
+broken points hanging, carrying an armful of driftwood.</p>
+<p>Without a word she went to work; the driftwood
+caught fire from the ashes, flaming up in exquisite
+colors, now rosy, now delicate green, now violet; the
+copper pot, swinging from the crane, began to steam,
+then to simmer.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Papa!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;De quoi!&#8221; growled the poacher.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Were you out last night?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dame, I&#8217;ve just come in.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is there anything?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The poacher gave me an oblique and evil glance,
+then coolly answered: &#8220;Three pheasant, two partridges,
+and a sea-trout in the net-shed. All are drawn.&#8221;</p>
+<p>So swiftly she worked that the pink light had scarcely
+deepened to crimson when the poacher, laying the gun
+tenderly in the blankets of Jacqueline&#8217;s tumbled bed,
+came striding back to the table where a sea-trout smoked
+on a cracked platter, and a bowl of bread and milk stood
+before each place.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_201' name='page_201'></a>201</span></p>
+<p>We ate silently. Ange Pitou, the yellow cat, came
+around with tail inflated. There were fishbones enough
+to gratify any cat, and Ange Pitou made short work of
+them.</p>
+<p>The poacher bolted his food, sombre eyes brooding
+or stealing across the room to the bed where his gun
+lay. Jacqueline, to my amazement, ate as daintily
+as a linnet, yet with a fresh, hearty unconsciousness
+that left nothing in her bowl or wooden spoon.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Schist?&#8221; inquired the poacher, lifting his tired eyes
+to me. I nodded. So he brought a jug of cold, sweet
+cider, and we all drank long and deeply, each in turn
+slinging the jug over the crooked elbow.</p>
+<p>The poacher rose, wiped his mouth with the back of
+his hand, and made straight for his new gun.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You two,&#8221; he said, with a wave of his arm, &#8220;you
+settle it among yourselves. Jacqueline, is it true that
+Le Bihan saw woodcock dropping into the fen last
+night?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He says so.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He is not a liar&mdash;usually,&#8221; observed the poacher.
+He touched his beret to me, flung the fowling-piece over
+his shoulder, picked up a canvas bag in which I heard
+cartridges rattling, stepped into his sabots, and walked
+away. In a few moments the hysterical yelps of a dog,
+pleased at the prospect of a hunt, broke out from the
+net-shed.</p>
+<p>Jacqueline placed the few dishes in a pan of hot
+water, wiped her fingers, daintily, and picked up Ange
+Pitou, who promptly acknowledged the courtesy by
+bursting into a crackling purring.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Show me the swimming-suit,&#8221; she said, shyly.</p>
+<p>I drew it out of the satchel and laid it across my knees.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, it has a little tail behind&mdash;like a fish!&#8221; she cried,
+enchanted. &#8220;I shall look like the silver grilse of
+Quimperl&eacute;!&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_202' name='page_202'></a>202</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you think you can swim in those scales?&#8221; I
+asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Swim? I&mdash;Jacqueline? Attendez un peu&mdash;you
+shall see!&#8221;</p>
+<p>She laughed an excited, confident little laugh and
+hugged Ange Pitou, who closed his eyes in ecstasy
+sheathing and unsheathing his sharp claws.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is almost sunrise,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It lacks many minutes to sunrise,&#8221; she replied.
+&#8220;Ask Ange Pitou. At sunrise he leaves me; nothing
+can hold him; he does not bite or scratch, he just pushes
+and pulls until my arms are tired. Then he goes.
+It is always so.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why does he do that?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ask him. I have often asked, but he never tells
+me&mdash;do you, my friend? I think he&#8217;s a moor-sprite&mdash;perhaps
+a devil. Do devils hate all kinds of
+water?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, only holy water,&#8221; I replied.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, then, he&#8217;s something else. Look! Look! He
+is beginning! See him push to get free, see him drive
+his furry head into my hands. The sun is coming
+up out of the sea! It will soon be here.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She opened her arms; the cat sprang to the doorstep
+and vanished.</p>
+<p>Jacqueline looked at the swimming-suit, then at me.
+&#8220;Will you go down to the beach, M&#8217;sieu Scarlett?&#8221;</p>
+<p>But I had not traversed half the strip of rock and
+hard sand before something flew past&mdash;a slim, glittering
+shape which suddenly doubled up, straightened
+again, and fell headlong into the thundering surf.</p>
+<p>The waves hurled her from crest to crest, clothing
+her limbs in froth; the singing foam rolled her over
+and over, stranding her on bubbling sands, until the
+swell found her again, lifted her, and tossed her seaward
+into the wide, white arms of the breakers.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_203' name='page_203'></a>203</span></p>
+<p>Back to land she drifted and scrambled up on the
+beach, a slender, drenched figure, glistening and flashing
+with every movement.</p>
+<p>Dainty of limb as a cat in wet grass, she shook the
+spray from her fingers and scrubbed each palm with
+sand, then sprang again headlong into the surf; there
+was a flash, a spatter, and she vanished.</p>
+<p>After a long, long while, far out on the water she
+rose, floating.</p>
+<p>Now the red sun, pushing above the ocean&#8217;s leaden
+rim, flung its crimson net across the water. String
+after string of white-breasted sea-ducks beat to windward
+from the cove, whirling out to sea; the gray gulls
+flapped low above the shoal and settled in rows along
+the outer bar, tossing their sun-tipped wings; the black
+cormorant on the cliff craned its hideous neck, scanning
+the ocean with restless, brilliant eyes.</p>
+<p>Tossed back once more upon the beach like an opalescent
+shell, Jacqueline, ankle-deep in foam, looked out
+across the flaming waters, her drenched hair dripping.</p>
+<p>From the gorse on cliff and headland, one by one the
+larks shot skyward like amber rockets, trailing a shower
+of melody till the whole sky rained song. The crested
+vanneaux, passing out to sea, responded plaintively,
+flapping their bronze-green wings.</p>
+<p>The girl twisted her hair and wrung it till the last
+salt drop had fallen. Sitting there in the sands, idle
+fingers cracking the pods of gilded sea-weed, she
+glanced up at me and laughed contentedly. Presently
+she rose and walked out to a high ledge, motioning
+me to follow. Far below, the sun-lit water
+shimmered in a shallow basin of silver sand.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Look!&#8221; she cried, flinging her arms above her head,
+and dropped into space, falling like a star, down, down
+into the shallow sea. Far below I saw a streak of living
+light shoot through the water&mdash;on, on, closer to the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_204' name='page_204'></a>204</span>
+surface now, and at last she fairly sprang into the air,
+quivering like a gaffed salmon, then fell back to float
+and clear her blue eyes from her tangled hair.</p>
+<p>She gave me a glance full of malice as she landed,
+knowing quite well that she had not only won, but had
+given me a shock with her long dive into scarce three
+feet of water.</p>
+<p>Presently she climbed to the sun-warmed hillock of
+sand and sat down beside me to dry her hair.</p>
+<p>A langouste, in his flaming scarlet coat of mail,
+passed through a glassy pool among the rocks, treading
+sedately on pointed claws; the lan&ccedil;ons tunnelled
+the oozing beach under her pink feet, like streams
+of living quicksilver; the big, blue sea-crabs sidled
+off the reef, sheering down sideways into limpid
+depths. Landward the curlew walked in twos and
+threes, swinging their long sickle bills; the sea-swallows
+drove by like gray snow-squalls, melting away
+against the sky; a vitreous living creature, blazing
+with purest sapphire light, floated past under water.</p>
+<p>Ange Pitou, coveting a warm sun-bath in the sand,
+came wandering along pretending not to see us; but
+Jacqueline dragged him into her arms for a hug, which
+lasted until Ange Pitou broke loose, tail hoisted but
+ears deaf to further flattery.</p>
+<p>So Jacqueline chased Ange Pitou back across the
+sand and up the rocky path, pursuing her pet from
+pillar to post with flying feet that fell as noiselessly
+as the velvet pads of Ange Pitou.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come to the net-shed, if you please!&#8221; she called
+back to me, pointing to a crazy wooden structure built
+above the house.</p>
+<p>As I entered the net-shed the child was dragging a
+pile of sea-nets to the middle of the floor.</p>
+<p>&#8220;In case I fall,&#8221; she said, coolly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Better let me arrange them, then,&#8221; I said, glancing
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_205' name='page_205'></a>205</span>
+up at the improvised trapeze which dangled under the
+roof-beams.</p>
+<p>She thanked me, seized a long rope, and went up,
+hand over hand. I piled the soft nets into a mattress,
+but decided to stand near, not liking the arrangements.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile Jacqueline was swinging, head downward,
+from her trapeze. Her cheeks flamed as she
+twisted and wriggled through a complicated man&oelig;uvre,
+which ended by landing her seated on the bar of
+the trapeze a trifle out of breath. With both hands
+resting on the ropes, she started herself swinging,
+faster, faster, then pretended to drop off backward,
+only to catch herself with her heels, substitute heels
+for hands, and hang. Doubling back on her own body,
+she glided to her perch beneath the roof, shook her
+damp hair back, set the trapeze flying, and curled up
+on the bar, resting as fearlessly and securely as a
+bullfinch in a tree-top.</p>
+<p>Above her the red-and-black wasps buzzed and crawled
+and explored the sun-scorched beams. Spiders
+watched her from their silken hammocks, and the tiny
+cliff-mice scuttled from beam to beam. Through the
+open door the sunshine poured a flood of gold over the
+floor where the bronzed nets were spread. Mending
+was necessary; she mentioned it, and set herself swinging
+again, crossing her feet.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You think you could drop from there into a tank
+of water?&#8221; I asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;How deep?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Say four feet.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She nodded, swinging tranquilly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Have you any fear at all, Jacqueline?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You would try whatever I asked you to try?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If I thought I could,&#8221; she replied, na&iuml;vely.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But that is not it. I am to be your master. You
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_206' name='page_206'></a>206</span>
+must have absolute confidence in me and obey orders
+instantly.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Like a soldier?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Exactly.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Bien.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then hang by your hands!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Quick as a flash she hung above me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You trust me, Jacqueline?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then drop!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Down she flashed like a falling meteor. I caught her
+with that quick trick known to all acrobats, which left
+her standing on my knee.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Jump!&#8221;</p>
+<p>She sprang lightly to the heap of nets, lost her
+balance, stumbled, and sat down very suddenly. Then
+she threw back her head and laughed; peal on peal of
+deliciously childish laughter rang through the ancient
+net-shed, until, overhead, the passing gulls echoed her
+mirth with querulous mewing, and the sea-hawk, towering
+to the zenith, wheeled and squealed.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_207' name='page_207'></a>207</span>
+<a name='XIII_FRIENDS' id='XIII_FRIENDS'></a>
+<h2>XIII</h2>
+<h3>FRIENDS</h3>
+</div>
+<p>At seven o&#8217;clock that morning the men in the circus
+camp awoke, worried, fatigued, vaguely resentful,
+unusually profane. Horan was openly mutinous, and
+announced his instant departure.</p>
+<p>By eight o&#8217;clock a miraculous change had taken
+place; the camp was alive with scurrying people, galvanized
+into hopeful activity by my possibly unwarranted
+optimism and a few judiciously veiled threats.</p>
+<p>Clothed with temporary authority by Byram, I took
+the bit between my teeth and ordered the instant erection
+of the main tents, the construction of the ring,
+barriers, and benches, and the immediate renovating
+of the portable tank in which poor little Miss Claridge
+had met her doom.</p>
+<p>I detailed Kelly Eyre to Quimperl&eacute; with orders for
+ten thousand crimson hand-bills; I sent McCadger,
+with Dawley, the bass-drummer, and Irwin, the cornettist,
+to plaster our posters from Pont Aven to Belle Isle,
+and I gave them three days to get back, and promised
+them a hundred dollars apiece if they succeeded in
+sticking our bills on the fortifications of Lorient and
+Quimper, with or without permission.</p>
+<p>I sent Grigg and three exempt Bretons to beat up
+the country from Gestel and Rosporden to Pontivy, clear
+across to Quiberon, and as far east as St. Gildas Point.</p>
+<p>By the standing-stones of Carnac, I swore that I&#8217;d
+have all Finist&egrave;re in that tent. &#8220;Governor,&#8221; said I,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_208' name='page_208'></a>208</span>
+&#8220;we are going to feature Jacqueline all over Brittany,
+and, if the ladies object, it can&#8217;t be helped! By-the-way,
+<i>do</i> they object?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The ladies did object, otherwise they would not have
+been human ladies; but the battle was sharp and decisive,
+for I was desperate.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It simply amounts to this,&#8221; I said: &#8220;Jacqueline
+pulls us through or the governor and I land in jail.
+As for you, Heaven knows what will happen to you!
+Penal settlement, probably.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And I called Speed and pointed at Jacqueline, sitting
+on her satchel, watching the proceedings with amiable
+curiosity.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Speed, take that child and rehearse her. Begin as
+soon as the tent is stretched and you can rig the flying
+trapeze. Use the net, of course. Horan rehearsed Miss
+Claridge; he&#8217;ll stand by. Miss Crystal, your good-will
+and advice I depend upon. Will you help me?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;With all my heart,&#8221; said Miss Crystal.</p>
+<p>That impulsive reply broke the sullen deadlock.</p>
+<p>Pretty little Mrs. Grigg went over and shook the
+child&#8217;s hand very cordially and talked broken French
+to her; Miss Delany volunteered to give her some
+&#8220;Christian clothes&#8221;; Mrs. Horan burst into tears, complaining
+that everybody was conspiring to injure her
+and her husband, but a few moments later she brought
+Jacqueline some toast, tea, and fried eggs, an attention
+shyly appreciated by the puzzled child, who never before
+had made such a stir in the world.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t stuff her,&#8221; said Speed, as Mrs. Horan enthusiastically
+trotted past bearing more toast. &#8220;Here,
+Scarlett, the ladies are spoiling her. Can I take her
+for the first lesson?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Byram, who had shambled up, nodded. I was glad
+to see him reassert his authority. Speed took the
+child by the hand, and together they entered the big
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_209' name='page_209'></a>209</span>
+white tent, which now loomed up like a mammoth
+mushroom against the blue sky.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Governor,&#8221; I said, &#8220;we&#8217;re all a bit demoralized;
+a few of us are mutinous. For Heaven&#8217;s sake, let the
+men see you are game. This child has got to win out
+for us. Don&#8217;t worry, don&#8217;t object; back me up and let
+me put this thing through.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The old man shoved his hands into his trousers-pockets
+and looked at me with heavy, hopeless eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now here&#8217;s the sketch for the hand-bill,&#8221; I said,
+cheerfully, taking a pencilled memorandum from my
+pocket. And I read:</p>
+<p style='text-align:center'>
+``THE PATRIOTIC ANTI-PRUSSIAN REPUBLICAN CIRCUS,<br />
+<span style='font-size:smaller'>MORE STUPENDOUS, MORE GIGANTIC, MORE<br />
+OVERPOWERING THAN EVER!</span><br />
+GLITTERING, MARVELLOUS, SOUL-COMPELLING!''</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s &#8217;soul-compelling&#8217;?&#8221; asked Byram.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Anything you please, governor,&#8221; I said, and read
+on rapidly until I came to the paragraph concerning
+Jacqueline:</p>
+<p style='text-align:center'>
+``THE WONDER OF EARTH AND HEAVEN!<br />
+<span style='font-size:smaller'>THE UNUTTERABLY BEAUTIFUL FLYING<br />
+MERMAID! CAUGHT ON THE<br />
+COAST OF BRITTANY!</span><br />
+WHAT IS SHE?<br />
+<span style='font-size:smaller'>FISH? BIRD? HUMAN? DIVINE?</span><br />
+WHO KNOWS?<br />
+<span style='font-size:smaller'>THE SCIENTISTS OF FRANCE DO NOT KNOW!!<br />
+THE SCIENTISTS OF THE WORLD<br />
+ARE CONFOUNDED!<br />
+IS SHE</span><br />
+A LOST SOUL<br />
+<span style='font-size:smaller'>FROM THE SUNKEN CITY OF KER-YS?<br />
+50,000 FRANCS REWARD FOR THE BRETON WHO CAN<br />
+PROVE THAT SHE DID NOT COME STRAIGHT FROM</span><br />
+PARADISE!!!''</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_210' name='page_210'></a>210</span></div>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s a damn good bill,&#8221; said Byram, suddenly.</p>
+<p>He was so seldom profane that I stared at him, worried
+lest his misfortunes had unbalanced him. But
+a faint, healthy color was already replacing the pallor
+in his loose cheeks, a glint of animation came into his
+sunken eyes. He lifted his battered silk hat, replaced
+it at an angle almost defiant, and scowled at Horan,
+who passed us sullenly, driving the camel tentwards
+with awful profanity.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t talk such langwidge in my presence, Mr.
+Horan,&#8221; he said, sharply; &#8220;a camuel is a camuel, but
+remember: &#8217;kind hearts is more than cornets,&#8217; an&#8217; it&#8217;s
+easier for that there camuel to pass through the eye
+of a needle than for a cussin&#8217; cuss to cuss his way into
+Kingdom Come!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Horan, who had betrayed unmistakable symptoms
+of insubordination that morning, quailed under the
+flowing rebuke. He was a man of muscular strength
+and meagre intellect; words hit him like trip-hammers.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Certainly, governor,&#8221; he stammered, and spoke to
+the camel politely, guiding that enraged and squealing
+quadruped to his manger with a forced smile.</p>
+<p>With mallet, hammer, saw, and screw-driver I worked
+until noon, maturing my plans all the while. These
+plans would take the last penny in the treasury and
+leave us in debt several thousand francs. But it was
+win or go to smash now, and personally I have always
+preferred a tremendous smash to a slow and oozy fizzle.</p>
+<p>A big pot of fragrant soup was served to the company
+at luncheon; and it amused me to see Jacqueline troop
+into the tent with the others and sit down with her bit
+of bread and her bowl of broth.</p>
+<p>She was flushed and excited, and she talked to her
+instructor, Speed, all the while, chattering like a linnet
+between mouthfuls of bread and broth.</p>
+<p>&#8220;How is she getting on?&#8221; I called across to Speed.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_211' name='page_211'></a>211</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;The child is simply startling,&#8221; he said, in English.
+&#8220;She is not afraid of anything. She and Miss Crystal
+have been doing that hair-raising &#8217;flying swing&#8217; <i>without
+rehearsal!</i>&#8221;</p>
+<p>Jacqueline, hearing us talking in English, turned
+and stared at me, then smiled and looked up sweetly
+at Speed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You seem to be popular with your pupil,&#8221; I said,
+laughing.</p>
+<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s a fine girl&mdash;a fine, fearless, straight-up-and-down
+girl,&#8221; he said, with enthusiasm.</p>
+<p>Everybody appeared to like her, though how much
+that liking might be modified if prosperity returned
+I was unable to judge.</p>
+<p>Now all our fortunes depended on her. She was not
+a ballon d&#8217;essai; she was literally the whole show;
+and if she duplicated the sensational success of poor
+little Miss Claridge, we had nothing to fear. But her
+troubles would then begin. At present, however, we
+were waiting for her to pull us out of the hole before we
+fell upon her and rent her professionally. And I use
+that &#8220;we&#8221; not only professionally, but with an attempt
+at chivalry.</p>
+<p>Byram&#8217;s buoyancy had returned in a measure. He
+sat in his shirt-sleeves at the head of the table, vigorously
+sopping his tartine in his soup, and, mouth full,
+leaned forward, chewing and listening to the conversation
+around him.</p>
+<p>Everybody knew it was life or death now, that each
+one must drop petty jealousies and work for the common
+salvation. An artificial and almost feverish animation
+reigned, which I adroitly fed with alarming allusions
+to the rigor of the French law toward foreigners
+and other malefactors who ran into debt to French
+subjects on the sacred soil of France. And, having
+lived so long in France and in the French possessions,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_212' name='page_212'></a>212</span>
+I was regarded as an oracle of authority by these ambulant
+professional people who were already deadly
+homesick, and who, in eighteen months of Europe, had
+amassed scarcely a dozen French phrases among them
+all.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll say one thing,&#8221; observed Byram, with dignity;
+&#8220;if ever I git out of this darn continong with
+my circus, I&#8217;ll recooperate in the undulatin&#8217; medders
+an&#8217; j&#8217;yful vales of the United States. Hereafter that
+country will continue to remain good enough for
+me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>All applauded&mdash;all except Jacqueline, who looked
+around in astonishment at the proceedings, and only
+smiled when Speed explained in French.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ask maddermoselle if she&#8217;ll go home with us?&#8221;
+prompted Byram. &#8220;Tell her there&#8217;s millions in it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Speed put the question; Jacqueline listened gravely,
+hesitated, then whispered to Speed, who reddened a
+trifle and laughed.</p>
+<p>Everybody waited for a moment. &#8220;What does she
+say?&#8221; inquired Byram.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, nothing; she talked nonsense.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But Jacqueline&#8217;s dignity and serene face certainly
+contradicted Speed&#8217;s words.</p>
+<p>Presently Byram arose, flourishing his napkin.
+&#8220;Time&#8217;s up!&#8221; he said, with decision, and we all trooped
+off to our appointed labors.</p>
+<p>Now that I had stirred up this beehive and set it
+swarming again, I had no inclination to turn drone.
+Yet I remembered my note to the Countess de Vassart
+and her reply. So about four o&#8217;clock I made the best
+toilet I could in my only other suit of clothes, and
+walked out of the bustling camp into the square, where
+the mossy fountain splashed under the oaks and the
+children of Paradise were playing. Hands joined, they
+danced in a ring, singing:
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_213' name='page_213'></a>213</span></p>
+<table style='margin: auto' summary=''><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;<i>Barzig&nbsp;ha&nbsp;barzig&nbsp;a&nbsp;Goneri<br />
+Ari&nbsp;e&nbsp;mab&nbsp;roue&nbsp;gand&nbsp;daou&nbsp;pe&nbsp;dri</i>&#8221;&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;<br />
+&#8220;Little&nbsp;minstrel-bard&nbsp;of&nbsp;Con&eacute;ri<br />
+The&nbsp;son&nbsp;of&nbsp;the&nbsp;King&nbsp;has&nbsp;come&nbsp;with&nbsp;two&nbsp;or&nbsp;three&mdash;<br />
+Nay,&nbsp;with&nbsp;a&nbsp;whole&nbsp;bright&nbsp;flock&nbsp;of&nbsp;paroquets,<br />
+Crimson,&nbsp;silver,&nbsp;and&nbsp;violet.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>And the children, in their white coiffes and tiny
+wooden shoes, moved round and round the circle, in
+the middle of which a little lad and a little lass of Paradise
+stood motionless, hand clasping hand.</p>
+<p>The couplet ended, the two children in the middle
+sprang forward and dragged a third child out of the
+circle. Then the song began again, the reduced circle
+dancing around the three children in the middle.</p>
+<table style='margin: auto' summary=''><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;&mdash;The&nbsp;son&nbsp;of&nbsp;the&nbsp;King&nbsp;has&nbsp;come&nbsp;with&nbsp;two&nbsp;or&nbsp;three&mdash;<br />
+Nay,&nbsp;with&nbsp;a&nbsp;whole&nbsp;bright&nbsp;flock&nbsp;of&nbsp;paroquets,<br />
+Crimson,&nbsp;silver,&nbsp;and&nbsp;violet.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>It was something like a game I had played long ago&mdash;in
+the age of fable&mdash;and I lingered, touched with homesickness.</p>
+<p>The three children in the middle took a fourth comrade
+from the circle, crying, &#8220;Will you go to the moon
+or will you go to the stars?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The moon,&#8221; lisped the little maid, and she was
+led over to the fountain.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The stars,&#8221; said the first prisoner, and was conducted
+to the stone bridge.</p>
+<p>Soon a small company was clustered on the bridge,
+another band at the fountain. Then, as there were
+no more to dance in a circle, the lad and lassie who had
+stood in the middle to choose candidates for the moon
+and stars clasped hands and danced gayly across the
+square to the group of expectant children at the fountain,
+crying:
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_214' name='page_214'></a>214</span></p>
+<table style='margin: auto' summary=''><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;Baradoz!&nbsp;Baradoz!&#8221;<br />
+(Paradise!&nbsp;Paradise!)</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>and the whole band charged on the little group on the
+bridge, shouting and laughing, while the unfortunate
+tenants of the supposed infernal regions fled in every
+direction, screaming:</p>
+<table style='margin: auto' summary=''><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;Pater&nbsp;noster<br />
+Dibi&nbsp;doub!<br />
+Dibi&nbsp;doub!<br />
+Dibi&nbsp;doub!&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>Their shouts and laughter still came faintly from the
+tree-shaded square as I crossed the bridge and walked
+out into the moorland toward the sea, where I could
+see the sun gilding the headland and the spouting-rocks
+of Point Paradise.</p>
+<p>Over the turning tide cormorants were flying, now
+wheeling like hawks, now beating seaward in a duck-like
+flight. I passed little, lonely pools on the moor,
+from which snipe rose with a startling squak! squak!
+and darted away inland as though tempest blown.</p>
+<p>Presently a blue-gray mass in mid-ocean caught
+my eye. It was the island of Groix, and between it
+and Point Paradise lay an ugly, naked, black shape,
+motionless, oozing smoke from two stubby funnels&mdash;the
+cruiser <i>Fer-de-Lance</i>! So solidly inert lay the iron-clad
+that it did not seem as if she had ever moved or
+ever could move; she looked like an imbedded ledge
+cropping up out of the sea.</p>
+<p>Far across the hilly moorland the white semaphore
+glistened like a gull&#8217;s wing&mdash;too far for me to see the
+balls and cones hoisted or the bright signals glimmering
+along the halyards as I followed a trodden path
+winding south through the gorse. Then a dip in the
+moorland hid the semaphore and at the same moment
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_215' name='page_215'></a>215</span>
+brought a house into full view&mdash;a large, solid structure
+of dark stone, heavily Romanesque, walled in by an
+ancient buttressed barrier, above which I could see the
+tree-tops of a fruit-garden.</p>
+<p>The Ch&acirc;teau de Tr&eacute;court was a fine example of the
+so called &#8220;fortified farm&#8221;; it had its moat, too, and
+crumbling wing-walls, pierced by loop-holes and over-hung
+with miniature battlements. A walled and loop-holed
+passageway connected the house with another
+stone enclosure in which stood stable, granary, cattle-house,
+and sheepfold, all of stone, though the roofs
+of these buildings were either turfed or thatched. And
+over them the weather-vane, a golden Dorado, swam
+in the sunshine.</p>
+<p>One thing I noticed as I crossed the unused moat on
+a permanent bridge: the youthful Countess no longer
+denied herself the services of servants, for I saw a
+cloaked shepherd and his two wolf-like and tailless
+sheep-dogs watching the flock scattered over the
+downs; and there were at least half a dozen farm servants
+pottering about from stable to granary, and a
+toothless porter to answer the gate-bell and pilot me
+past the tiny loop-holed lodge-turret to the house.
+There was also a man, lying belly down in the bracken,
+watching me; and as I walked into the court I tried to
+remember where I had seen his face before.</p>
+<p>The entire front of the house was covered with those
+splendid orange-tinted tea-roses that I had noticed in
+Paradise; thicket on thicket of clove-scented pinks
+choked the flower-beds; and a broad mat of deep-tinted
+pansies lay on the lawn, spread out for all the
+world like a glorious Eastern rug.</p>
+<p>There was a soft whirring in the air like the sound of a
+humming-bird close by; it came from a spinning-wheel,
+and grew louder as a servant admitted me into the house
+and guided me to a sunny room facing the fruit garden.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_216' name='page_216'></a>216</span></p>
+<p>The spinner at the wheel was singing in an undertone&mdash;singing
+a Breton &#8220;gwerz,&#8221; centuries old, retained
+in memory from generation to generation:</p>
+<table style='margin: auto' summary=''><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;Woe&nbsp;to&nbsp;the&nbsp;Maids&nbsp;of&nbsp;Paradise,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 12em;">Yvonne!</span><br />
+Twice&nbsp;have&nbsp;the&nbsp;Saxons&nbsp;landed;&nbsp;twice!<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 12em;">Yvonne!</span><br />
+Yet&nbsp;must&nbsp;Paradise&nbsp;see&nbsp;them&nbsp;thrice!<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 12em;">Yvonne!&nbsp;Yvonne!&nbsp;Marivonik.&#8221;</span></p>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>Old as were the words, the melody was older&mdash;so
+old and quaint and sweet that it seemed a berceuse
+fashioned to soothe the drowsing centuries, lest the
+memories of ancient wrongs awake and rouse the very
+dead from their Gothic tombs.</p>
+<p>All the sad history of the Breton race was written in
+every minor note; all the mystery, the gentleness, the
+faith of the lost people of Armorica.</p>
+<p>And now the singer was intoning the &#8220;Gwerz Ar
+Baradoz&#8221;&mdash;the &#8220;Complaint of Paradise&#8221;&mdash;a slow,
+thrilling mis&eacute;r&eacute;r&eacute;, scarcely dominating the velvet whir
+of the spinning-wheel.</p>
+<p>Suddenly the melody ceased, and a young Bretonne
+girl appeared in the doorway, courtesying to me and
+saying in perfect English: &#8220;How do you do, Mr.
+Scarlett; and how do you like my spinning songs, if
+you please?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The girl was Mademoiselle Sylvia Elven, the marvellously
+clever actress from the Od&eacute;on, the same young
+woman who had played the Alsacienne at La Trappe,
+as perfectly in voice and costume as she now played
+the Bretonne.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You need not be astonished at all,&#8221; she said, calmly,
+&#8220;if you will only reflect that my name is Elven,
+which is also the name of a Breton town. Naturally,
+I am a Bretonne from Elven, and my own name is
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_217' name='page_217'></a>217</span>
+Duhamel&mdash;Sylvenne Duhamel. I thought I ought to
+tell you, so that you would not think me too clever
+and try to carry me off on your horse again.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I laughed uncertainly; clever women who talk cleverly
+always disturb me. Besides, somehow, I felt she
+was not speaking the truth, yet I could not imagine
+why she should lie to me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You were more fluent to the helpless turkey-girl,&#8221;
+she suggested, maliciously.</p>
+<p>I had absolutely nothing to say, which appeared to
+gratify her, for she dimpled and smiled under her
+snowy-winged coiffe, from which a thick gold strand
+of hair curled on her forehead&mdash;a sad bit of coquetry
+in a Bretonne from Elven, if she told the truth.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I only came to renew an old and deeply valued
+friendship,&#8221; she said, with mock sentimentality; &#8220;I
+am going back to my flax now.&#8221;</p>
+<p>However, she did not move.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And, by-the-way,&#8221; she said, languidly, &#8220;is there
+in your intellectual circus company a young gentleman
+whose name is Eyre?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Kelly Eyre? Yes,&#8221; I said, sulkily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ah.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She strolled out of the room, hesitated, then turned
+in the doorway with a charming smile.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The Countess will return from her gallop at five.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She waited as though expecting an answer, but I
+only bowed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Would you take a message to Mistaire Kelly Eyre
+for me?&#8221; she asked, sweetly.</p>
+<p>I said that I would.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then please say that: &#8216;<i>On Sunday the book-stores
+are closed in Paris.</i>&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is that what I am to say?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Exactly that.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Very well, mademoiselle.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_218' name='page_218'></a>218</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Of course, if he asks who told you&mdash;you may say
+that it was a Bretonne at Point Paradise.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nothing else?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nothing, monsieur.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She courtesied and vanished.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Little minx,&#8221; I thought, &#8220;what mischief are you
+preparing now?&#8221; and I rested my elbow on the window-sill
+and gazed out into the garden, where apricot-trees
+and fig-trees lined the winding walks between beds of
+old-fashioned herbs, anise, basil, caraway, mint, sage,
+and saffron.</p>
+<p>Sunlight lay warm on wall and gravel-path; scarlet
+apples hung aloft on a few young trees; a pair of trim,
+wary magpies explored the fig-trees, sometimes quarrelling,
+sometimes making common cause against the
+shy wild-birds that twittered everywhere among the
+vines.</p>
+<p>I fancied, after a few moments, that I heard the
+distant thudding of a horse&#8217;s hoofs; soon I was sure of
+it, and rose to my feet expectantly, just as a flushed
+young girl in a riding-habit entered the room and gave
+me her gloved hand.</p>
+<p>Her fresh, breezy beauty astonished me; could this
+laughing, gray-eyed girl with her silky, copper-tinted
+hair be the same slender, grave young Countess whom
+I had known in Alsace&mdash;this incarnation of all that is
+wholesome and sweet and winning in woman? What
+had become of her mission and the soiled brethren of
+the proletariat? What had happened?</p>
+<p>I looked at her earnestly, scarcely understanding
+that she was saying she was glad I had come, that she
+had waited for me, that she had wanted to see me, that
+she had wished to tell me how deeply our tragic experience
+at La Trappe and in Morsbronn had impressed
+her. She said she had sent a letter to me in Paris
+which was returned, <i>opened</i>, with a strange note from
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_219' name='page_219'></a>219</span>
+Monsieur Mornac. She had waited for some word
+from me, here in Paradise, since September; &#8220;waited
+impatiently,&#8221; she added, and a slight frown bent her
+straight brows for a moment&mdash;a moment only.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But come out to my garden,&#8221; she said, smiling, and
+stripping off her little buff gauntlets. &#8220;There we will
+have tea a l&#8217;Anglaise, and sunshine, and a long, long,
+satisfying talk; at least I will,&#8221; she added, laughing
+and coloring up; &#8220;for truly, Monsieur Scarlett, I do
+not believe I have given you one second to open your
+lips.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Heaven knows I was perfectly content to watch her
+lips and listen to the music of her happy, breathless
+voice without breaking the spell with my own.</p>
+<p>She led the way along a path under the apricots to
+a seat against a sunny wall, a wall built of massive
+granite, deeply thatched with fungus and lichens,
+where, palpitating in the hot sun, the tiny lizards
+lay glittering, and the scarlet-banded nettle-butterflies
+flitted and hovered and settled to sun themselves, wings
+a-droop.</p>
+<p>Here in the sunshine the tea-rose perfume, mingling
+with the incense of the sea, mounted to my head like
+the first flush of wine to a man long fasting; or was it
+the enchantment of her youth and loveliness&mdash;the
+subtle influence of physical vigor and spiritual innocence
+on a tired, unstrung man?</p>
+<p>&#8220;First of all,&#8221; she said, impulsively, &#8220;I know your
+life&mdash;all of it in minute particular. Are you astonished?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, madame,&#8221; I replied; &#8220;Mornac showed you my
+dossier.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is true,&#8221; she said, with a troubled look of
+surprise.</p>
+<p>I smiled. &#8220;As for Mornac,&#8221; I began, but she interrupted
+me.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_220' name='page_220'></a>220</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Ah, Mornac! Do you suppose I believed him? Had
+I not proof on proof of your loyalty, your honor, your
+courtesy, your chivalry&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Madame, your generosity&mdash;and, I fear, your pity&mdash;overpraises.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, it does not! I know what you are. Mornac
+cannot make white black! I know what you have
+been. Mornac could not read you into infamy, even
+with your dossier under my own eyes!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;In my dossier you read a sorry history, madame.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;In your dossier I read the tragedy of a gentleman.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you know,&#8221; said I, &#8220;that I am now a performer
+in a third-rate travelling circus?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think that is very sad,&#8221; she said, sweetly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sad? Oh no. It is better than the disciplinary
+battalions of Africa.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Which was simply acknowledging that I had served
+a term in prison.</p>
+<p>The color faded in her face. &#8220;I thought you were
+pardoned.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I was&mdash;from prison, not from the battalion of
+Biribi.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I only know,&#8221; she said, &#8220;that they say you were
+not guilty; that they say you faced utter ruin, even
+the possibility of death, for the sake of another man
+whose name even the police&mdash;even Monsieur de Mornac&mdash;could
+never learn. Was there such a man?&#8221;</p>
+<p>I hesitated. &#8220;Madame, there is such a man; <i>I</i> am
+the man who <i>was</i>.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;With no hope?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hope? With every hope,&#8221; I said, smiling. &#8220;My
+name is not my own, but it must serve me to my end,
+and I shall wear it threadbare and leave it to no
+one.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is there no hope?&#8221; she asked, quietly.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_221' name='page_221'></a>221</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;None for the man who <i>was</i>. Much for James
+Scarlett, tamer of lions and general mountebank,&#8221; I
+said, laughing down the rising tide of bitterness. Why
+had she stirred those dark waters? I had drowned
+myself in them long since. Under them lay the corpse
+of a man I had forgotten&mdash;my dead self.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No hope?&#8221; she repeated.</p>
+<p>Suddenly the ghost of all I had lost rose before me
+with her words&mdash;rose at last after all these years, towering,
+terrible, free once more to fill the days with loathing
+and my nights with hell eternal,... after all these
+years!</p>
+<p>Overwhelmed, I fought down the spectre in silence.
+Kith and kin were not all in the world; love of woman
+was not all; a chance for a home, a wife, children, were
+not all; a name was not all. Raising my head, a trifle
+faint with the struggle and the cost of the struggle,
+I saw the distress in her eyes and strove to smile.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There is every hope,&#8221; I said, &#8220;save the hopes of
+youth&mdash;the hope of a woman&#8217;s love, and of that happiness
+which comes through love. I am a man past
+thirty, madame&mdash;thirty-five, I believe my dossier makes
+it. It has taken me fifteen years to bury my youth.
+Let us talk of Mornac.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, we will talk of Mornac,&#8221; she said, gently.</p>
+<p>So with infinite pains I went back and traced for
+her the career of Buckhurst, sparing her nothing; I
+led up to my own appearance on the scene, reviewed
+briefly what we both knew, then disclosed to her in its
+most trivial detail the conference between Buckhurst
+and myself in which his cynical avowal was revealed
+in all its native hideousness.</p>
+<p>She sat motionless, her face like cold marble, as I
+carefully gathered the threads of the plot and gently
+twitched that one which galvanized the mask of Mornac.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mornac!&#8221; she stammered, aghast.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_222' name='page_222'></a>222</span></p>
+<p>I showed her why Buckhurst desired to come to
+Paradise; I showed her why Mornac had initiated her
+into the mysteries of my dossier, taking that infernal
+precaution, although he had every reason to believe
+he had me practically in prison, with the keys in his
+own pocket.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Had it not been for my comrade, Speed,&#8221; I said,
+&#8220;I should be in one of Mornac&#8217;s fortress cells. He
+overshot the mark when he left us together and stepped
+into his cabinet to spread my dossier before you. He
+counted on an innocent man going through hell itself
+to prove his innocence; he counted on me, and left
+Speed out of his calculations. He had your testimony,
+he had my dossier, he had the order for my
+arrest in his pocket.... And then I stepped out of
+sight! I, the honest fool, with my knowledge of his
+infamy, of Buckhurst&#8217;s complicity and purposes&mdash;I
+was gone.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And now mark the irony of the whole thing: he
+had, criminally, destroyed the only bureau that could
+ever have caught me. But he did his best during the
+few weeks that were left him before the battle of Sedan.
+After that it was too late; it was too late when the first
+Uhlan appeared before the gates of Paris. And now
+Mornac, shorn of authority, is shut up in a city
+surrounded by a wall of German steel, through which
+not one single living creature has penetrated for two
+months.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I looked at her steadily. &#8220;Eliminate Mornac as a
+trapped rat; cancel him as a dead rat since the ship
+of Empire went down at Sedan. I do not know what
+has taken place in Paris&mdash;save what all now know
+that the Empire is ended, the Republic proclaimed, and
+the Imperial police a memory. Then let us strike out
+Mornac and turn to Buckhurst. Madame, I am here
+to serve you.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_223' name='page_223'></a>223</span></p>
+<p>The dazed horror in her face which had marked my
+revelations of Buckhurst&#8217;s villanies gave place to a
+mantling flush of pure anger. Shame crimsoned her
+neck, too; shame for her credulous innocence, her belief
+in this rogue who had betrayed her, only to receive
+pardon for the purpose of baser and more murderous
+betrayal.</p>
+<p>I said nothing for a long time, content to leave her
+to her own thoughts. The bitter draught she was
+draining could not harm her, could not but act as the
+most wholesome of tonics.</p>
+<p>Hers was not a weak character to sink, embittered,
+under the weight of knowledge&mdash;knowledge of evil,
+that all must learn to carry lightly through life; I had
+once thought her weak, but I had revised that opinion
+and substituted the words &#8220;pure in thought, inherently
+loyal, essentially unsuspicious.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Tell me about Buckhurst,&#8221; I said, quietly. &#8220;I
+can help you, I think.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The quick tears of humiliation glimmered for a
+second in her angry eyes; then pride fell from her,
+like a stately mantle which a princess puts aside, tired
+and content to rest.</p>
+<p>This was a phase I had never before seen&mdash;a lovely,
+natural young girl, perplexed, troubled, deeply wounded,
+ready to be guided, ready for reproof, perhaps even for
+that sympathy without which reproof is almost valueless.</p>
+<p>She told me that Buckhurst came to her house here
+in Paradise early in September; that while in Paris,
+pondering on what I had said, she had determined to
+withdraw herself absolutely from all organized socialistic
+associations during the war; that she believed
+she could do the greatest good by living a natural and
+cheerful life, by maintaining the position that birth
+and fortune had given her, and by using that position
+and fortune for the benefit of those less fortunate.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_224' name='page_224'></a>224</span></p>
+<p>This she had told Buckhurst, and the rascal appeared
+to agree with her so thoroughly that, when Dr. Delmont
+and Professor Tavernier arrived, they also applauded
+the choice she made of Buckhurst as distributer of
+money, food, and clothing to the provincial hospitals,
+now crowded to suffocation with the wreck of battle.</p>
+<p>Then a strange thing occurred. Dr. Delmont and
+Professor Tavernier disappeared without any explanation.
+They had started for St. Nazaire with a sum of
+money&mdash;twenty thousand francs, locked in the private
+strong-box of the Countess&mdash;to be distributed among
+the soldiers of Chanzy; and they had never returned.</p>
+<p>In the light of what she had learned from me, she
+feared that Buckhurst had won them over; perhaps
+not&mdash;she could not bear to suspect evil of such
+men.</p>
+<p>But she now believed that Buckhurst had used every
+penny he had handled for his own purposes; that not
+one hospital had received what she had sent.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am no longer wealthy,&#8221; she said, anxiously,
+looking up at me. &#8220;I did find time in Paris to have
+matters straightened; I sold La Trappe and paid
+everything. It left me with this house in Paradise,
+and with means to maintain it and still have a few
+thousand francs to give every year. Now it is nearly
+gone&mdash;I don&#8217;t know where. I am dreadfully unhappy;
+I have such a horror of treachery that I cannot even
+understand it, but this ignoble man, Buckhurst, is
+assuredly a heartless rascal.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But,&#8221; I said, patiently, &#8220;you have not yet told me
+where he is.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know,&#8221; she said. &#8220;A week ago a dreadful
+creature came here to see Buckhurst; they went across
+the moor toward the semaphore and stood for a long
+while looking at the cruiser which is anchored off Groix.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_225' name='page_225'></a>225</span>
+Then Buckhurst came back and prepared for a journey.
+He said he was going to Tours to confer with
+the Red Cross. I don&#8217;t know where he went. He took
+all the money for the general Red Cross fund.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;When did he say he would return?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He said in two weeks. He has another week
+yet.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is he usually prompt?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Always so&mdash;to the minute.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is good news,&#8221; I said, gayly. &#8220;But tell me
+one thing: do you trust Mademoiselle Elven?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, indeed!&mdash;indeed!&#8221; she cried, horrified.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Very well,&#8221; said I, smiling. &#8220;Only for the sake
+of caution&mdash;extra, and even perhaps useless caution&mdash;say
+nothing of this matter to her, nor to any living soul
+save me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I promise,&#8221; she said, faintly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;One thing more: this conspiracy against the state
+no longer concerns me&mdash;officially. Both Speed and
+I did all we could to warn the Emperor and the Empress;
+we sent letters through the police in London, we
+used the English secret-service to get our letters into
+the Emperor&#8217;s hand, we tried every known method of
+denouncing Mornac. It was useless; every letter must
+have gone through Mornac&#8217;s hands before it reached
+the throne. We did all we dared do; we were in disguise
+and in hiding under assumed names; we could not do
+more.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now that Mornac is not even a pawn in the game&mdash;as,
+indeed, I begin to believe he never really was, but
+has been from the first a dupe of Buckhurst&mdash;it is the
+duty of every honest man to watch Buckhurst and warn
+the authorities that he possibly has designs on the
+crown jewels of France, which that cruiser yonder is
+all ready to bear away to Sa&iuml;gon.</p>
+<p>&#8220;How he proposes to attempt such a robbery I can&#8217;t
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_226' name='page_226'></a>226</span>
+imagine. I don&#8217;t want to denounce him to General
+Chanzy or Aurelles de Palladine, because the conspiracy
+is too widely spread and too dangerous to be
+defeated by the capture of one man, even though he
+be the head of it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What I want is to entrap the entire band; and that
+can only be done by watching Buckhurst, not arresting
+him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Therefore, madame, I have written and despatched
+a telegram to General Aurelles de Palladine, offering
+my services and the services of Mr. Speed to the Republic
+without compensation. In the event of acceptance,
+I shall send to London for two men who will do
+what is to be done, leaving me free to amuse the public
+with my lions. Meanwhile, as long as we stay in
+Paradise we both are your devoted servants, and we
+beg the privilege of serving you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>During all this time the young Countess had never
+moved her eyes from my face&mdash;perhaps I was flattered&mdash;perhaps
+for that reason I talked on and on, pouring
+out wisdom from a somewhat attenuated supply.</p>
+<p>And I now rose to take my leave, bowing my very
+best bow; but she sat still, looking up quietly at
+me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You ask the privilege of serving me,&#8221; she said.
+&#8220;You could serve me best by giving me your friendship.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You have my devotion, madame,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I did not ask it. I asked your friendship&mdash;in all
+frankness and equality.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you desire the friendship of a circus performer?&#8221;
+I asked, smiling.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I desire it, not only for what you are, but for what you
+have been&mdash;have always been, let them say what they
+will!&#8221;</p>
+<p>I was silent.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_227' name='page_227'></a>227</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Have you never given women your friendship?&#8221;
+she asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not in fifteen years&mdash;nor asked theirs.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Will you not ask mine?&#8221;</p>
+<p>I tried to speak steadily, but my voice was uncertain;
+I sat down, crushed under a flood of memories, hopes
+accursed, ambitions damned and consigned to oblivion.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are very kind,&#8221; I said. &#8220;You are the Countess
+de Vassart. A man is what he makes himself. I have
+made myself&mdash;with both eyes open; and I am now an
+acrobat and a tamer of beasts. I understand your
+goodness, your impulse to help those less fortunate
+than yourself. I also understand that I have placed
+myself where I am, and that, having done so deliberately,
+I cannot meet as friends and equals those
+who might have been my equals if not friends. Besides
+that, I am a native of a paradox&mdash;a Republic
+which, though caste-bound, knows no caste abroad.
+I might, therefore, have been your friend if you had
+chosen to waive the traditions of your continent and
+accept the traditions of mine. But now, madame, I
+must beg permission to make my adieux.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She sprang up and caught both my hands in her ungloved
+hands. &#8220;Won&#8217;t you take my friendship&mdash;and
+give me yours&mdash;my friend?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; I said, slowly. The blood beat in my temples,
+almost blinding me; my heart hammered in my
+throat till I shivered.</p>
+<p>As in a dream I bent forward; she abandoned her
+hands to me; and I touched a woman&#8217;s hands with my
+lips for the first time in fifteen years.</p>
+<p>&#8220;In all devotion and loyalty&mdash;and gratitude,&#8221; I
+said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And in friendship&mdash;say it!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;In friendship.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_228' name='page_228'></a>228</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Now you may go&mdash;if you desire to. When will you
+come again?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;When may I?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;When you will.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_229' name='page_229'></a>229</span>
+<a name='XIV_THE_PATH_OF_THE_LIZARD' id='XIV_THE_PATH_OF_THE_LIZARD'></a>
+<h2>XIV</h2>
+<h3>THE PATH OF THE LIZARD</h3>
+</div>
+<p>About nine o&#8217;clock the next morning an incident
+occurred which might have terminated my career
+in one way, and did, ultimately, end it in another.</p>
+<p>I had been exercising my lions and putting them
+through their paces, and had noticed no unusual insubordination
+among them, when suddenly, Timour
+Melek, a big Algerian lion, flew at me without the
+slightest provocation or warning.</p>
+<p>Fortunately I had a training-chair in my hand, on
+which Timour had just been sitting, and I had time
+to thrust it into his face. Thrice with incredible swiftness
+he struck the iron-chair, right, left, and right, as
+a cat strikes, then seized it in his teeth. At the same
+moment I brought my loaded whip heavily across his
+nose.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Down, Timour Melek! Down! down! down!&#8221; I
+said, steadily, accompanying each word with a blow
+of the whip across the nose.</p>
+<p>The brute had only hurt himself when he struck the
+chair, and now, under the blows raining on his sensitive
+nose, he doubtless remembered similar episodes in his
+early training, and shrank back, nearly deafening me
+with his roars. I followed, punishing him, and he
+fled towards the low iron grating which separated the
+training-cage from the night-quarters.</p>
+<p>This I am now inclined to believe was a mistake of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_230' name='page_230'></a>230</span>
+judgment on my part. I should have driven him into
+a corner and thoroughly cowed him, using the training-chair
+if necessary, and trusting to my two assistants
+with their irons, who had already closed up on either
+side of the cage.</p>
+<p>I was not in perfect trim that morning. Not that I
+felt nervous in the least, nor had I any lack of self-confidence,
+but I was not myself. I had never in my life
+entered a lion-cage feeling as I did that morning&mdash;an
+indifference which almost amounted to laziness,
+an apathy which came close to melancholy.</p>
+<p>The lions knew I was not myself&mdash;they had been
+aware of it as soon as I set foot in their cage; and I
+knew it. But my strange apathy only increased as I
+went about my business, perfectly aware all the time
+that, with lions born in captivity, the unexpected is
+always to be expected.</p>
+<p>Timour Melek was now close to the low iron door between
+the partitions; the other lions had become unusually
+excited, bounding at a heavy gallop around
+the cage, or clinging to the bars like enormous cats.</p>
+<p>Then, as I faced Timour, ready to force him backward
+through the door into the night-quarters, something
+in the blank glare of his eyes seemed to fascinate
+me. I had an absurd sensation that he was slipping
+away from me&mdash;escaping; that I no longer dominated
+him nor had authority. It was not panic, nor even
+fear; it was a faint paralysis&mdash;temporary, fortunately;
+for at that instant instinct saved me; I struck the lion
+a terrific blow across the nose and whirled around,
+chair uplifted, just in time to receive the charge of
+Empress Khatoun, consort of Timour.</p>
+<p>She struck the iron-bound chair, doubling it up
+like crumpled paper, hurling me headlong, not to the
+floor of the cage, but straight through the sliding-bars
+which Speed had just flung open with a shout. As
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_231' name='page_231'></a>231</span>
+for me, I landed violently on my back in the sawdust,
+the breath knocked clean out of me.</p>
+<p>When I could catch my breath again I realized that
+there was no time to waste. Speed looked at me angrily,
+but I jerked open the grating, flung another
+chair into the cage, leaped in, and, singling out Empress
+Khatoun, I sailed into her with passionless thoroughness,
+punishing her to a stand-still, while the other
+lions, Aicha, Marghouz, Timour, and Genghis Khan
+snarled and watched me steadily.</p>
+<p>As I emerged from the cage Speed asked me whether
+I was hurt, and I gasped out that I was not.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What went wrong?&#8221; he persisted.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Timour and that young lioness&mdash;no, <i>I</i> went wrong;
+the lions knew it at once; something failed me, I don&#8217;t
+know what; upon my soul, Speed, I don&#8217;t know what
+happened.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You lost your nerve?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, not that. Timour began looking at me in a
+peculiar way&mdash;he certainly dominated me for an instant&mdash;for
+a tenth of a second; and then Khatoun
+flew at me before I could control Timour&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>I hesitated.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Speed, it was one of those seconds that come to us,
+when the faintest shadow of indecision settles matters.
+Engineers are subject to it at the throttle, pilots at the
+helm, captains in battle&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Men in love,&#8221; added Speed.</p>
+<p>I looked at him, not comprehending.</p>
+<p>&#8220;By-the-way,&#8221; said Speed, &#8220;Leo Grammont, the
+greatest lion-tamer who ever lived, once told me that
+a man in love with a woman could not control lions;
+that when a man falls in love he loses that intangible,
+mysterious quality&mdash;call it mesmerism or whatever
+you like&mdash;the occult force that dominates beasts. And
+he said that the lions knew it, that they perceived it
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_232' name='page_232'></a>232</span>
+sometimes even before the man himself was aware that
+he was in love.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I looked him over in astonishment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s the matter with you?&#8221; he asked, amused.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What's the matter with <i>you</i>?&#8221; I demanded. &#8220;If
+you mean to intimate that I have fallen in love you are
+certainly an astonishing ass!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t talk that way,&#8221; he said, good-humoredly.
+&#8220;I didn&#8217;t dream of such a thing, or of offending you,
+Scarlett.&#8221;</p>
+<p>It struck me at the same moment that my irritable
+and unwarranted retort was utterly unlike me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I beg your pardon,&#8221; I said. &#8220;I don&#8217;t know exactly
+what is the matter with me to-day. First I quarrel
+with poor old Timour Melek, then I insult you. I&#8217;ve
+discovered that I have nerves; I never before knew
+it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Cold flap-jacks and cider would have destroyed
+Hercules himself in time,&#8221; observed Speed, following
+with his eyes the movements of a lithe young girl,
+who was busy with the hoisting apparatus of the flying
+trapeze. The girl was Jacqueline, dressed in a
+mended gown of Miss Delany&#8217;s.</p>
+<p>&#8220;At times,&#8221; muttered Speed, partly to himself, &#8220;that
+little witch frightens me. There is no risk she
+dares not take; even Horan gets nervous; and when
+that bull-necked numbskull is scared there&#8217;s reason
+for it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>We walked out into the main tent, where simultaneous
+rehearsals were everywhere in progress; and I
+picked up the ring-master&#8217;s whip and sent it curling
+after &#8220;Briza,&#8221; a harmless, fat, white mare on which
+pretty Mrs. Grigg was sitting expectantly. Round and
+round the ring she cantered, now astride two horses,
+now guiding a &#8220;spike,&#8221; practising assiduously her
+acrobatics. At intervals, far up in the rigging overhead,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_233' name='page_233'></a>233</span>
+I caught glimpses of Miss Crystal swinging on
+her trapeze, watching the ring below.</p>
+<p>Byram came in to rehearse the opening processional
+and to rebuke his dearest foe, the unspeakable
+&#8220;camuel,&#8221; bestridden by Mrs. Horan as Fatima, Queen
+of the Desert. Speed followed, squatted on the head of
+the elephant, ankus on thigh, shouting, &#8220;H&ocirc;ut! M&auml;il!
+Djeb&eacute; Noain! M&auml;il the hezar! M&auml;il!&#8221; he thundered,
+triumphantly, saluting Byram with lifted ankus as the
+elephant ambled past in a cloud of dust.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Clear the ring!&#8221; cried Byram.</p>
+<p>Miss Delany, who was outlining Jacqueline with
+juggler&#8217;s knives, began to pull her stock of cutlery
+from the soft pine backing; elephant, camel, horses
+trampled out; Miss Crystal caught a dangling rope
+and slid earthward, and I turned and walked towards
+the outer door with Byram.</p>
+<p>As I looked back for an instant I saw Jacqueline, in
+her glittering diving-skin, calmly step out of her discarded
+skirt and walk towards the sunken tank in the
+middle of the ring, which three workmen were uncovering.</p>
+<p>She was to rehearse her perilous leap for the first
+time to-day, and I told Speed frankly that I was too
+nervous to be present, and so left him staring across
+the dusky tent at the slim child in spangles.</p>
+<p>I had an appointment to meet Robert the Lizard at
+noon, and I was rather curious to find out how much
+his promises were worth when the novelty of his new
+gun had grown stale. So I started towards the cliffs,
+nibbling a crust of bread for luncheon, though the incident
+of the morning had left me small appetite for
+food.</p>
+<p>The poacher was sunning himself on his doorsill
+when I came into view over the black basalt rocks.
+To my surprise, he touched his cap as I approached,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_234' name='page_234'></a>234</span>
+and rose civilly, replying to my greeting with a brief,
+&#8220;Salute, m&#8217;sieu!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are prompt to the minute,&#8221; I said, pleasantly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You also,&#8221; he observed. &#8220;We are quits, m&#8217;sieu&mdash;so
+far.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I told him of the progress that Jacqueline was making;
+he listened in silence, and whether or not he was
+interested I could not determine.</p>
+<p>There was a pause; I looked out across the sun-lit
+ocean, taking time to arrange the order of the few
+questions which I had to ask.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come to the point, m&#8217;sieu,&#8221; he said, dryly. &#8220;We
+have struck palms.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Spite of my training, spite of the caution which experience
+brings to the most unsuspicious of us, I had
+a curious confidence in this tattered rascal&#8217;s loyalty
+to a promise. And apparently without reason, too,
+for there was something wrong with his eyes&mdash;or else
+with the way he used them. They were wonderful,
+vivid blue eyes, well set and well shaped, but he never
+looked at anybody directly except in moments of excitement
+or fury. At such moments his eyes appeared to
+be lighted up from behind.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Lizard,&#8221; I said, &#8220;you are a poacher.&#8221;</p>
+<p>His placid visage turned stormy.</p>
+<p>&#8220;None of that, m&#8217;sieu,&#8221; he retorted; &#8220;remember the
+bargain! Concern yourself with your own affairs!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wait,&#8221; I said. &#8220;I&#8217;m not trying to reform you.
+For my purposes it is a poacher I want&mdash;else I might
+have gone to another.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That sounds more reasonable,&#8221; he admitted, guardedly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I want to ask this,&#8221; I continued: &#8220;are you a poacher
+from necessity, or from that pure love of the chase
+which is born in even worse men than you and I?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I poach because I love it. There are no poachers
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_235' name='page_235'></a>235</span>
+from necessity; there is always the sea, which furnishes
+work for all who care to steer a sloop, or draw a seine,
+or wield a sea-rake. I am a pilot.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But the war?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;At least the war could not keep me from the sardine
+grounds.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;So you poach from choice?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes. It is in me. I am sorry, but what shall I do?
+<i>It's in me</i>.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And you can&#8217;t resist?&#8221;</p>
+<p>He laughed grimly. &#8220;Go and call in the hounds
+from the stag&#8217;s throat!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Presently I said:</p>
+<p>&#8220;You have been in jail?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; he replied, indifferently.</p>
+<p>&#8220;For poaching?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Eur e&#8217;harvik rous,&#8221; he said in Breton, and I could
+not make out whether he meant that he had been in
+jail for the sake of a woman or of a &#8220;little red doe.&#8221;
+The Breton language bristles with double meanings,
+symbols, and allegories. The word for doe in Breton
+is <i>karvez</i>; or for a doe which never had a fawn, it is
+<i>heiez</i>; for a fawn the word is <i>karvik</i>.</p>
+<p>I mentioned these facts to him, but he only looked
+dangerous and remained silent.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Lizard,&#8221; I said, &#8220;give me your confidence as I give
+you mine. I will tell you now that I was once in the
+police&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>He started.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And that I expect to enter that corps again. And
+I want your aid.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;My aid? For the police?&#8221; His laugh was simply
+horrible. &#8220;I? The Lizard? Continue, m&#8217;sieu.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I will tell you why. Yesterday, on a visit to Point
+Paradise, I saw a man lying belly down in the bracken;
+but I didn&#8217;t let him know I saw him. I have served
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_236' name='page_236'></a>236</span>
+in the police; I think I recognize that man. He is
+known in Belleville as Tric-Trac. He came here, I
+believe, to see a man called Buckhurst. Can you
+find this Tric-Trac for me? Do you, perhaps, know
+him?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said the Lizard, &#8220;I knew him in prison.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You have seen him here?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, but I will not betray him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Because he is a poor, hunted devil of a poacher like
+me!&#8221; cried the Lizard, angrily. &#8220;He must live; there&#8217;s
+enough land in Finist&egrave;re for us both.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;How long has he been here in Paradise?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;For two months.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And he told you he lived by poaching?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He lies.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The Lizard looked at me intently.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He has played you; he is a thief, and he has come
+here to rob. He is a filou&mdash;a town rat. Can he bend
+a hedge-snare? Can he line a string of dead-falls?
+Can he even snare enough game to keep himself from
+starving? He a woodsman? <i>He</i> a poacher of the
+bracken? You are simple, my friend.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The veins in the poacher&#8217;s neck began to swell and
+a dull color flooded his face.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Prove that he has played me,&#8221; he said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Prove it yourself.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;How?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;By watching him. He came here to meet a man
+named Buckhurst.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I have seen that man Buckhurst, too. What is
+he doing here?&#8221; asked the Lizard.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is what I want you to find out and help me to
+find out!&#8221; I said. &#8220;Voil&agrave;! Now you know what I
+want of you.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_237' name='page_237'></a>237</span></p>
+<p>The sombre visage of the poacher twitched.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I take it,&#8221; said I, &#8220;that you would not make a
+comrade of a petty pickpocket.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The poacher uttered an oath and shook his fist at
+me. &#8220;Bon sang!&#8221; he snarled, &#8220;I am an honest man
+if I am a poacher!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s the reason I trusted you,&#8221; said I, good-humoredly.
+&#8220;Take your fists down, my friend, and
+think out a plan which will permit me to observe this
+Monsieur Tric-Trac at my leisure, without I myself
+being observed.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is easy,&#8221; he said. &#8220;I take him food to-day.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then I was right,&#8221; said I, laughing. &#8220;He is a
+Belleville rat, who cannot feed himself where there are
+no pockets to pick. Does he know a languste from a
+linnet? Not he, my friend!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The Lizard sat still, head bent, knees drawn up, apparently
+buried in thought. There is no injury one
+can do a Breton of his class like the injury of deceiving
+and mocking.</p>
+<p>If Tric-Trac, a man of the city, had come here to
+profit by the ignorance of a Breton&mdash;and perhaps
+laugh at his stupidity!</p>
+<p>But I let the ferment work in the dark blood of the
+Lizard, leaving him to his own sombre logic, undisturbed.</p>
+<p>Presently the Lizard raised his head and fixed his
+bright, intelligent eyes on me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;M&#8217;sieu,&#8221; he said, in a curiously gentle voice, &#8220;we
+men of Paradise are called out for the army. I must
+go, or go to jail. How can I remain here and help you
+trap these filous?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I have telegraphed to General Chanzy,&#8221; I said,
+frankly. &#8220;If he accepts&mdash;or if General Aurelles de
+Palladine is favorable&mdash;I shall make you exempt under
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_238' name='page_238'></a>238</span>
+authority from Tours. I mean to keep you in my
+service, anyway,&#8221; I added.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You mean that&mdash;that I need not go to Lorient&mdash;to
+this war?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I hope so, my friend.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He looked at me, astonished. &#8220;If you can do that,
+m&#8217;sieu, you can do anything.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;In the meanwhile,&#8221; I said, dryly, &#8220;I want another
+look at Tric-Trac.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I could show you Tric-Trac in an hour&mdash;but to
+go to him direct would excite his suspicion. Besides,
+there are two gendarmes in Paradise to conduct the
+conscripts to Lorient; there are also several gardes-champ&ecirc;tre.
+But I can get you there, in the open
+moorland, too, under everybody&#8217;s noses! Shall I?&#8221;
+he said, with an eager ferocity that startled me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are not to injure him, no matter what he does
+or says,&#8221; I said, sharply. &#8220;I want to watch him, not
+to frighten him away. I want to see what he and
+Buckhurst are doing. Do you understand?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then strike palms!&#8221;</p>
+<p>We struck vigorously.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now I am ready to start,&#8221; I said, pleasantly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And now I am ready to tell you something,&#8221; he
+said, with the fierce light burning behind his blue
+eyes. &#8220;If you were already in the police I would not
+help you&mdash;no, not even to trap this filou who has mocked
+me! If you again enter the police I will desert you!&#8221;</p>
+<p>He licked his dry lips.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you know what a blood-feud is?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then understand that a man in a high place has
+wronged me&mdash;and that he is of the police&mdash;the Imperial
+Military police!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_239' name='page_239'></a>239</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;You will know when I pass my fagot-knife into his
+throat,&#8221; he snarled&mdash;&#8220;not before.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The Lizard picked up his fishing-rod, slung a canvas
+bag over his stained velveteen jacket, gathered together
+a few coils of hair-wire, a pot of twig-lime, and other
+odds and ends, which he tucked into his broad-flapped
+coat-pocket. &#8220;Allons,&#8221; he said, briefly, and we
+started.</p>
+<p>The canvas bag on his back bulged, perhaps with
+provisions, although the steel point of a murderous
+salmon-gaff protruded from the mouth of the sack and
+curved over his shoulder.</p>
+<p>The village square in Paradise was nearly deserted.
+The children had raced away to follow the newly arrived
+gendarmes as closely as they dared, and the women
+were in-doors hanging about their men, whom the government
+summoned to Lorient.</p>
+<p>There were, however, a few people in the square, and
+these the Lizard was very careful to greet. Thus we
+passed the mayor, waddling across the bridge, puffing
+with official importance over the arrival of the gendarmes.
+He bowed to me; the Lizard saluted him
+with, &#8220;Times are hard on the fat!&#8221; to which the mayor
+replied morosely, and bade him go to the devil.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Au revoir, donc,&#8221; retorted the Lizard, unabashed.
+The mayor bawled after him a threat of arrest unless
+he reported next day in the square.</p>
+<p>At that the poacher halted. &#8220;Don&#8217;t you wish you
+might get me!&#8221; he said, tauntingly, probably presuming
+on my conditional promise.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you refuse to report?&#8221; demanded the mayor, also
+halting.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Et ta s&oelig;ur!&#8221; replied the poacher; &#8220;is she reporting
+at the caserne?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The mayor replied angrily, and a typical Breton
+quarrel began, which ended in the mayor biting his
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_240' name='page_240'></a>240</span>
+thumb-nail at the Lizard and wishing him &#8220;St. Hubert&#8217;s
+luck&#8221;&mdash;an insult tantamount to a curse.</p>
+<p>Now St. Hubert was a mighty hunter, and his luck
+was proverbially marvellous. But as everything goes
+by contrary in Brittany, to wish a Breton hunter good
+luck was the very worst thing you could do him. Bad
+luck was certain to follow&mdash;if not that very day, certainly,
+inexorably, <i>some</i> day.</p>
+<p>With wrath in his eyes the Lizard exhausted his
+profanity, stretching out his arm after the retreating
+mayor, who waddled away, gesticulating, without turning
+his head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come back! Toad! Sourd! V-Snake! Bat of
+the gorse!&#8221; shouted the Lizard. &#8220;Do you think I&#8217;m
+afraid of your spells, fat owl of Fa&ouml;uet? Evil-eyed eel!
+The luck of Ker-Ys to you and yours! Ho fois! Do
+you think I am frightened&mdash;I, Robert the Lizard?
+Your wife is a camel and your daughter a cow!&#8221; The
+mayor was unmarried, but it didn&#8217;t matter. And,
+moreover, as that official was now out of ear-shot, the
+Lizard turned anxiously to me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t tell me you are superstitious enough to care
+what the mayor said,&#8221; I laughed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dame, m&#8217;sieu, we shall have no luck to-day. To-morrow
+it doesn&#8217;t matter&mdash;but if we go to-day, bad luck
+must come to us.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;To-day? Nonsense!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If not, then another day.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Rubbish! Come on.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you think we could take precautions?&#8221; he asked,
+furtively.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Take all you like,&#8221; I said; &#8220;rack your brains for
+an antidote to neutralize the bad luck, only come on,
+you great gaby!&#8221;</p>
+<p>I knew many of the Finist&egrave;re legends; out of the
+corner of my eye I watched this stalwart rascal, cowed
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_241' name='page_241'></a>241</span>
+by gross superstition, peeping about for some favorable
+sign to counteract the luck of St. Hubert.</p>
+<p>First he looked up at the crows, and counted them
+as they passed overhead cawing ominously&mdash;one&mdash;two&mdash;three&mdash;four&mdash;five!
+Five is danger! But wait, more
+were coming: one&mdash;two&mdash;three&mdash;four&mdash;five&mdash;six&mdash;seven&mdash;!
+A loss! Well, that was not as bad as some
+things. But hark! More crows coming: one&mdash;two&mdash;three!
+Death!</p>
+<p>&#8220;Jes&ucirc;!&#8221; he faltered, ducking his head instinctively.
+&#8220;I&#8217;ll look elsewhere for signs.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The signs were all wrong that morning; first we met
+an ancient crone with a great pack of fagots on her
+bent back, and I was sure he could have strangled her
+cheerfully, because there are few worse omens for a
+hunter of game or of men. Then he examined the
+first mushroom he found, but under the pink-and-pearl
+cap we saw no insects crawling. The veil, too, was
+rent, showing the poisonous, fluted gills; and the toadstool
+blackened when he cut it with the blade of his
+fagot-knife.</p>
+<p>He tried once more, however, and searched through
+the gorse until he found a heavy lizard, green as an
+emerald. He teased it till it snapped at the silver franc
+in my hand; its teeth should have vanished, but when
+he held out his finger the creature bit into it till the
+blood spurted.</p>
+<p>Still I refused to turn back. What should he do?
+Then into his mind crept a Pouldu superstition. It
+was a charm against evil, including lightning, black-rot,
+rheumatism, and &#8220;douleurs&#8221; of other varieties.</p>
+<p>The charm was simple. We needed only to build
+a little fire of gorse, and walk through the smoke once
+or twice. So we built the fire and walked through the
+smoke, the Lizard coughing and cursing until I feared
+he might overdo it by smothering us both. Then
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_242' name='page_242'></a>242</span>
+stamping out the last spark&mdash;for he was a woodsman
+always&mdash;we tramped on in better humor with
+destiny.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You think that turned the curse backward, m&#8217;sieu?&#8221;
+he asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There is not the faintest doubt of that,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>Far away towards Sainte-Ysole we saw the blue woods
+which were our goal. However, we had no intention
+of going there as the bee flies, partly because Tric-Trac
+might see us, partly because the Lizard wished any
+prowling passer-by to observe that he was occupied
+with his illegitimate profession. For my part, I very
+much preferred a brush with a garde-champ&ecirc;tre or a
+summons to explain why no shots were found in the
+Lizard&#8217;s pheasants, rather than have anybody ask
+us why we were walking so fast towards Sainte-Ysole
+woods.</p>
+<p>Therefore we promptly selected a hedge for operations,
+choosing a high, thick one, which separated two
+fields of wheat stubble.</p>
+<p>Kneeling under the hedge, he broke a hole in it just
+large enough for a partridge to worry through. Then
+he bent his twig, fastened the hair-wire into a running
+noose, adjusted it, and stood up. This man&oelig;uvre he
+repeated at various hedges or in thickets where he
+&#8220;lined&#8221; his trail with peeled twigs on every bush.</p>
+<p>Once he paused to reset a hare-trap with a turnip,
+picked up in a neighboring field; once he limed a young
+sapling and fixed a bit of a mirror in the branches, but
+not a bird alighted, although the blackthorns were
+full of fluttering wings. And all the while we had been
+twisting and doubling and edging nearer and nearer
+to the Sainte-Ysole woods, until we were already within
+their cool shadow, and I heard the tinkle of a stream
+among leafy depths.</p>
+<p>Now we had no fear; we were hidden from the eyes
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_243' name='page_243'></a>243</span>
+of the dry, staring plain, and the Lizard laughed to
+himself as he fastened a grasshopper to his hook and
+flung it into the broad, dark water of the pool at his
+feet.</p>
+<p>Slowly he fished up stream, but, although he seemed
+to be intent on his sport, there was something in the
+bend of his head that suggested he might be listening
+for other sounds than the complex melodies of mossy
+waterfalls.</p>
+<p>His poacher&#8217;s eyes began to glisten and shimmer
+in the forest dusk like the eyes of wild things that hunt
+at night. As he noiselessly turned, his nostrils spread
+with a tremor, as a good dog&#8217;s nose quivers at the point.</p>
+<p>Presently he beckoned me, stepped into the moss,
+and crawled without a sound straight through the
+holly thicket.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Watch here,&#8221; he whispered. &#8220;Count a hundred
+when I disappear, then creep on your stomach to the
+edge of that bank. In the bed of the stream, close under
+you, you will see and hear your friend Tric-Trac.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Before I had counted fifty I heard the Lizard cry out,
+&#8220;Bonjour, Tric-Trac!&#8221; but I counted on, obeying the
+Lizard&#8217;s orders as I should wish mine to be obeyed.
+I heard a startled exclamation in reply to the Lizard&#8217;s
+greeting, then a purely Parisian string of profanity,
+which terminated as I counted one hundred and crept
+forward to the mossy edge of the bank, under the yellow
+beech leaves.</p>
+<p>Below me stood the Lizard, intently watching a figure
+crouched on hands and knees before a small, iron-bound
+box.</p>
+<p>The person addressed as Tric-Trac promptly tried
+to hide the box by sitting down on it. He was a young
+man, with wide ears and unhealthy spots on his face.
+His hair, which was oily and thick, he wore neatly
+plastered into two pointed love-locks. This not only
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_244' name='page_244'></a>244</span>
+adorned and distinguished him, but it lent a casual
+and detached air to his ears, which stood at right angles
+to the plane of his face. I knew that engaging countenance.
+It was the same old Tric-Trac.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Zut, alors!&#8221; repeated Tric-Trac, venomously, as
+the poacher smiled again; &#8220;can&#8217;t you give the company
+notice when you come in?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did you expect me to ring the tocsin?&#8221; asked the
+Lizard.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Flute!&#8221; snarled Tric-Trac. &#8220;Like a mud-rat, you
+creep with no sound&mdash;c&#8217;est pas polite, nom d&#8217;un
+nom!&#8221;</p>
+<p>He began nervously brushing the pine-needles from
+his skin-tight trousers, with dirty hands.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s that box?&#8221; asked the Lizard, abruptly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Box? Where?&#8221; A vacant expression came into
+Tric-Trac&#8217;s face, and he looked all around him except
+at the box upon which he was sitting.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Box?&#8221; he repeated, with that hopeless effrontery
+which never deserts criminals of his class, even under
+the guillotine. &#8220;I don&#8217;t see any box.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re sitting on it,&#8221; observed the Lizard.</p>
+<p>&#8220;<i>That</i> box? Oh! You mean <i>that</i> box? Oh!&#8221; He
+peeped at it between his meagre legs, then turned a
+nimble eye on the poacher.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s in it?&#8221; demanded the poacher, sullenly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t know,&#8221; replied Tric-Trac, with brisk interest.
+&#8220;I found it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;<i>Found</i> it!&#8221; repeated the Lizard, scornfully.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Certainly, my friend; how do you suppose I came
+by it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You stole it!&#8221;</p>
+<p>They faced each other for a moment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Supposition that you are correct; what of it?&#8221; said
+the young ruffian, calmly.</p>
+<p>The Lizard was silent.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_245' name='page_245'></a>245</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Did you bring me anything to chew on?&#8221; inquired
+Tric-Trac, sniffing at the poacher&#8217;s sack.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Bread, cheese, three pheasants, cider&mdash;more than
+I eat in a week,&#8221; said the Lizard, quietly. &#8220;It will cost
+forty sous.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He opened his sack and slowly displayed the provisions.</p>
+<p>I looked hard at the iron-bound box.</p>
+<p><i>On one end was painted the Geneva cross.</i> Dr. Delmont
+and Professor Tavernier had disappeared carrying
+red-cross funds. Was that their box?</p>
+<p>&#8220;I said it costs forty sous&mdash;two silver francs,&#8221; repeated
+the Lizard, doggedly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Forty sous? That&#8217;s robbery!&#8221; sniffed the young
+ruffian, now using that half-whining, half-sneering
+form of discourse peculiar alike to the vicious chevalier
+of Paris and his confr&egrave;re of the provincial centres.
+Accent and slang alone distinguish between them; the
+argot, however, is practically the same.</p>
+<p>Tric-Trac fished a few coins from his pocket, counted
+carefully, and handed them, one by one, to the poacher.</p>
+<p>The poacher coolly tossed the food on the ground,
+and, as Tric-Trac rose to pick it up, seized the box.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Drop that!&#8221; said Tric-Trac, quickly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s in it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nothing! Drop it, I tell you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where&#8217;s the key?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s no key&mdash;it&#8217;s a machine.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s in it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now I&#8217;ve been trying to find out for two weeks,&#8221;
+sneered Tric-Trac, &#8220;and I don&#8217;t know yet. Drop it!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m going to open it all the same,&#8221; said the Lizard,
+coolly, lifting the lid.</p>
+<p>A sudden silence followed; then the Lizard swore
+vigorously. There was another box within the light,
+iron-edged casket, a keyless cube of shining steel,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_246' name='page_246'></a>246</span>
+with a knob on the top, and a needle which revolved
+around a dial on which were engraved the hours and
+minutes. And emblazoned above the dial was the coat
+of arms of the Countess de Vassart.</p>
+<p>When Tric-Trac had satisfied himself concerning the
+situation, he returned to devour his food.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Flute! Zut! Mince!&#8221; he observed; &#8220;you and your
+bad manners, they sicken me&mdash;tiens!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The Lizard, flat on his stomach, lay with the massive
+steel box under his chin, patiently turning the needle
+from figure to figure.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wonderful! wonderful!&#8221; sneered Tric-Trac. &#8220;Continue,
+my friend, to put out your eyes with your fingers!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The Lizard continued to turn the needle backward
+and forward around the face of the dial. Once, when
+he twirled it impatiently, a tiny chime rang out from
+within the box, but the steel lid did not open.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s the Angelus,&#8221; said Tric-Trac, with a grimace.
+&#8220;Let us pray, my friend, for a cold-chisel&mdash;when my
+friend Buckhurst returns.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Still the Lizard lay, unmoved, turning the needle
+round and round.</p>
+<p>Tric-Trac having devoured the cheese, bread, and an
+entire pheasant, made a bundle of the remaining food,
+emptied the cider-jug, wiped his beardless face with his
+cap, and announced that he would be pleased to &#8220;broil&#8221;
+a cigarette.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you want the gendarmes to scent tobacco?&#8221;
+said the Lizard.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are the &#8217;Flics&#8217; out already?&#8221; asked Tric-Trac, astonished.</p>
+<p>&#8220;They&#8217;re in Paradise, setting the whole Department
+by the ears. But they can&#8217;t look sideways at me; I&#8217;m
+going to be exempt.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It strikes me,&#8221; observed Tric-Trac, &#8220;that you take
+great precautions for your own skin.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_247' name='page_247'></a>247</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;I do,&#8221; said the Lizard.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What about me?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The poacher looked around at the young ruffian.
+Those muscles in the human face which draw back
+the upper lip are not the muscles used for laughter.
+Animals employ them when they snarl. And now the
+Lizard laughed that way; his upper lip shrank from
+the edge of his yellow teeth, and he regarded Tric-Trac
+with oblique and burning eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What about me?&#8221; repeated Tric-Trac, in an offended
+tone. &#8220;Am I to live in fear of the Flics?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The Lizard laughed again, and Tric-Trac, disgusted,
+stood up, settled his cap over his wide ears, humming
+a song as he loosened his trousers-belt:</p>
+<table style='margin: auto' summary=''><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;Si&nbsp;vous&nbsp;t&#8217;nez&nbsp;&agrave;&nbsp;vot&#8217;&nbsp;squelette<br />
+Ne&nbsp;fait&#8217;&nbsp;pas&nbsp;comme&nbsp;Bibi!<br />
+Claquer&nbsp;plut&ocirc;t&nbsp;dans&nbsp;vot&#8217;&nbsp;lit<br />
+Que&nbsp;de&nbsp;claquer&nbsp;&agrave;&nbsp;la&nbsp;Roquette!&#8221;&mdash;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>&#8220;Who are you gaping at?&#8221; he added, abruptly.
+&#8220;Bon; c&#8217;est ma geule. Et apr&egrave;s? Drop that box!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come,&#8221; replied the Lizard, coldly, placing the
+box on the moss, &#8220;you&#8217;d better not quarrel with
+me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, that&#8217;s a threat, is it?&#8221; sneered Tric-Trac. He
+walked over to the steel box, lifted it, placed it in the
+iron-edged case, and sat down on the case.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I want you to comprehend,&#8221; he added, &#8220;that you
+have pushed your nose into an affair that does not
+concern you. The next time you come here to sell
+your snared pheasants, come like a man, nom de Dieu!
+and not like a cat of the Glaci&egrave;re!&mdash;or I&#8217;ll find a way to
+stop your curiosity.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The dull-red color surged into the poacher&#8217;s face and
+heavy neck; for a moment he stood as though stunned.
+Then he dragged out his knife.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_248' name='page_248'></a>248</span></p>
+<p>Tric-Trac sat looking at him insolently, one hand
+thrust into the bosom of his greasy coat.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve got a toy under my cravate that says &#8216;Papa!&#8217;
+six times&mdash;pop! pop! pop! pop! pop! pop! Papa!&#8221; he
+continued, calmly; &#8220;so there&#8217;s no use in your turning
+red and swelling the veins in your neck. Go to the
+devil! Do you think I can&#8217;t live without you? Go to
+the devil with your traps and partridges and fish-hooks&mdash;and
+that fagot-knife in your fist&mdash;and if you try to
+throw it at me you&#8217;ll make a sad mistake!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The Lizard&#8217;s half-raised hand dropped as Tric-Trac,
+with a movement like lightning, turned a revolver full
+on him, talking all the while in his drawling whine.</p>
+<p>&#8220;C&#8217;est &ccedil;&agrave;! Now you are reasonable. Get out of this
+forest, my friend&mdash;or stay and join us. Eh! That
+astonishes you? Why? Idiot, we want men like you.
+We want men who have nothing to lose and&mdash;millions
+to gain! Ah, you are amazed! Yes, millions&mdash;I say
+it. I, Tric-Trac of the Glaci&egrave;re, who have done my time
+in Noumea, too! Yes, millions.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The young ruffian laughed and slowly passed his
+tongue over his thin lips. The Lizard slowly returned
+his knife to its sheath, looked all around, then deliberately
+sat down on the moss cross-legged. I could
+have hugged him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;A million? Where?&#8221; he asked, vacantly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Parbleu! Naturally you ask where,&#8221; chuckled
+Tric-Trac. &#8220;Tiens! A supposition that it&#8217;s in this
+box!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The box is too small,&#8221; said the Lizard, patiently.</p>
+<p>Tric-Trac roared. &#8220;Listen to him! Listen to the
+child!&#8221; he cried, delighted. &#8220;Too small to hold gold
+enough for you? Very well&mdash;but is <i>a ship big enough</i>?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A big ship is.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Tric-Trac wriggled in convulsions of laughter.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, listen! He wants a big ship! Well&mdash;say a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_249' name='page_249'></a>249</span>
+ship as big as that ugly, black iron-clad sticking up
+out of the sea yonder, like a Usine-de-gaz!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think that ship would be big enough,&#8221; said the
+poacher, seriously.</p>
+<p>Tric-Trac did not laugh; his little eyes narrowed, and
+he looked steadily at the poacher.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you mean what I mean?&#8221; he asked, deliberately.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; said the Lizard, &#8220;what do you mean?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I mean that France is busy stitching on a new flag.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Black?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Red&mdash;<i>first</i>.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh-h!&#8221; mused the poacher. &#8220;When does France
+hoist that new red flag?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;When Paris falls.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The poacher rested his chin on his doubled fist and
+leaned forward across his gathered knees. &#8220;I see,&#8221;
+he drawled.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Under the commune there can be no more poverty,&#8221;
+said Tric-Trac; &#8220;you comprehend that.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Exactly.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And no more aristocrats.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Exactly.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; said Tric-Trac, his head on one side, &#8220;how
+does that programme strike you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is impossible, your programme,&#8221; said the poacher,
+rising to his feet impatiently.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You think so? Wait a few days! Wait, my friend,&#8221;
+cried Tric-Trac, eagerly; &#8220;and say!&mdash;come back here
+next Monday! There will be a few of us here&mdash;a few
+friends. And keep your mouth shut tight. Here!
+Wait. Look here, friend, don&#8217;t let a little pleasantry
+stand between comrades. Your fagot-knife against
+my little flute that sings pa-pa!&mdash;that leaves matters
+balanced, eh?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The young ruffian had followed the Lizard and caught
+him by his stained velvet coat.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_250' name='page_250'></a>250</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Voyons,&#8221; he persisted, &#8220;do you think the commune
+is going to let a comrade starve for lack of Badinguet&#8217;s
+lozenges? Here, take a few of these!&#8221; and the rascal
+thrust out a dirty palm full of twenty-franc gold pieces.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What are these for?&#8221; muttered the Lizard, sullenly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;For your beaux yeux, imbecile!&#8221; cried Tric-Trac,
+gayly. &#8220;Come back when you want more. My comrade,
+Citizen Buckhurst, will be glad to see you next
+Monday. Adieu, my friend. Don&#8217;t chatter to the Flics!&#8221;</p>
+<p>He picked up his box and the packet of provisions,
+dropped his revolver into the side-pocket of his jacket,
+cocked his greasy cap, blew a kiss to the Lizard, and
+started off straight into the forest. After a dozen steps
+he hesitated, turned, and looked back at the poacher
+for a moment in silence. Then he made a friendly
+grimace.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are not a fool,&#8221; he said, &#8220;so you won&#8217;t follow
+me. Come again Monday. It will really be worth
+while, dear friend.&#8221; Then, as on an impulse, he came
+all the way back, caught the Lizard by the sleeve,
+raised his meagre body on tip-toe, and whispered.</p>
+<p>The Lizard turned perfectly white; Tric-Trac trotted
+away into the woods, hugging his box and smirking.</p>
+<p>The Lizard and I walked back together. By the
+time we reached Paradise bridge I understood him
+better, and he understood me. And when we arrived
+at the circus tent, and when Speed came up, handing
+me a telegram from Chanzy refusing my services, the
+Lizard turned to me like an obedient hound to take my
+orders&mdash;now that I was not to re-enter the Military
+Police.</p>
+<p>I ordered him to disobey the orders from Lorient
+and from the mayor of Paradise; to take to the woods
+as though to avoid the conscription; to join Buckhurst&#8217;s
+franc-company of ruffians, and to keep me
+fully informed.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_251' name='page_251'></a>251</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;And, Lizard,&#8221; I said, &#8220;you may be caught and
+hanged for it by the police, or stabbed by Tric-Trac.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Bien,&#8221; he said, coolly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But it is a brave thing you do; a soldierly thing!&#8221;</p>
+<p>He was silent.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is for France,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>He shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And we&#8217;ll catch this Tric-Trac red-handed,&#8221; I suggested.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ah&mdash;yes!&#8221; His eyes glowed as though lighted up
+from behind. &#8220;And another who is high in the police,
+and a friend of this Tric-Trac!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Was it that man&#8217;s name he whispered to you when
+you turned so white?&#8221; I said, suddenly.</p>
+<p>The Lizard turned his glowing eyes on me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Was the man&#8217;s name&mdash;Mornac?&#8221; I asked, at a hopeless
+venture.</p>
+<p>The Lizard shivered; I needed no reply, not even
+his hoarse, &#8220;Are you the devil, that you know all
+things?&#8221;</p>
+<p>I looked at him wonderingly. What wrong could
+Mornac have done a ragged outcast here on the Breton
+coast? And where was Mornac? Had he left Paris
+in time to avoid the Prussian trap? Was he here in
+this country, rubbing elbows with Buckhurst?</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did Tric-Trac tell you that Mornac was at the head
+of that band?&#8221; I demanded.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why do you ask me?&#8221; stammered the Lizard;
+&#8220;you know everything&mdash;even when it is scarcely
+whispered!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The superstitious astonishment of the man, his utter
+collapse and his evident fear of me, did not suit me.
+Treachery comes through that kind of fear; I meant
+to rule him in another and safer manner. I meant
+to be absolutely honest with him.</p>
+<p>It was difficult to persuade him that I had only guessed
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_252' name='page_252'></a>252</span>
+the name whispered; that, naturally, I should think of
+Mornac as a high officer of police, and particularly so
+since I knew him to be a villain, and had also divined
+his relations with Buckhurst.</p>
+<p>I drew from the poacher that Tric-Trac had named
+Mornac as head of the communistic plot in Brittany;
+that Mornac was coming to Paradise very soon, and that
+then something gay might be looked for.</p>
+<p>And that night I took Speed into my confidence and
+finally Kelly Eyre, our balloonist.</p>
+<p>And we talked the matter over until long after midnight.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_253' name='page_253'></a>253</span>
+<a name='XV_FOREWARNED' id='XV_FOREWARNED'></a>
+<h2>XV</h2>
+<h3>FOREWARNED</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The lions had now begun to give me a great deal
+of trouble. Timour Melek, the old villain, sat on
+his chair, snarling and striking at me, but still going
+through his paces; Empress Khatoun was a perfect
+devil of viciousness, and refused to jump her hoops;
+even poor little A&iuml;cha, my pet, fed by me soon after
+her foster-mother, a big Newfoundland, had weaned
+her, turned sullen in the pyramid scene. I roped her
+and trimmed her claws; it was high time.</p>
+<p>Oh, they knew, and I knew, that matters had gone
+wrong with me; that I had, for a time, at least, lost the
+intangible something which I once possessed&mdash;that occult
+right to dominate.</p>
+<p>It worried me; it angered me. Anger in authority,
+which is a weakness, is quickly discovered by beasts.</p>
+<p>Speed&#8217;s absurd superstition continued to recur to me
+at inopportune moments; in my brain his voice was
+ceaselessly sounding&mdash;&#8220;A man in love, a man in love,
+a man in love&#8221;&mdash;until a flash of temper sent my lions
+scurrying and snarling into a pack, where they huddled
+and growled, staring at me with yellow, mutinous eyes.</p>
+<p>Yet, strangely, the greater the risk, and the plainer
+to me that my lions were slipping out of my control,
+the more my apathy increased, until even Byram began
+to warn me.</p>
+<p>Still I never felt the slightest physical fear; on the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_254' name='page_254'></a>254</span>
+contrary, as my irritation increased my disdain grew.
+It seemed a monstrous bit of insolence on the part of
+these overgrown cats to meditate an attack on me.
+Even though I began to feel that it was only a question
+of time when the moment must arrive, even though
+I gradually became certain that the first false move
+on my part would precipitate an attack, the knowledge
+left me almost indifferent.</p>
+<p>That morning, as I left the training-cage&mdash;where,
+among others, Kelly Eyre stood looking on&mdash;I suddenly
+remembered Sylvia Elven and her message to Eyre,
+which I had never delivered.</p>
+<p>We strolled towards the stables together; he was a
+pleasant, clean-cut, fresh-faced young fellow, a man I
+had never known very well, but one whom I was inclined
+to respect and trust.</p>
+<p>&#8220;My son,&#8221; said I, politely, &#8220;do you think you have
+arrived at an age sufficiently mature to warrant my
+delivering to you a message from a pretty girl?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s no harm in attempting it, my venerable
+friend,&#8221; he replied, laughing.</p>
+<p>&#8220;This is the message,'' I said: &#8220;<i>On Sunday the
+book-stores are closed in Paris.</i>&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who gave you that message, Scarlett?&#8221; he stammered.</p>
+<p>I looked at him curiously, brutally; a red, hot blush
+had covered his face from neck to hair.</p>
+<p>&#8220;In case you asked, I was to inform you,&#8221; said I,
+&#8220;that a Bretonne at Point Paradise sent the message.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A Bretonne!&#8221; he repeated, as though scared.</p>
+<p>&#8220;A Bretonne!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But I don&#8217;t know any!&#8221;</p>
+<p>I shrugged my shoulders discreetly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are you certain she was a Bretonne?&#8221; he asked.
+His nervousness surprised me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Does she not say so?&#8221; I replied.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_255' name='page_255'></a>255</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;I know&mdash;I know&mdash;but that message&mdash;there is only
+one woman who could have sent it&mdash;&#8221; He hesitated,
+red as a pippin.</p>
+<p>He was so young, so manly, so unspoiled, and so red,
+that on an impulse I said: &#8220;Kelly, it was Mademoiselle
+Elven who sent you the message.&#8221;</p>
+<p>His face expressed troubled astonishment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is that her name?&#8221; he asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well&mdash;it&#8217;s one of them, anyway,&#8221; I replied, beginning
+to feel troubled in my turn. &#8220;See here, Kelly,
+it&#8217;s not my business, but you won&#8217;t mind if I speak
+plainly, will you? The times are queer&mdash;you understand.
+Everybody is suspicious; everybody is under
+suspicion in these days. And I want to say that the
+young lady who sent that curious message to you is
+as clever as twenty men like you and me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He was silent.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If it is a love affair, I&#8217;ll stop now&mdash;not a question,
+you understand. If it is not&mdash;well, as an older and
+more battered and world-worn man, I&#8217;m going to make
+a suggestion to you&mdash;with your permission.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Make it,&#8221; he said, quietly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then I will. Don&#8217;t talk to Mademoiselle Elven.
+You, Speed, and I know something about a certain
+conspiracy; we are going to know more before we inform
+the captain of that cruiser out there beyond Point
+Paradise. I know Mademoiselle Elven&mdash;slightly. I
+am afraid of her&mdash;and I have not yet decided why.
+Don&#8217;t talk to her.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But&mdash;I don&#8217;t know her,&#8221; he said; &#8220;or, at least I
+don&#8217;t know her by that name.&#8221;</p>
+<p>After a moment I said: &#8220;Is the person in question
+the companion of the Countess de Vassart?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If she is I do not know it,&#8221; he replied.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Was she once an actress?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It would astonish me to believe it!&#8221; he said.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_256' name='page_256'></a>256</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Then who do you believe sent you that message,
+Kelly?&#8221;</p>
+<p>His cheeks began to burn again, and he gave me an
+uncomfortable look. A silence, and he sat down in
+my dressing-room, his boyish head buried in his hands.
+After a glance at him I began changing my training-suit
+for riding-clothes, whistling the while softly to
+myself. As I buttoned a fresh collar he looked up.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Scarlett, you are well-born and&mdash;you are here
+in the circus with the rest of us. You know what we
+are&mdash;you know that two or three of us have seen better
+days,... that something has gone wrong with us to
+bring us here,... but we never speak of it,... and
+never ask questions.... But I should like to tell
+you about myself;... you are a gentleman, you
+know,... and I was not born to anything in particular.... I
+was a clerk in the consul&#8217;s office in Paris
+when Monsieur Tissandier took a fancy to me, and I
+entered his balloon ateliers to learn to assist him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He hesitated. I tied my necktie very carefully before
+a bit of broken mirror.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then the government began to make much of us,... you
+remember? We started experiments for the
+army.... I was intensely interested, and ... there
+was not much talk about secrecy then,... and my
+salary was large, and I was received at the Tuileries.
+My head was turned;... life was easy, brilliant. I
+made an invention&mdash;a little electric screw which steered
+a balloon ... sometimes...&#8221; He laughed, a mirthless
+laugh, and looked at me. All the color had gone
+from his face.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There was a woman&mdash;&#8221; I turned partly towards him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We met first at the British Embassy,... then
+elsewhere,... everywhere.... We skated together
+at the club in the Bois at that celebrated f&ecirc;te,... you
+know?&mdash;the Emperor was there&mdash;&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_257' name='page_257'></a>257</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;I know,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>He looked at me dreamily, passed his hand over his
+face, and went on:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Somehow we always talked about military balloons.
+And that evening ... she was so interested in my
+work ... I brought some little sketches I had made&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I understand,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>He looked at me miserably. &#8220;She was to return
+the sketches to me at Calman&#8217;s&mdash;the fashionable book-store,... next
+day.... I never thought that the
+next day was to be Sunday.... The book-stores
+of Paris are not open on Sunday&mdash;<i>but the War Office
+is</i>.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I began to put on my coat.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And the sketches were asked for?&#8221; I suggested&mdash;&#8220;and
+you naturally told what had become of them?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I refused to name her.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of course; men of our sort can&#8217;t do that.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am not of your sort&mdash;you know it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh yes, you are, my friend&mdash;and the same kind of
+fool, too. There&#8217;s only one kind of man in this world.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He looked at me listlessly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;So they sent you to a fortress?&#8221; I asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;To New Caledonia,... four years.... I was only
+twenty, Scarlett,... and ruined.... I joined Byram
+in Antwerp and risked the tour through France.&#8221;</p>
+<p>After a moment&#8217;s thought I said: &#8220;In your opinion,
+what nation profited by your sketches? Italy?
+Spain? Prussia? Bavaria? England?... Perhaps
+Russia?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you mean that this woman was a foreign spy?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps. Perhaps she was only careless, or capricious,... or inconstant.... You
+never saw her
+again?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I was under arrest on Sunday. I do not know.... I
+like to believe that she went to the book-store on
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_258' name='page_258'></a>258</span>
+Monday,... that she made an innocent mistake,... but
+I never knew, Scarlett,... I never knew.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Suppose you ask her?&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>He reddened furiously.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I cannot.... If she did me a wrong, I cannot reproach
+her; if she was innocent&mdash;look at me, Scarlett!&mdash;a
+ragged, ruined mountebank in a travelling circus,... and
+she is&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;An honest woman that a man might care for?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is ... my belief.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If she is,&#8221; I said, &#8220;go and ask her about those
+drawings.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But if she is not,... I cannot tell <i>you</i>!&#8221; he flashed
+out.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let us shake hands, Kelly,&#8221; I said,... &#8220;and be
+very good friends. Will you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>He gave me his hand rather shyly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We will never speak of her again,&#8221; I said,... &#8220;unless
+you desire it. You have had a terrible lesson
+in caution; I need say no more. Only remember that
+I have trusted you with a secret concerning Buckhurst&#8217;s
+conspiracy.&#8221;</p>
+<p>His firm hand tightened on mine, then he walked
+away, steadily, head high. And I went out to saddle
+my horse for a canter across the moor to Point Paradise.</p>
+<p>It was a gray day, with a hint of winter in the air,
+and a wind that set the gorse rustling like tissue-paper.
+Up aloft the sun glimmered, a white spot in a silvery
+smother; pale lights lay on moorland and water; the
+sea tumbled over the bar, boiling like a flood of liquid
+lead from which the spindrift curled and blew into a
+haze that buried the island of Groix and turned the
+anchored iron-clad to a phantom.</p>
+<p>A day for a gallop, if ever there was such a day!&mdash;a
+day to wash out care from a troubled mind and cleanse
+it in the whipping, reeking, wet east wind&mdash;a day for a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_259' name='page_259'></a>259</span>
+fox! And I rose in my saddle and shouted aloud as a
+red fox shot out of the gorse and galloped away across
+the endless moorland, with the feathers of a mallard
+still sticking to his whiskers.</p>
+<p>Oh, what a gallop, with risk enough, too; for I did
+not know the coast moors; and the deep clefts from the
+cliffs cut far inland, so that eye and ear and bridle-hand
+were tense and ready to catch danger ere it ingulfed
+us in some sea-churned crevice hidden by the
+bracken. And how the gray gulls squealed, high
+whirling over us, and the wild ducks in the sedge rose
+with clapping wings, craning their necks, only to swing
+overhead in circles, whimpering, and drop, with pendent
+legs and wings aslant, back into the bog from
+which we startled them.</p>
+<p>A ride into an endless gray land, sweet with sea-scents,
+rank with the perfume of salty green things;
+a ride into a land of gushing winds, wet as spray, strong
+and caressing, too, and full of mischief; winds that set
+miles of sedge rippling; sudden winds, that turned still
+pools to geysers and set the yellow gorse flowers flying;
+winds that rushed up with a sea-roar like the
+sound in shells, then, sudden, died away, to leave the
+furrowed clover motionless and the tall reeds still as
+death.</p>
+<p>So, by strange ways and eccentric circles, like the
+a&euml;rial paths of homing sea-birds, I came at last to
+the spot I had set out for, consciously; yet it surprised
+me to find I had come there.</p>
+<p>Before I crossed the little bridge I scented the big
+orange-tinted tea-roses and the pinks. Leaves on
+apricots were falling; the fig-tree was bare of verdure,
+and the wind chased the big, bronzed leaves across the
+beds of herbs, piling them into heaps at the base of the
+granite wall.</p>
+<p>A boy took my horse; a servant in full Breton costume
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_260' name='page_260'></a>260</span>
+admitted me; the velvet humming of Sylvia Elven&#8217;s
+spinning-wheel filled the silence, like the whirring of a
+great, soft moth imprisoned in a room:</p>
+<table style='margin: auto' summary=''><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;Woe&nbsp;to&nbsp;the&nbsp;Maids&nbsp;of&nbsp;Paradise,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 12em;">Yvonne!</span><br />
+Twice&nbsp;have&nbsp;the&nbsp;Saxons&nbsp;landed&mdash;twice!<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 12em;">Yvonne!</span><br />
+Yet&nbsp;shall&nbsp;Paradise&nbsp;see&nbsp;them&nbsp;thrice!<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 12em;">Yvonne!&nbsp;Yvonne!&nbsp;Marivonik!</span><br />
+&nbsp;<br />
+&#8220;Fair&nbsp;is&nbsp;their&nbsp;hair&nbsp;and&nbsp;blue&nbsp;their&nbsp;eyes,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 12em;">Yvonne!</span><br />
+Body&nbsp;o&#8217;&nbsp;me!&nbsp;their&nbsp;words&nbsp;are&nbsp;lies,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 12em;">Yvonne!</span><br />
+Maids&nbsp;of&nbsp;Paradise,&nbsp;oh,&nbsp;be&nbsp;wise!<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 12em;">Yvonne!&nbsp;Yvonne!&nbsp;Marivonik!&#8221;</span></p>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>The door swung open noiselessly; the whir of the
+wheel and the sound of the song filled the room for an
+instant, then was shut out as the Countess de Vassart
+closed the door and came forward to greet me.</p>
+<p>In her pretty, soft gown, with a tint of blue ribbon at
+the neck and shoulders, she seemed scarcely older than
+a school-girl, so radiant, so sweet and fresh she stood
+there, giving me her little hand to touch in friendship.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It was so good of you to come,&#8221; she said; &#8220;I know
+you made it a duty and gave up a glorious gallop to be
+amiable to me. Did you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>I tried to say something, but her loveliness confused
+me.</p>
+<p>Somebody brought tea&mdash;I don&#8217;t know who; all I
+could see clearly was her gray eyes meeting mine&mdash;the
+light from the leaded window touching her glorious,
+ruddy hair.</p>
+<p>As for the tea, I took whatever she offered; doubtless
+I drank it, but I don&#8217;t remember. Nor do I remember
+what she said at first, for somehow I began thinking
+about my lions, and the thought obsessed me even while
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_261' name='page_261'></a>261</span>
+striving to listen to her, even in the tingling maze of
+other thoughts which kept me dumb under the exquisite
+spell of this intimacy with her.</p>
+<p>The delicate odor of ripened herbs stole into the room
+from the garden; far away, through the whispering
+whir of the spinning-wheel, I heard the sea.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you like Sylvia&#8217;s song?&#8221; she asked, turning her
+head to listen. &#8220;It is a very old song&mdash;a very, very
+old one&mdash;centuries old. It&#8217;s all about the English,
+how they came to harry our coasts in those days&mdash;and
+it has almost a hundred verses!&#8221; Something of the
+Bretonne came into her eyes for a moment, that shadow
+of sadness, that patient fatalism in which, too, there
+is something of distrust. The next instant her eyes
+cleared and she smiled.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The Tr&eacute;courts suffered much from the English raiders.
+I am a Tr&eacute;court, you know. That song was made
+about us&mdash;about a young girl, Yvonne de Tr&eacute;court, who
+was carried away by the English. She was foolish; she
+had a lover among the Saxons,... and she set a signal
+for him, and they came and sacked the town, and carried
+her away, and that was what she got for her folly.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She bent her head thoughtfully; the sound of the
+sea grew louder in the room; a yellow light stole out
+of the west and touched the window-panes, slowly
+deepening to orange; against it the fruit trees stood,
+a leafless tracery of fragile branches.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is the winter awaking, very far away,&#8221; she
+said, under her breath.</p>
+<p>Something in the hollow monotone of the sea made
+me think again of the low grumble of restless lions.
+The sound was hateful. Why should it steal in here&mdash;why
+haunt me even in this one spot in all the world
+where a world-tired man had found a moment&#8217;s peace
+in a woman&#8217;s eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are you troubled?&#8221; she asked, then colored at her
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_262' name='page_262'></a>262</span>
+own question, as though deeming the impulse to speak
+unwarranted.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, not troubled. Happiness is often edged with
+a shadow. I am content to be here.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She bent her head and looked at the heavy rose
+lying in solitary splendor on the table. The polished
+wood reflected it in subdued tints of saffron.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is a strange friendship,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ours?... yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I said, musing: &#8220;To me it is like magic. I scarce
+dare speak, scarce breathe, lest the spell break.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She was silent.</p>
+<p>&#8220;&mdash;Lest the spell break&mdash;and this house, this room,
+fade away, leaving me alone, staring at the world once
+more.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If there is a spell, you have cast it,&#8221; she said, laughing
+at my sober face. &#8220;A wizard ought to be able to
+make his spells endure.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then her face grew graver. &#8220;You must forget the
+past,&#8221; she said; &#8220;you must forget all that was cruel
+and false and unhappy,... will you not?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, madame.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I, too,&#8221; she said, &#8220;have much to forget and much
+to hope for; and you taught me how to forget and how
+to hope.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I, madame?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,... at La Trappe, at Morsbronn, and here.
+Look at me. Have I not changed?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; I said, fascinated.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I know I have,&#8221; she said, as though speaking to
+herself. &#8220;Life means more now. Somehow my childhood
+seems to have returned, with all its hope of the
+world and all its confidence in the world, and its certainty
+that all will be right. Years have fallen from
+my shoulders like a released burden that was crushing
+me to my knees. I have awakened from a dream
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_263' name='page_263'></a>263</span>
+that was not life at all,... a dream in which I, alone,
+staggered through darkness, bearing the world on my
+shoulders&mdash;the world doubly weighted with the sorrows
+of mankind,... a dream that lasted years, but...<i>you</i>
+awoke me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She leaned forward and lifted the rose, touching her
+face with it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It was so simple, after all&mdash;this secret of the world&#8217;s
+malady. You read it for me. I know now what is
+written on the eternal tablets&mdash;to live one&#8217;s own life
+as it is given, in honor, charity, without malice; to
+seek happiness where it is offered; to share it when
+possible; to uplift. But, most of all, to be happy and
+accept happiness as a heavenly gift that is to be shared
+with as many as possible. And this I have learned
+since ... I knew you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The light in the room had grown dimmer; I leaned
+forward to see her face.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Am I not right?&#8221; she asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think so.... I am learning from you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But you taught this creed to me!&#8221; she cried.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, you are teaching it to me. And the first lesson
+was a gift,... your friendship.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Freely given, gladly given,&#8221; she said, quickly.
+&#8220;And yours I have in return,... and will keep always&mdash;always&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>She crushed the rose against her mouth, looking at
+me with inscrutable gray eyes, as I had seen her look
+at me once at La Trappe, once in Morsbronn.</p>
+<p>I picked up my gloves and riding-crop; as I rose she
+stood up in the dusk, looking straight at me.</p>
+<p>I said something about Sylvia Elven and my compliments
+to her, something else about the happiness
+I felt at coming to the ch&acirc;teau again, something about
+her own goodness to me&mdash;Heaven knows what!&mdash;and
+she gave me her hand and I held it a moment.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_264' name='page_264'></a>264</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Will you come again?&#8221; she asked.</p>
+<p>I stammered a promise and made my way blindly to
+the door which a servant threw open, flung myself
+astride my horse, and galloped out into the waste of
+moorland, seeing nothing, hearing nothing save the
+low roar of the sea, like the growl of restless lions.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_265' name='page_265'></a>265</span>
+<a name='XVI_A_RESTLESS_MAN' id='XVI_A_RESTLESS_MAN'></a>
+<h2>XVI</h2>
+<h3>A RESTLESS MAN</h3>
+</div>
+<p>When I came into camp, late that afternoon, I
+found Byram and Speed groping about among
+a mass of newspapers and letters, the first mail we circus
+people had received for nearly two months.</p>
+<p>There were letters for all who were accustomed to
+look for letters from families, relatives, or friends at
+home. I never received letters&mdash;I had received none
+of that kind in nearly a score of years, yet that curious
+habit of expectancy had not perished in me, and I
+found myself standing with the others while Byram
+distributed the letters, one by one, until the last home-stamped
+envelope had been given out, and all around
+me the happy circus-folk were reading in homesick
+contentment. I know of no lonelier man than he who
+lingers empty-handed among those who pore over the
+home mail.</p>
+<p>But there were newspapers enough and to spare&mdash;French,
+English, American; and I sat down by my
+lion&#8217;s cage and attempted to form some opinion of the
+state of affairs in France. And, as far as I could read
+between the lines, this is what I gathered, partly from
+my own knowledge of past events, partly from the
+foreign papers, particularly the English:</p>
+<p>When, on the 3d of September, the humiliating news
+arrived that the Emperor was a prisoner and his army
+annihilated, the government, for the first time in its
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_266' name='page_266'></a>266</span>
+existence, acted with promptness and decision in a matter
+of importance. Secret orders were sent by couriers to
+the Bank of France, to the Louvre, and to the Invalides;
+and, that same night, train after train rushed out of
+Paris loaded with the battle-flags from the Invalides,
+the most important pictures and antique sculptures
+from the Louvre, the greater part of the gold and silver
+from the Bank of France, and, last but by no means
+least, the crown and jewels of France.</p>
+<p>This Speed and I already knew.</p>
+<p>These trains were despatched to Brest, and at the
+same time a telegram was directed to the admiral commanding
+the French iron-clad fleet in the Baltic to send
+an armored cruiser to Brest with all haste possible,
+there to await further orders, but to be fully prepared
+in any event to take on board certain goods designated
+in cipher. This we knew in a general way, though
+Speed understood that Lorient was to be the port of
+departure.</p>
+<p>The plan was a good one and apparently simple;
+and there seemed to be no doubt that jewels, battle-flags,
+pictures, and coin were already beyond danger
+from the German armies, now plodding cautiously
+southward toward the capital, which was slowly recovering
+from its revolutionary convulsions and preparing
+for a siege.</p>
+<p>The plan, then, was simple; but, for an equally simple
+reason, it miscarried in the following manner. Early
+in August, while the French armies from the Rhine
+to the Meuse were being punished with frightful
+regularity and precision, the French Mediterranean
+squadron had sailed up and down that interesting
+expanse of water, apparently in patriotic imitation of
+the historic</p>
+<table style='margin: auto' summary=''><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;King&nbsp;of&nbsp;France&nbsp;and&nbsp;twenty&nbsp;thousand&nbsp;men.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_267' name='page_267'></a>267</span></div>
+<p>For, it now appeared, the French admiral was afraid
+that the Spanish navy might aid the German ships in
+harassing the French transports, which at that time
+were frantically engaged in ferrying a sea-sick Algerian
+army across the Mediterranean to the mother country.</p>
+<p>Of course there was no ground for the admiral&#8217;s suspicions.
+The German war-ships stayed in their own
+harbors, the Spaniards made no offensive alliance with
+Prussia, and at length the French admiral sailed triumphantly
+away with his battleships and cruisers.</p>
+<p>On the 7th of August the squadron of four battleships,
+two armored corvettes, and a despatch-boat
+steamed out of Brest, picking up on its way northward
+three more iron-clad frigates, and several cruisers
+and despatch-boats; and on the 11th of August, 1870,
+the squadron anchored off Heligoland, from whence
+Admiral Fourichon proclaimed the blockade of the
+German coast.</p>
+<p>It must have been an imposing sight! There lay
+the great iron-clads, the <i>Magnanime</i>, the <i>H&eacute;roine</i>, the
+<i>Provence</i>, the <i>Valeureuse</i>, the <i>Revanche</i>, the <i>Invincible</i>,
+the <i>Couronne</i>! There lay the cruisers, the <i>Atalante</i>,
+the <i>Renaud</i>, the <i>Cosmao</i>, the <i>Decr&egrave;s</i>! There, too, lay
+the single-screw despatch-boats <i>Reine-Hortense</i>, <i>Renard</i>,
+and <i>Dayot</i>. And upon their armored decks,
+three by three, stalked the French admirals. Yet,
+without cynicism, it may be said that the admirals of
+France fought better, in 1870, on dry land than they did
+on the ocean.</p>
+<p>However, the German ships stayed peacefully inside
+their fortified ports, and the three French admirals
+pranced peacefully up and down outside, until the God
+of battles intervened and trouble naturally ensued.</p>
+<p>On the 6th of September all the seas of Europe were
+set clashing under a cyclone that rose to a howling
+hurricane. The British iron-clad <i>Captain</i> foundered
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_268' name='page_268'></a>268</span>
+off Finist&egrave;re; the French fleet in the Baltic was scattered
+to the four winds.</p>
+<p>In the midst of the tempest a French despatch-boat,
+the <i>Hirondelle</i>, staggered into sight, signalling the
+flag-ship. Then the French admiral for the first time
+learned the heart-breaking news of Sedan, and as the
+tempest-tortured battle-ship drove seaward the signals
+went up: &#8220;Make for Brest!&#8221; The blockade of the
+German coast was at an end.</p>
+<p>On the 4th of September the treasure-laden trains
+had left Paris for Brest. On the 5th the <i>Hirondelle</i>
+steamed out towards the fleet with the news from Sedan
+and the orders for the detachment of a cruiser to receive
+the crown jewels. On the 6th the news and the orders
+were signalled to the flag-ship; but the God of battles
+unchained a tempest which countermanded the order
+and hurled the iron-clads into outer darkness.</p>
+<p>Some of the ships crept into English ports, burning
+their last lumps of coal, some drifted into Dunkerque;
+but the flag-ship disappeared for nine long days, at
+last to reappear off Cherbourg, a stricken thing with a
+stricken crew and an admiral broken-hearted.</p>
+<p>So, for days and days, the treasure-laden trains must
+have stood helpless in the station at Brest, awaiting the
+cruiser that did not come.</p>
+<p>On the 17th of September the French Channel
+squadron, of seven heavy iron-clads, unexpectedly
+steamed into Lorient harbor and dropped anchor amid
+thundering salutes from the forts; and the next day
+one of the treasure-trains came flying into Lorient,
+to the unspeakable relief of the authorities in the beleaguered
+capital.</p>
+<p>Speed and I already knew the secret orders sent.
+The treasures, including the crown diamonds, were to
+be stored in the citadel, and an armored cruiser was
+to lie off the arsenal with banked fires, ready to receive
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_269' name='page_269'></a>269</span>
+the treasures at the first signal and steam to the French
+fortified port of Sa&iuml;gon in Cochin China, by a course
+already determined.</p>
+<p>Why on earth those orders had been changed so that
+the cruiser was to lie off Groix I could not imagine,
+unless some plot had been discovered in Lorient which
+had made it advisable to shift the location of the treasures
+for the third time.</p>
+<p>Pondering there at the tent door, amid my heap of
+musty newspapers, I looked out into the late, gray
+afternoon and saw the maids of Paradise passing and
+repassing across the bridge with a clicking of wooden
+shoes and white head-dresses glimmering in the dusk
+of the trees.</p>
+<p>The town had filled within a day or two; the Paradise
+coiffe was not the only coiffe to be seen in the square;
+there was the delicate-winged head-dress of Fa&ouml;uet, the
+beautiful coiffes of Rosporden, Sainte-Anne d&#8217;Auray,
+and Pont Aven; there, too, flashed the scarlet skirts of
+Bannalec and the gorgeous embroidered bodices of the
+interior; there were the men of Quimperl&eacute; in velvet,
+the men of Penmarch, the men of Fa&ouml;uet with their
+dark, Spanish-like faces and their sombreros, and their
+short yellow jackets and leggings. All in holiday costume,
+too, for the maids were stiff in silver and lace,
+and the men wore carved sabots and embroidered gilets.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Governor,&#8221; I called out to Byram, &#8220;the town is
+filling fast. It&#8217;s like a Pardon in Morbihan; we&#8217;ll
+pack the old tent to the nigger&#8217;s-heaven!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a fact,&#8221; he said, pushing his glasses up over
+his forehead and fanning his face with his silk hat.
+&#8220;We&#8217;re going to open to a lot of money, Mr. Scarlett,
+and ... I ain&#8217;t goin&#8217; to forgit them that stood by me,
+neither.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He placed a heavy hand on my shoulder, and, stooping,
+peered into my face.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_270' name='page_270'></a>270</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Air you sick, m&#8217; friend?&#8221; he asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I, governor? Why, no.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ain&#8217;t been bit by that there paltry camuel nor
+nothin&#8217;, hev ye?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No; do I look ill?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Peaked&mdash;kind o&#8217; peaked. White, with dark succles
+under your eyes. Air you nervous?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;About the lions? Oh no. Don&#8217;t worry about me,
+governor.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He sighed, adjusted his spectacles, and blew his
+nose.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Speed&mdash;he&#8217;s worriting, too; he says that Empress
+Khatoun means to hev ye one o&#8217; these days.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You tell Mr. Speed to worry over his own affairs&mdash;that
+child, Jacqueline, for instance. I suppose she
+made her jump without trouble to-day? I was too
+nervous to stay and watch her.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;M&#8217; friend,&#8221; said Byram, in solemn ecstasy, &#8220;I
+take off my hat to that there kid!&#8221; And he did so
+with a flourish. &#8220;You orter seen her; she hung on
+that flying trap, jest as easy an&#8217; sassy! We was all
+half crazy. Speed he grew blue around the gills;
+Miss Crystal, a-swingin&#8217; there in the riggin&#8217; by her
+knees, kept a swallerin&#8217; an&#8217; lickin&#8217; her lips, she was
+that scared.</p>
+<p>&#8220;&#8216;Ready?&#8217; she calls out in a sort o&#8217; quaver.</p>
+<p>&#8220;&#8216;Ready!&#8217; sez little Jacqueline, cool as ice, swingin&#8217;
+by her knees. &#8216;Go!&#8217; sez Miss Crystal, an&#8217; the kid let
+go, an&#8217; Miss Crystal grabbed her by the ankles.
+&#8216;Ready?&#8217; calls up Speed, beside the tank.</p>
+<p>&#8220;&#8216;Ready!&#8217; sez the kid, smilin&#8217;. &#8216;Drop!&#8217; cries Speed.
+An&#8217; Jacqueline shot down like a blazing star&mdash;whir!
+swish! splash! All over! An&#8217; that there nervy kid
+a floatin&#8217; an&#8217; a sportin&#8217; like a minnie-fish at t&#8217;other
+end o&#8217; the tank! Oh, gosh, but it was grand! It was
+jest&mdash;&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_271' name='page_271'></a>271</span></p>
+<p>Speech failed; he walked away, waving his arms,
+his rusty silk hat on the back of his head.</p>
+<p>A few moments later drums began to roll from the
+square. Speed, passing, called out to me that the conscripts
+were leaving for Lorient; so I walked down to
+the bridge, where the crowd had gathered and where
+a tall gendarme stood, his blue-and-white uniform
+distinct in the early evening light. The mayor was
+there, too, dressed in his best, waddling excitedly about,
+and buttonholing at intervals a young lieutenant of
+infantry, who appeared to be extremely bored.</p>
+<p>There were the conscripts of the Garde Mobile, an
+anxious peasant rabble, awkward, resigned, docile
+as cattle. Here stood a farmer, reeking of his barnyard;
+here two woodsmen from the forest, belted and
+lean; but the majority were men of the sea, heavy-limbed,
+sun-scorched fellows, with little, keen eyes always
+half closed, and big, helpless fists hanging. Some
+carried their packets slung from hip to shoulder, some
+tied their parcels to the muzzles of their obsolete muskets.
+A number wore the boatman&#8217;s smock, others
+the farmer&#8217;s blouse of linen, but the greater number
+were clad in the blue-wool jersey and cloth b&eacute;ret of the
+sailor.</p>
+<p>Husbands, sons, lovers, looked silently at the women.
+The men uttered no protest, no reproach; the women
+wept very quietly. In their hearts that strange mysticism
+of the race predominated&mdash;the hopeless acceptance
+of a destiny which has, for centuries, left its imprint
+in the sad eyes of the Breton. Generations of
+martyrdom leave a cowed and spiritually fatigued race
+which breeds stoics.</p>
+<p>Like great white blossoms, the spotless head-dresses
+of the maids of Paradise swayed and bowed above
+the crowd.</p>
+<p>A little old woman stood beside a sailor, saying
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_272' name='page_272'></a>272</span>
+to anybody who would listen to her: &#8220;My son&mdash;they
+are taking my son. Why should they take my
+son?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Another said: &#8220;They are taking mine, too, but
+he cannot fight on land. He knows the sea; he is
+not afraid at sea. Can nobody help us? He cannot
+fight on land; he does not know how!&#8221;</p>
+<p>A woman carrying a sleeping baby stood beside
+the drummers at the fountain. Five children dragged
+at her skirts and peered up at the mayor, who shrugged
+his shoulders and shook his fat head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What can I do? He must march with the others,
+your man,&#8221; said the mayor, again and again. But
+the woman with the baby never ceased her eternal
+question: &#8220;What can we live on if you take him?
+I do not mean to complain too much, but we have nothing.
+What can we live on, m&#8217;sieu the mayor?&#8221;</p>
+<p>But now the drummers had stepped out into the
+centre of the square and were drawing their drum-sticks
+from the brass sockets in their baldricks.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good-bye! Good-bye!&#8221; sobbed the maids of Paradise,
+giving both hands to their lovers. &#8220;We will
+pray for you!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Pray for us,&#8221; said the men, holding their sweethearts&#8217;
+hands.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Attention!&#8221; cried the officer, a slim, hectic lieutenant
+from Lorient.</p>
+<p>The mayor handed him the rolls, and the lieutenant,
+facing the shuffling single rank, began to call off:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Roux of Bannalec?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Here, monsieur&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t say, &#8216;Here, monsieur!&#8217; Say, &#8216;Present!&#8217;
+Now, Roux?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Present, monsieur&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Idiot! Kedrec?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Present!&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_273' name='page_273'></a>273</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s right! Penmarch?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Present!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Rhuis of Sainte-Yssel?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Present!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Herv&eacute; of Paradise Beacon?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Present!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Laenec?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Present!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Duhamel?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Present!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The officer moistened his lips, turned the page, and
+continued:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Carnac of Alincourt?&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was a silence, then a voice cried, &#8220;Crippled!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mark him off, lieutenant,&#8221; said the mayor, pompously;
+&#8220;he&#8217;s our little hunchback.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Shall I mark you in his place?&#8221; asked the lieutenant,
+with a smile that turned the mayor&#8217;s blood to water.
+&#8220;No? You would make a fine figure for a forlorn
+hope.&#8221;</p>
+<p>A man burst out laughing, but he was half crazed
+with grief, and his acrid mirth found no response.
+Then the roll-call was resumed:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Gestel?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Present!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Garenne!&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was another silence.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Robert Garenne!&#8221; repeated the officer, sharply.
+&#8220;Monsieur the mayor has informed me that you are
+liable for military duty. If you are present, answer
+to your name or take the consequences!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The poacher, who had been lounging on the bridge,
+slouched slowly forward and touched his cap.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am organizing a franc corps,&#8221; he said, with a
+deadly sidelong glance at the mayor, who now stood
+beside the lieutenant.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_274' name='page_274'></a>274</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;You can explain that at Lorient,&#8221; replied the lieutenant.
+&#8220;Fall in there!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But I&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Fall in!&#8221; repeated the lieutenant.</p>
+<p>The poacher&#8217;s visage became inflamed. He hesitated,
+looking around for an avenue of escape. Then
+he caught my disgusted eye.</p>
+<p>&#8220;For the last time,&#8221; said the lieutenant, coolly drawing
+his revolver, &#8220;I order you to fall in!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The poacher backed into the straggling rank, glaring.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now,&#8221; said the lieutenant, &#8220;you may go to your
+house and get your packet. If we have left when you
+return, follow and report at the arsenal in Lorient.
+Fall out! March!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The poacher backed out to the rear of the rank,
+turned on his heel, and strode away towards the coast,
+clinched fists swinging by his side.</p>
+<p>There were not many names on the roll, and the call
+was quickly finished. And now the infantry drummers
+raised their sticks high in the air, there was a
+sharp click, a crash, and the square echoed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;March!&#8221; cried the officer; and, drummers ahead,
+the long single rank shuffled into fours, and the column
+started, enveloped in a throng of women and children.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good-bye!&#8221; sobbed the women. &#8220;We will pray!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good-bye! Pray!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The crowd pressed on into the dusk. Far up the
+darkening road the white coiffes of the women glimmered;
+the drum-roll softened to a distant humming.</p>
+<p>The children, who did not understand, had gathered
+around a hunchback, the exempt cripple of the roll-call.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ho! Fois!&#8221; I heard him say to the crowd of wondering
+little ones, &#8220;if I were not exempt I&#8217;d teach these
+Prussians to dance the farandole to my biniou!
+Oui, dame! And perhaps I&#8217;ll do it yet, spite of the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_275' name='page_275'></a>275</span>
+crooked back I was not born with&mdash;as everybody knows!
+Oui, dame! Everybody knows I was born as straight
+as the next man!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The children gaped, listening to the distant drumming,
+now almost inaudible.</p>
+<p>The cripple rose, lighted a lantern, and walked slowly
+out toward the cliffs, carrying himself with that uncanny
+dignity peculiar to hunchbacks. And as he
+walked he sang, in his thin, sharp voice, the air of
+&#8220;The Three Captains&#8221;:</p>
+<table style='margin: auto' summary=''><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;J&#8217;ai&nbsp;eu&nbsp;dans&nbsp;son&nbsp;c&oelig;ur&nbsp;la&nbsp;plac&#8217;&nbsp;la&nbsp;plus&nbsp;belle,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 6em;">La&nbsp;plac&#8217;&nbsp;la&nbsp;plus&nbsp;belle.</span><br />
+J&#8217;ai&nbsp;pass&eacute;&nbsp;trois&nbsp;ans,&nbsp;trois&nbsp;ans&nbsp;avec&nbsp;elle,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 6em;">Trois&nbsp;ans&nbsp;avec&nbsp;elle.</span><br />
+J&#8217;ai&nbsp;eu&nbsp;trois&nbsp;enfants&nbsp;qui&nbsp;sont&nbsp;capitaines,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 6em;">Qui&nbsp;sont&nbsp;capitaines.</span><br />
+L&#8217;un&nbsp;est&nbsp;&agrave;&nbsp;Bordeaux,&nbsp;l&#8217;autre&nbsp;&agrave;&nbsp;la&nbsp;Rochelle,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 6em;">L&#8217;autre&nbsp;&agrave;&nbsp;la&nbsp;Rochelle.</span><br />
+Le&nbsp;troisi&egrave;me&nbsp;ici,&nbsp;caressent&nbsp;les&nbsp;belles,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 6em;">Caressent&nbsp;les&nbsp;belles.&#8221;</span></p>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>Far out across the shadowy cliffs I heard his lingering,
+strident chant, and caught the spark of his lantern;
+then silence and darkness fell over the deserted square;
+the awed children, fingers interlocked, crept homeward
+through the dusk; there was no sound save the
+rippling wash of the river along the quay of stone.</p>
+<p>Tired, a trifle sad, thinking perhaps of those home
+letters which had come to all save me, I leaned against
+the river wall, staring at the darkness; and over me
+came creeping that apathy which I had already learned
+to recognize and even welcome as a mental an&aelig;sthetic
+which set that dark sentinel, care, a-drowsing.</p>
+<p>What did I care, after all? Life had stopped for me
+years before; there was left only a shell in which that
+unseen little trickster, the heart, kept tap-tapping
+away against a tired body. Was that what we call
+life? The sorry parody!
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_276' name='page_276'></a>276</span></p>
+<p>A shape slunk near me through the dusk, furtive,
+uncertain. &#8220;Lizard,&#8221; I said, indifferently. He came
+up, my gun on his ragged shoulder.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You go with your class?&#8221; I asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, I go to the forest,&#8221; he said, hoarsely. &#8220;You
+shall hear from me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I nodded.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are you content?&#8221; he demanded, lingering.</p>
+<p>The creature wanted sympathy, though he did not
+know it. I gave him my hand and told him he was a
+brave man; and he went away, noiselessly, leaving
+me musing by the river wall.</p>
+<p>After a long while&mdash;or it may only have been a few
+minutes&mdash;the square began to fill again with the first
+groups of women, children, and old men who had
+escorted the departing conscripts a little way on their
+march to Lorient. Back they came, the maids of
+Paradise silent, tearful, pitifully acquiescent; the
+women of Bannalec, Fa&ouml;uet, Rosporden, Quimperl&eacute;
+chattering excitedly about the scene they had witnessed.
+The square began to fill; lanterns were
+lighted around the fountain; the two big lamps with
+their brass reflectors in front of the mayor&#8217;s house
+illuminated the pavement and the thin tree-foliage
+with a yellow radiance.</p>
+<p>The chatter grew louder as new groups in all sorts
+of gay head-dresses arrived; laughter began to be
+heard; presently the squealing of the biniou pipes
+broke out from the bowling-green, where, high on a
+bench supported by a plank laid across two cider barrels,
+the hunchback sat, skirling the farandole. Ah,
+what a world entire was this lost little hamlet of Paradise,
+where merrymakers trod on the mourners&#8217; heels,
+where the scream of the biniou drowned the floating
+note of the passing bell, where Misery drew the curtains
+of her bed and lay sleepless, listening to Gayety
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_277' name='page_277'></a>277</span>
+dancing breathless to the patter of a coquette&#8217;s wooden
+shoes!</p>
+<p>Long tables were improvised in the square, piled
+up with bread, sardines, puddings, hams, and cakes.
+Casks of cider, propped on skids, dotted the outskirts
+of the bowling-green, where the mayor, enthroned in
+his own arm-chair, majestically gave his orders in a
+voice thickened by pork, onions, and gravy.</p>
+<p>Truly enough, half of Finist&egrave;re and Morbihan was
+gathering at Paradise for a f&ecirc;te. The slow Breton
+imagination had been fired by our circus bills and
+posters; ancient Armorica was stirring in her slumber,
+roused to consciousness by the Yankee bill-poster.</p>
+<p>At the inn all rooms were taken; every house had
+become an inn; barns, stables, granaries had their
+guests; fishermen&#8217;s huts on coast and cliff were bright
+with coiffes and embroidered jerseys.</p>
+<p>In their misfortune, the lonely women of Paradise
+recognized in this influx a godsend&mdash;a few francs to
+gain with which to face those coming wintry months
+while their men were absent. And they opened their
+tiny houses to those who asked a lodging.</p>
+<p>The crowds which had earlier in the evening gathered
+to gape at our big tent were now noisiest in the
+square, where the endless drone of the pipes intoned
+the farandole.</p>
+<p>A few of our circus folk had come down to enjoy the
+picturesque spectacle. Speed, standing with Jacqueline
+beside me, began to laugh and beat time to the wild
+music. A pretty maid of Bannalec, white coiffe and
+scarlet skirts a-flutter, called out with the broad freedom
+of the chastest of nations: &#8220;There is the lover I
+could pray for&mdash;if he can dance the farandole!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll show you whether I can dance the farandole,
+ma belle!&#8221; cried Speed, and caught her hand, but she
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_278' name='page_278'></a>278</span>
+snatched her brown fingers away and danced off, laughing:
+&#8220;He who loves must follow, follow, follow the
+farandole!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Speed started to follow, but Jacqueline laid a timid
+hand on his arm.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I dance, M&#8217;sieu Speed,&#8221; she said, her face flushing
+under her elf-locks.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You blessed child,&#8221; he cried, &#8220;you shall dance till
+you drop to your knees on the bowling-green!&#8221; And,
+hand clasping hand, they swung out into the farandole.
+For an instant only I caught a glimpse of Jacqueline&#8217;s
+blissful face, and her eyes like blue stars burning;
+then they darkened into silhouettes against the yellow
+glare of the lanterns and vanished.</p>
+<p>Byram rambled up for a moment, to comment on
+the quaint scene from a showman&#8217;s point of view. &#8220;It
+would fill the tent in old Noo York, but it&#8217;s n. g. in this
+here country, where everybody&#8217;s either a coryphee or a
+clown or a pantaloon! Camuels ain&#8217;t no rara avises
+in the Sairy, an&#8217; no niggers go to burnt-cork shows.
+Phylosophy is the thing, Mr. Scarlett! Ruminate!
+Ruminate!&#8221;</p>
+<p>I promised to do so, and the old man rambled away,
+coat and vest on his arm, silk hat cocked over his left
+eye, the lamp-light shining on the buckles of his suspenders.
+Dear old governor!&mdash;dear, vulgar incarnation
+of those fast vanishing pioneers who invented civilization,
+finding none; who, self-taught, unashamed
+taught their children the only truths they knew, that
+the nation was worthy of all good, all devotion, and all
+knowledge that her sons could bring her to her glory
+that she might one day fulfil her destiny as greatest
+among the great on earth.</p>
+<p>The whining Breton bagpipe droned in my ears; the
+dancers flew past; laughter and cries arose from the
+tables in the square where the curate of St. Julien stood,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_279' name='page_279'></a>279</span>
+forefinger wagging, soundly rating an intoxicated but
+apologetic Breton in the costume of Fa&ouml;uet.</p>
+<p>I was tired&mdash;tired of it all; weary of costumes and
+strange customs, weary of strange tongues, of tinsel
+and mummers, and tarnished finery; sick of the sawdust
+and the rank stench of beasts&mdash;and the vagabond
+life&mdash;and the hopeless end of it all&mdash;the shabby end of
+a useless life&mdash;a death at last amid strangers! Soldiers
+in red breeches, peasants in embroidered jackets,
+strolling mountebanks all tinselled and rouged&mdash;they
+were all one to me.... I wanted my own land.... I
+wanted my own people.... I wanted to go home ... home!&mdash;and
+die, when my time came, under the skies
+I knew as a child,... under that familiar moon which
+once silvered my nursery windows....</p>
+<p>I turned away across the bridge out into the dark
+road. Long before I came to the smoky, silent camp I
+heard the monotonous roaring of my lions, pacing
+their shadowy dens.</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_280' name='page_280'></a>280</span>
+<a name='XVII_THE_CIRCUS' id='XVII_THE_CIRCUS'></a>
+<h2>XVII</h2>
+<h3>THE CIRCUS</h3>
+</div>
+<p>A little after sunrise on the day set for our first
+performance, Speed sauntered into my dressing-room
+in excellent humor, saying that not only had the
+village of Paradise already filled up with the peasantry
+of Finist&egrave;re and Morbihan, but every outlying hamlet
+from St. Julien to Pont Aven was overflowing; that
+many had even camped last night along the roadside;
+in short, that the country was unmistakably aroused to
+the importance of the Anti-Prussian Republican circus
+and the Flying Mermaid of Ker-Ys.</p>
+<p>I listened to him almost indifferently, saying that I
+was very glad for the governor&#8217;s sake, and continued
+to wash a deep scratch on my left arm, using salt water
+to allay the irritation left by A&iuml;cha&#8217;s closely pared claws&mdash;the
+vixen.</p>
+<p>But the scratch had not poisoned me; I was in fine
+physical condition; rehearsals had kept us all in trim;
+our animals, too, were in good shape; and the machinery
+started without a creak when, an hour later, Byram
+himself opened the box-office at the tent-door and began
+to sell tickets to an immense crowd for the first performance,
+which was set for two o&#8217;clock that afternoon.</p>
+<p>I had had an unpleasant hour&#8217;s work with the
+lions, during which Marghouz, a beast hitherto lazy
+and docile, had attempted to creep behind me. Again
+I had betrayed irritation; again the lions saw it,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_281' name='page_281'></a>281</span>
+understood it, and remembered. A&iuml;cha tore my sleeve;
+when I dragged Timour Melek&#8217;s huge jaws apart he
+endured the operation patiently, but as soon as I
+gave the signal to retire he sprang snarling to the floor,
+mane on end, and held his ground, just long enough to
+defy me. Poor devils! Who but I knew that they were
+right and I was wrong! Who but I understood what
+lack of freedom meant to the strong&mdash;meant to caged
+creatures, unrighteously deprived of liberty! Though
+born in captivity, wild things change nothing; they
+sleep by day, walk by night, follow as well as they can
+the instincts which a caged life cannot crush in them,
+nor a miserable, artificial existence obliterate.</p>
+<p>They are right to resist.</p>
+<p>I mentioned something of this to Speed as I was putting
+on my coat to go out, but he only scowled at me,
+saying: &#8220;Your usefulness as a lion-tamer is ended,
+my friend; you are a fool to enter that cage again, and
+I&#8217;m going to tell Byram.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t spoil the governor&#8217;s pleasure now,&#8221; I said,
+irritably; &#8220;the old man is out there selling tickets with
+both hands, while little Griggs counts receipts in a
+stage whisper. Let him alone, Speed; I&#8217;m going to
+give it up soon, anyway&mdash;not now&mdash;not while the governor
+has a chance to make a little money; but soon&mdash;very
+soon. You are right; I can&#8217;t control anything
+now&mdash;not even myself. I must give up my lions, after
+all.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;When?&#8221; said Speed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Soon&mdash;I don&#8217;t know. I&#8217;m tired&mdash;really tired. I
+want to go home.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Home! Have you one?&#8221; he asked, with a faint
+sneer of surprise.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes; a rather extensive lodging, bounded east and
+west by two oceans, north by the lakes, south by the
+gulf. Landlord&#8217;s a relation&mdash;my Uncle Sam.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_282' name='page_282'></a>282</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Are you really going home, Scarlett?&#8221; he asked,
+curiously.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I have nothing to keep me here, have I?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not unless you choose to settle down and ... marry.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I looked at him; presently my face began to redden;
+and, &#8220;What do you mean?&#8221; I asked, angrily.</p>
+<p>He replied, in a very mild voice, that he did not mean
+anything that might irritate me.</p>
+<p>I said, &#8220;Speed, don&#8217;t mind my temper; I can&#8217;t seem
+to help it any more; something has changed me, something
+has gone wrong.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Perhaps something has gone right,&#8221; he mused,
+looking up at the flying trapeze, where Jacqueline
+swung dangling above the tank, watching us with
+sea-blue eyes.</p>
+<p>After a moment&#8217;s thought I said: &#8220;Speed, what the
+devil do you mean by that remark?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now you&#8217;re angry again,&#8221; he said, wearily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, I&#8217;m not. Tell me what you mean.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, what do you imagine I mean?&#8221; he retorted.
+&#8220;Do you think I&#8217;m blind? Do you suppose I&#8217;ve watched
+you all these years and don&#8217;t know you? Am I an
+ass, Scarlett? Be fair; am I?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No; not an ass,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then let me alone&mdash;unless you want plain speaking
+instead of a bray.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I do want it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Which?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You know; go on.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Am I to tell you the truth?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;As you interpret it&mdash;yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Very well, my friend; then, at your respectful request,
+I beg to inform you that you are in love with
+Madame de Vassart&mdash;and have been for months.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I did not pretend surprise; I knew he was going to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_283' name='page_283'></a>283</span>
+say it. Yet it enraged me that he should think it and
+say it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are wrong,&#8221; I said, steadily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, Scarlett; I am right.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are wrong,&#8221; I repeated.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t say that again,&#8221; he retorted. &#8220;If you do
+not know it, you ought to. Don&#8217;t be unfair; don&#8217;t be
+cowardly. Face it, man! By Heaven, you&#8217;ve got to
+face it some time&mdash;here, yonder, abroad, on the ocean,
+at home&mdash;no matter where, you&#8217;ve got to face it some
+day and tell yourself the truth!&#8221;</p>
+<p>His words hurt me for a moment; then, as I listened,
+that strange apathy once more began to creep over me.
+Was it really the truth he had told me? Was it? Well&mdash;and
+then? What meaning had it to me?... Of
+what help was it?... of what portent?... of what
+use?... What door did it unlock? Surely not the
+door I had closed upon myself so many years ago!</p>
+<p>Something of my thoughts he may have divined as I
+stood brooding in the sunny tent, staring listlessly at
+my own shadow on the floor, for he laid his hand on
+my shoulder and said: &#8220;Surely, Scarlett, if happiness
+can be reborn in Paradise, it can be reborn here. I
+know you; I have known you for many years. And
+in all that time you have never fallen below my ideal!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What are you saying, Speed?&#8221; I asked, rousing
+from my lethargy to shake his hand from my shoulder.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The truth. In all these years of intimacy, familiarity
+has never bred contempt in me; I am not your
+equal in anything; it does not hurt me to say so. I
+have watched you as a younger brother watches, lovingly,
+jealous yet proud of you, alert for a failing
+or a weakness which I never found&mdash;or, if I thought
+I found a flaw in you, knowing that it was but part
+of a character too strong, too generous for me to
+criticise.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_284' name='page_284'></a>284</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Speed,&#8221; I said, astonished, &#8220;are you talking about
+me&mdash;about <i>me</i>&mdash;a mountebank&mdash;and a failure at that?
+You know I&#8217;m a failure&mdash;a nobody&mdash;&#8221; I hesitated,
+touched by his kindness. &#8220;Your loyalty to me is all
+I have. I wish it were true that I am such a man as you
+believe me to be.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is true,&#8221; he said, almost sullenly. &#8220;If it were
+not, no man would say it of you&mdash;though a woman
+might. Listen to me, Scarlett. I tell you that a man
+shipwrecked on the world&#8217;s outer rocks&mdash;if he does not
+perish&mdash;makes the better pilot afterwards.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But ... I perished, Speed.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is not true,&#8221; he said, violently; &#8220;but you will if
+you don&#8217;t steer a truer course than you have. Scarlett,
+answer me!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Answer you? What?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are you in love?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>He waited, looked up at me, then dropped his hands
+in his pockets and turned away toward the interior of
+the tent where Jacqueline, having descended from the
+rigging, stood, drawing her slim fingers across the
+surface of the water in the tank.</p>
+<p>I walked out through the tent door, threading my
+way among the curious crowds gathered not only at
+the box-office, but even around the great tent as far as
+I could see. Byram hailed me with jovial abandon,
+perspiring in his shirt-sleeves, silk hat on the back of
+his head; little Grigg made one of his most admired
+grimaces and shook the heavy money-box at me; Horan
+waved his hat above his head and pointed at the
+throng with a huge thumb. I smiled at them all and
+walked on.</p>
+<p>Cloud and sunshine alternated on that capricious
+November morning; the sea-wind was warm; the tincture
+of winter had gone. On that day, however, I saw
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_285' name='page_285'></a>285</span>
+wavering strings of wild ducks flying south; and the
+little hedge-birds of different kinds were already flocking
+amiably together in twittering bands that filled
+the leafless blackthorns on the cliffs;&mdash;true prophets,
+all, of that distant cold, gathering somewhere in the
+violet north.</p>
+<p>I walked fast across the moors, as though I had a
+destination. And I had; yet when I understood it I
+sheered off, only to turn again and stare fascinated
+in the direction of the object that frightened me.</p>
+<p>There it rose against the seaward cliffs, the little
+tower of Tr&eacute;court farm, sea-smitten and crusted, wind-worn,
+stained, gray as the lichened rocks scattered
+across the moorland. Over it the white gulls pitched
+and tossed in a windy sky; beyond crawled the ancient
+and wrinkled sea.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is a strange thing,&#8221; I said aloud, &#8220;to find love at
+the world&#8217;s edge.&#8221; I looked blindly across the gray
+waste. &#8220;But I have found it too late.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The wind blew furiously; I heard the gulls squealing
+in the sky, the far thunder of the surf.</p>
+<p>Then, looking seaward again, for the first time I noticed
+that the black cruiser was gone, that nothing
+now lay between the cliffs and the hazy headland of
+Groix save a sheet of lonely water spreading league on
+league to meet a flat, gray sky.</p>
+<p>Why had the cruiser sailed? As I stood there, brooding,
+to my numbed ears the moor-winds bore a sound
+coming from a great distance&mdash;the sound of cannon&mdash;little,
+soft reports, all but inaudible in the wind and the
+humming undertone of the breakers. Yet I knew the
+sound, and turned my unquiet eyes to the sea, where
+nothing moved save the far crests of waves.</p>
+<p>For a while I stood listening, searching the sea, until
+a voice hailed me, and I turned to find Kelly Eyre almost
+at my elbow.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_286' name='page_286'></a>286</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;There is a man in the village haranguing the people,&#8221;
+he said, abruptly. &#8220;We thought you ought to
+know.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A man haranguing the people,&#8221; I repeated. &#8220;What
+of it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Speed thinks the man is Buckhurst.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What!&#8221; I cried.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s something else, too,&#8221; he said, soberly, and
+drew a telegram from his pocket.</p>
+<p>I seized it, and studied the fluttering sheet:</p>
+<div style='font-size:smaller'>
+<p>&#8220;The governor of Lorient, on complaint of the mayor of Paradise,
+forbids the American exhibition, and orders the individual
+Byram to travel immediately to Lorient with his so-called circus,
+where a British steamship will transport the personnel, baggage,
+and animals to British territory. The mayor of Paradise will see
+that this order of expulsion is promptly executed.</p>
+<p style='margin-left:0.0em; margin-right:0.0em; text-align:right'>&#8220;(Signed) <span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Breteuil</span>.<br />
+&#8220;Chief of Police.&#8221;<br /></p>
+</div>
+<p>&#8220;Where did you get that telegram?&#8221; I asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a copy; the mayor came with it. Byram does
+not know about it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t let him know it!&#8221; I said, quickly; &#8220;this thing
+will kill him, I believe. Where is that fool of a mayor?
+Come on, Kelly! Stay close beside me.&#8221; And I set
+off at a swinging pace, down the hollow, out across
+the left bank of the little river, straight to the bridge,
+which we reached almost on a run.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Look there!&#8221; cried my companion, as we came in
+sight of the square.</p>
+<p>The square was packed with Breton peasants; near
+the fountain two cider barrels had been placed, a plank
+thrown across them, and on this plank stood a man
+holding a red flag.</p>
+<p>The man was John Buckhurst.</p>
+<p>When I came nearer I could see that he wore a red
+scarf across his breast; a little nearer and I could hear
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_287' name='page_287'></a>287</span>
+his passionless voice sounding; nearer still, I could
+distinguish every clear-cut word:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Men of the sea, men of that ancient Armorica which,
+for a thousand years, has suffered serfdom, I come to
+you bearing no sword. You need none; you are free
+under this red flag I raise above you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He lifted the banner, shaking out the red folds.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yet if I come to you bearing no sword, I come with
+something better, something more powerful, something
+so resistless that, using it as your battle-cry, the world
+is yours!</p>
+<p>&#8220;I come bearing the watchword of world-brotherhood&mdash;Peace,
+Love, Equality! I bear it from your
+battle-driven brothers, scourged to the battlements of
+Paris by the demons of a wicked government! I bear
+it from the devastated towns of the provinces, from
+your homeless brothers of Alsace and Lorraine.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Peace, Love, Equality! All this is yours for the
+asking. The commune will be proclaimed throughout
+France; Paris is aroused, Lyons is ready, Bordeaux
+watches, Marseilles waits!</p>
+<p>&#8220;You call your village Paradise&mdash;yet you starve here.
+Let this little Breton village be a paradise in truth&mdash;a
+shrine for future happy pilgrims who shall say: &#8216;Here
+first were sewn the seeds of the world&#8217;s liberty! Here first
+bloomed the perfect flower of universal brotherhood!&#8221;</p>
+<p>He bent his sleek, gray head meekly, pausing as
+though in profound meditation. Suddenly he raised
+his head; his tone changed; a faint ring of defiance
+sounded under the smooth flow of words.</p>
+<p>He began with a blasphemous comparison, alluding
+to the money-changers in the temple&mdash;a subtle appeal
+to righteous violence.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It rests with us to cleanse the broad temple of our
+country and drive from it the thieves and traitors who
+enslave us! How can we do it? They are strong; we
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_288' name='page_288'></a>288</span>
+are weak. Ah, but <i>are</i> they truly strong? You say
+they have armies? Armies are composed of men. These
+men are your brothers, whipped forth to die&mdash;for what?
+For the pleasure of a few aristocrats. Who was it
+dragged your husbands and sons away from your
+arms, leaving you to starve? The governor of Lorient.
+Who is he? An aristocrat, paid to scourge your husbands
+and children to battle&mdash;paid, perhaps, by Prussia
+to betray them, too!&#8221;</p>
+<p>A low murmur rose from the people. Buckhurst
+swept the throng with colorless eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Under the commune we will have peace. Why?
+Because there can be no hunger, no distress, no homeless
+ones where the wealth of all is distributed equally.
+We will have no wars, because there will be nothing
+to fight for. We will have no aristocrats where all
+must labor for the common good; where all land is
+equally divided; where love, equality, and brotherhood
+are the only laws&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where&#8217;s the mayor?&#8221; I whispered to Eyre.</p>
+<p>&#8220;In his house; Speed is with him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come on, then,&#8221; I said, pushing my way around
+the outskirts of the crowd to the mayor&#8217;s house.</p>
+<p>The door was shut and the blinds drawn, but a knock
+brought Speed to the door, revolver in hand.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh,&#8221; he said, grimly, &#8220;it&#8217;s time you arrived. Come
+in.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The mayor was lying in his arm-chair, frightened,
+sulky, obstinate, his fat form swathed in a red sash.</p>
+<p>&#8220;O-ho!&#8221; I said, sharply, &#8220;so you already wear the
+colors of the revolution, do you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dame, they tied it over my waistcoat,&#8221; he said, &#8220;and
+there are no gendarmes to help me arrest them&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Never mind that just now,&#8221; I interrupted; &#8220;what
+I want to know is why you wrote the governor of Lorient
+to expel our circus.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_289' name='page_289'></a>289</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s my own affair,&#8221; he snapped; &#8220;besides, who
+said I wrote?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Idiot,&#8221; I said, &#8220;somebody paid you to do it. Who
+was it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The mayor, hunched up in his chair, shut his mouth
+obstinately.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Somebody paid you,&#8221; I repeated; &#8220;you would
+never have complained of us unless somebody paid
+you, because our circus is bringing money into your
+village. Come, my friend, that was easy to guess.
+Now let me guess again that Buckhurst paid you to
+complain of us.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The mayor looked slyly at me out of the corner of
+his mottled eyes, but he remained mute.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Very well,&#8221; said I; &#8220;when the troops from Lorient
+hear of this revolution in Paradise, they&#8217;ll come and
+chase these communards into the sea. And after that
+they&#8217;ll stand you up against a convenient wall and
+give you thirty seconds for absolution&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Stop!&#8221; burst out the mayor, struggling to his feet.
+&#8220;What am I to do? This gentleman, Monsieur Buckhurst,
+will slay me if I disobey him! Besides,&#8221; he added,
+with cowardly cunning, &#8220;they are going to do the same
+thing in Lorient, too&mdash;and everywhere&mdash;in Paris, in
+Bordeaux, in Marseilles&mdash;even in Quimperl&eacute;! And
+when all these cities are flying the red flag it won&#8217;t be
+comfortable for cities that fly the tricolor.&#8221; He began
+to bluster. &#8220;I&#8217;m mayor of Paradise, and I won&#8217;t be
+bullied! You get out of here with your circus and your
+foolish elephants! I haven&#8217;t any gendarmes just now
+to drive you out, but you had better start, all the same&mdash;before
+night.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh,&#8221; I said, &#8220;before night? Why before night?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wait and see then,&#8221; he muttered. &#8220;Anyway, get
+out of my house&mdash;d&#8217; ye hear?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We are going to give that performance at two o&#8217;clock
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_290' name='page_290'></a>290</span>
+this afternoon,&#8221; I said. &#8220;After that, another to-morrow
+at the same hour, and on every day at the same hour,
+as long as it pays. Do you understand?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Perfectly,&#8221; sneered the mayor.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And,&#8221; I continued, &#8220;if the governor of Lorient sends
+gendarmes to conduct us to the steamship in Lorient
+harbor, they&#8217;ll take with them somebody besides the
+circus folk.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You mean me?&#8221; he inquired.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I do.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What do I care?&#8221; he bawled in a fury. &#8220;You had
+better go to Lorient, I tell you. What do you know
+about the commune? What do you know about universal
+brotherhood? Everybody&#8217;s everybody&#8217;s brother,
+whether you like it or not! I&#8217;m your brother, and if it
+doesn&#8217;t suit you you may go to the devil!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Watching the infuriated magistrate, I said in English
+to Speed: &#8220;This is interesting. Buckhurst has learned
+we are here, and has paid this fellow heavily to have us
+expelled. What sense do you make of all this?&mdash;for I
+can make none.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Nor can I,&#8221; muttered Speed; &#8220;there&#8217;s a link gone;
+we&#8217;ll find it soon, I fancy. Without that link there&#8217;s
+no logic in this matter.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Look here,&#8221; I said, sharply, to the mayor, who had
+waddled toward the door, which was guarded by Kelly
+Eyre.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, I&#8217;m looking,&#8221; he snarled.</p>
+<p>Then I patiently pointed out to him his folly, and he
+listened with ill-grace, obstinate, mute, dull cunning
+gleaming from his half-closed eyes.</p>
+<p>Then I asked him what he would do if the cruiser
+began dropping shells into Paradise; he deliberately
+winked at me and thrust his tongue into his cheek.</p>
+<p>&#8220;So you know that the cruiser has gone?&#8221; I asked.</p>
+<p>He grinned.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_291' name='page_291'></a>291</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you suppose Buckhurst&#8217;s men hold the semaphore?
+If they do, they sent that cruiser on a fool&#8217;s
+errand,&#8221; whispered Speed.</p>
+<p>Here was a nice plot! I stepped to the window. Outside
+in the square Buckhurst was still speaking to a
+spellbound, gaping throng. A few men cheered him.
+They were strangers in Paradise.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s he doing it for?&#8221; I asked, utterly at a loss to
+account for proceedings which seemed to me the acme
+of folly. &#8220;He must know that the commune cannot
+be started here in Brittany! Speed, what is that man
+up to?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Behind us the mayor was angrily demanding that
+we leave his house; and after a while we did so, skirting
+the crowd once more to where, in a cleared space
+near the fountain, Buckhurst stood, red flag in hand,
+ranging a dozen peasants in line. The peasants were
+not Paradise men; they wore the costumes of the interior,
+and somebody had already armed them with
+scythes, rusty boarding-pikes, stable-forks, and one
+or two flintlock muskets. An evil-looking crew, if
+ever I saw one; wild-eyed, long-haired, bare of knee
+and ankle, loutish faces turned toward the slim, gray,
+pale-faced orator who confronted them, flag in hand.
+They were the scum of Morbihan.</p>
+<p>He told them that they were his guard of honor, the
+glory of their race&mdash;a sacred battalion whose names
+should shine high on the imperishable battlements of
+freedom.</p>
+<p>Around them the calm-eyed peasants stared at them
+stupidly; women gazed fascinated when Buckhurst,
+raising his flag, pointed in silence to the mayor&#8217;s house,
+where that official stood in his doorway, observing the
+scene:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Forward!&#8221; said Buckhurst, and the grotesque escort
+started with a clatter of heavy sabots and a rattle
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_292' name='page_292'></a>292</span>
+of scythes. The crowd fell back to give them way,
+then closed in behind like a herd of sheep, following
+to the mayor&#8217;s house, where Buckhurst set his sentinels
+and then entered, closing the door behind him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well!&#8221; muttered Speed, in amazement.</p>
+<p>After a long silence, Kelly Eyre looked at his watch.
+&#8220;It&#8217;s time we were in the tent,&#8221; he observed, dryly; and
+we turned away without a word. At the bridge we
+stopped and looked back. The red flag was flying
+from the mayor&#8217;s house.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Speed,&#8221; I said, &#8220;there&#8217;s one thing certain: Byram
+can&#8217;t stay if there&#8217;s going to be fighting here. I heard
+guns at sea this morning; I don&#8217;t know what that
+may indicate. And here&#8217;s this idiotic revolution started
+in Paradise! That means the troops from Lorient,
+and a wretched lot of bushwhacking and guerrilla work.
+Those Fa&ouml;uet Bretons that Buckhurst has recruited
+are a bad lot; there is going to be trouble, I tell
+you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Eyre suggested that we arm our circus people, and
+Speed promised to attend to it and to post them at the
+tent doors, ready to resist any interference with the
+performance on the part of Buckhurst&#8217;s recruits.</p>
+<p>It was already nearly one o&#8217;clock as we threaded our
+way through the crowds at the entrance, where our band
+was playing gayly and thousands of white head-dresses
+fluttered in the sparkling sunshine that poured intermittently
+from a sky where great white clouds were
+sailing seaward.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Walk right up, messoors! Entry done, mesdames,
+see voo play!&#8221; shouted Byram, waving a handful of
+red and blue tickets. &#8220;Animals all on view before the
+performance begins! Walk right into the corridor of
+livin&#8217; marvels and defunct curiosities! Bring the little
+ones to see the elephant an&#8217; the camuel&mdash;the fleet
+ship of the Sairy! Don&#8217;t miss nothing! Don&#8217;t fail
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_293' name='page_293'></a>293</span>
+to contemplate le ploo magnifique spectacle in all
+Europe! Don&#8217;t let nobody say you died an&#8217; never saw
+the only Flyin&#8217; Mermaid! An&#8217; don&#8217;t forget the prize&mdash;ten
+thousand francs to the man, woman, or che-ild
+who can prove that this here Flyin&#8217; Mermaid ain&#8217;t a
+fictious bein&#8217; straight from Paradise!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Speed and I made our way slowly through the crush
+to the stables, then around to the dressing-rooms, where
+little Grigg, in his spotted clown&#8217;s costume, was putting
+the last touches of vermilion to his white cheeks, and
+Horan, draped in a mangy leopard-skin to imitate
+Hercules, sat on his two-thousand-pound dumbbell,
+curling his shiny black mustache with Mrs. Grigg&#8217;s
+iron.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Jacqueline&#8217;s dressed,&#8221; cried Miss Crystal, parting
+the curtain of her dressing-room, just enough to show
+her pretty, excited eyes and nose.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right; I won&#8217;t be long,&#8221; replied Speed, who was
+to act as ring-master. And he turned and looked at
+me as I raised the canvas flap which screened my
+dressing-room.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think,&#8221; I said, &#8220;that we had better ride over to
+Tr&eacute;court after the show&mdash;not that there&#8217;s any immediate
+danger&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;There is no immediate danger,&#8221; said Speed, &#8220;because
+she is here.&#8221;</p>
+<p>My face began to burn; I looked at him miserably.
+&#8220;How do you know?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;She is there in the tent. I saw her.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He came up and held his hand on my shoulder. &#8220;I&#8217;m
+sorry I told you,&#8221; he said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why?&#8221; I asked. &#8220;She knows what I am. Is
+there any reason why she should not be amused? I
+promise you she shall be!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then why do you speak so bitterly? Don&#8217;t misconstrue
+her presence. Don&#8217;t be a contemptible fool.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_294' name='page_294'></a>294</span>
+If I have read her face&mdash;and I have never spoken to her,
+as you know&mdash;I tell you, Scarlett, that young girl is
+going through an ordeal! Do women of that kind
+come to shows like this to be amused?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What do you mean?&#8221; I said, angrily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I mean that she <i>could</i> not keep away! And I tell
+you to be careful with your lions, to spare her any recklessness
+on your part, to finish as soon as you can, and
+get out of that cursed cage. If you don&#8217;t you&#8217;re a
+coward, and a selfish one at that!&#8221;</p>
+<p>His words were like a blow in the face; I stared at
+him, too confused even for anger.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, you fool, you fool!&#8221; he said, in a low voice.
+&#8220;She cares for you; can&#8217;t you understand?&#8221;</p>
+<p>And he turned on his heel, leaving me speechless.</p>
+<p>I do not remember dressing. When I came out into
+the passageway Byram beckoned me, and pointed at
+a crack in the canvas through which one could see the
+interior of the amphitheatre. A mellow light flooded
+the great tent; spots of sunshine fell on the fresh tan-bark,
+where long, luminous, dusty beams slanted from
+the ridge-pole athwart the golden gloom.</p>
+<p>Tier on tier the wooden benches rose, packed with
+women in brilliant holiday dress, with men gorgeous
+in silver and velvet, with children decked in lace and
+gilt chains. The air was filled with the starched rustle
+of white coiffes and stiff collarettes; a low, incessant
+clatter of sabots sounded from gallery to arena; gusts
+of breathless whispering passed like capricious breezes
+blowing, then died out in the hush which fell as our
+band-master, McCadger, raised his wand and the band
+burst into &#8220;Dixie.&#8221;</p>
+<p>At that the great canvas flaps over the stable entrance
+slowly parted and the scarlet-draped head of Djebe, the
+elephant, appeared. On he came, amid a rising roar
+of approval, Speed in gorgeous robes perched on high,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_295' name='page_295'></a>295</span>
+ankus raised. After him came the camel, all over tassels
+and gold net, bestridden by Kelly Eyre, wearing
+a costume seldom seen anywhere, and never in the
+Sahara. White horses, piebald horses, and cream-colored
+horses pranced in the camel&#8217;s wake, dragging
+assorted chariots tenanted by gentlemen in togas;
+pretty little Mrs. Grigg, in habit and scarlet jacket,
+followed on Briza, the white mare; Horan came next,
+driving more horses; the dens of ferocious beasts
+creaked after, guarded by a phalanx of stalwart stablemen
+in plumes and armor; then Miss Crystal, driving
+zebras to a gilt chariot; then more men in togas, leading
+monkeys mounted on ponies; and finally Mrs. Horan
+seated on a huge egg drawn by ostriches.</p>
+<p>Once only they circled the sawdust ring; then the
+band stopped, the last of the procession disappeared,
+the clown came shrieking and tumbling out into the
+arena with his &#8220;Here we are again!&#8221;</p>
+<p>And the show was on.</p>
+<p>I stood in the shadow of the stable-tent, dressed in my
+frock-coat, white stock, white cords, and hunting-boots,
+sullen, imbittered, red with a false shame that better
+men than I have weakened under, almost desperate in
+my humiliation, almost ready to end it all there among
+those tawny, restless brutes pacing behind the bars
+at my elbow, watching me stealthily with luminous
+eyes.</p>
+<p>She knew what I was&mdash;but that she could come to
+see with her own eyes I could not understand, I could
+not forgive. Speed&#8217;s senseless words rang in my ears&mdash;&#8220;She
+cares for you!&#8221; But I knew they were meaningless,
+I knew she could not care for me. What fools&#8217;
+paradise would he have me enter? What did he know
+of this woman whom I knew and understood&mdash;whom I
+honored for her tenderness and pity to all who suffered&mdash;who
+I knew counted me as one among a multitude
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_296' name='page_296'></a>296</span>
+of unhappy failures whom her kindness and sympathy
+might aid.</p>
+<p>Because she had, in her gracious ignorance, given
+me a young girl&#8217;s impulsive friendship, was I to mistake
+her? What could Speed know of her&mdash;of her creed,
+her ideals, her calm, passionless desire to help where
+help was needed&mdash;anywhere&mdash;in the palace, in the faubourgs,
+in the wretched chaumi&egrave;res, in the slums? It was
+all one to her&mdash;to this young girl whose tender heart,
+bruised by her own sad life, opened to all on whom the
+evil days had dawned.</p>
+<p>And yet she had come here&mdash;and that was cruel;
+and she was not cruel. Could she know that I had
+a shred of pride left&mdash;one little, ragged thread of pride
+left in me&mdash;that she should come to see me do my mountebank
+tricks to the applause of a greasy throng?</p>
+<p>No, she had not thought of that, else she would have
+stayed away; for she was kind, above all else&mdash;generous
+and kind.</p>
+<p>Speed passed me in ring-master&#8217;s dress; there came
+the hollow thud of hoofs as Mrs. Grigg galloped into
+the ring on her white mare, gauze skirts fluttering,
+whip raised; and, &#8220;Hoop-la!&#8221; squealed the clown as
+his pretty little wife went careering around and around
+the tan-bark, leaping through paper-hoops, over hurdles,
+while the band played frantically and the Bretons
+shouted in an ecstasy of excitement.</p>
+<p>Then Grigg mounted his little trick donkey; roars
+of laughter greeted his discomfiture when Tim, the
+donkey, pitched him headlong and cantered off with a
+hee-haw of triumph.</p>
+<p>Miss Delany tripped past me in her sky-blue tights
+to hold the audience spellbound with her jugglery,
+and spin plates and throw glittering knives until the
+satiated people turned to welcome Horan and his
+&#8220;cogged&#8221; dumbbells and clubs.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_297' name='page_297'></a>297</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Have you seen her?&#8221; whispered Speed, coming up
+to me, long whip trailing.</p>
+<p>I shook my head.</p>
+<p>He looked at me in disgust. &#8220;Here&#8217;s something for
+you,&#8221; he said, shortly, and thrust an envelope into my
+hand.</p>
+<p>In the envelope was a little card on which was written:
+&#8220;I ask you to be careful, for a friend&#8217;s sake.&#8221;
+On the other side of the card was engraved her name.</p>
+<p>I raised my head and looked at Speed, who began
+to laugh nervously. &#8220;That&#8217;s better,&#8221; he said; &#8220;you
+don&#8217;t look like a surly brute any more.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where is she?&#8221; I said, steadying my voice, which
+my leaping heart almost stifled.</p>
+<p>He drew me by the elbow and looked toward the
+right of the amphitheatre. Following the direction of
+his eyes, I saw her leaning forward, pale-faced, grave,
+small, gloved hands interlocked. Beside her sat Sylvia
+Elven, apparently amused at the antics of the
+clown.</p>
+<p>Shame filled me. Not the false shame I had felt&mdash;that
+vanished&mdash;but shame that I could have misunderstood
+the presence of this brave friend of mine, this
+brave, generous, tender-hearted girl, who had given
+me her friendship, who was true enough to care what
+might happen to me&mdash;and brave enough to say so.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I will be careful,&#8221; I said to Speed, in a low voice.
+&#8220;If it were not for Byram I would not go on to-day&mdash;but
+that is a matter of honor. Oh, Speed,&#8221; I broke
+out, &#8220;is she not worth dying for?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why not live for her?&#8221; he observed, dryly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I will&mdash;don&#8217;t misunderstand me&mdash;I know she could
+never even think of me&mdash;as I do&mdash;of her&mdash;yes, as I dare
+to, Speed. I dare to love her with all this wretched heart
+and soul of mine! It&#8217;s all right&mdash;I think I am crazy
+to talk like this&mdash;but you are kind, Speed&mdash;you will
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_298' name='page_298'></a>298</span>
+forget what I said&mdash;you have forgotten it already&mdash;bless
+your heart&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, I haven&#8217;t,&#8221; he retorted, obstinately. &#8220;You
+must win her&mdash;you must! Shame on you for a coward
+if you do not speak that word which means life
+to you both!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Speed!&#8221; I began, angrily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, go to the devil!&#8221; he snapped, and walked off
+to where Jacqueline stood glittering, her slim limbs
+striking fire from every silver scale.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All ready, little sweetheart!&#8221; he cried, reassuringly,
+as she raised her blue eyes to his and shook her elf-locks
+around her flushed face. &#8220;It&#8217;s our turn now;
+they&#8217;re uncovering the tank, and Miss Crystal is on
+her trapeze. Are you nervous?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not when you are by me,&#8221; said Jacqueline.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll be there,&#8221; he said, smiling. &#8220;You will see me
+when you are ready. Look! There&#8217;s the governor!
+It&#8217;s your call! Quick, my child!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good-bye,&#8221; said Jacqueline, catching his hand in
+both of hers, and she was off and in the middle of
+the ring before I could get to a place of vantage to
+watch.</p>
+<p>Up into the rigging she swung, higher, higher, hanging
+like a brilliant fly in all that net-work of wire and
+rope, turning, twisting, climbing, dropping to her
+knees, until the people&#8217;s cheers rose to a sustained
+shriek.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ready!&#8221; quavered Miss Crystal, hanging from her
+own trapeze across the gulf.</p>
+<p>It was the first signal. Jacqueline set her trapeze
+swinging and hung by her knees, face downward.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ready!&#8221; called Miss Crystal again, as Jacqueline&#8217;s
+trapeze swung higher and higher.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ready!&#8221; said Jacqueline, calmly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Go!&#8221;</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_8' id='linki_8'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-298.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 566px; height: 378px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 566px;'>
+&#8220;I WAS ON MY KNEES&#8221;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_299' name='page_299'></a>299</span></div>
+<p>Like a meteor the child flashed across the space
+between the two trapezes; Miss Crystal caught her
+by her ankles.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ready?&#8221; called Speed, from the ground below.
+He had turned quite pale. I saw Jacqueline, hanging
+head down, smile at him from her dizzy height.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ready,&#8221; she said, calmly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Go!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Down, down, like a falling star, flashed Jacqueline
+into the shallow pool, then shot to the surface, shimmering
+like a leaping mullet, where she played and
+dived and darted, while the people screamed themselves
+hoarse, and Speed came out, ghastly and trembling,
+colliding with me like a blind man.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I wish I had never let her do it; I wish I had never
+brought her here&mdash;never seen her,&#8221; he stammered.
+&#8220;She&#8217;ll miss it some day&mdash;like Miss Claridge&mdash;and
+it will be murder&mdash;and I&#8217;ll have done it! Anybody
+but that child, Scarlett, anybody else&mdash;but I can&#8217;t
+bear to have her die that way&mdash;the pretty little thing!&#8221;</p>
+<p>He let go of my arm and stood back as my lion-cages
+came rolling out, drawn by four horses.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s your turn,&#8221; he said, in a dazed way. &#8220;Look
+out for that lioness.&#8221;</p>
+<p>As I walked out into the arena I saw only one face.
+She tried to smile, and so did I; but a terrible, helpless
+sensation was already creeping over me&mdash;the knowledge
+that I was causing her distress&mdash;the knowledge
+that I was no longer sure of myself&mdash;that, with my
+love for her, my authority over these caged things had
+gone, never to return. I knew it, I recognized it, and
+admitted it now. Speed&#8217;s words rang true&mdash;horribly
+true.</p>
+<p>I entered the cage, afraid.</p>
+<p>Almost instantly I was the centre of a snarling mass
+of lions; I saw nothing; my whip rose and fell mechanically.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_300' name='page_300'></a>300</span>
+I stood like one stunned, while the tawny forms
+leaped right and left.</p>
+<p>Suddenly I heard a keeper say, &#8220;Look out for Empress
+Khatoun, sir!&#8221; And a moment later a cry,
+&#8220;Look out, sir!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Something went wrong with another lion, too, for
+the people were standing up and shouting, and the
+sleeve of my coat hung from the elbow, showing my
+bare shoulder. I staggered up against the bars of
+the sliding door as a lioness struck me heavily and I
+returned the blow. I remember saying, aloud: &#8220;I
+must keep my feet; I must not fall!&#8221; Then daylight
+grew red, and I was on my knees, with the foul breath
+of a lion in my face. A hot iron bar shot across the
+cage. The roaring of beasts and people died out in
+my ears; then, with a shock, my soul seemed to be
+dashed out of me into a terrific darkness.</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h3>PART THIRD</h3>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_303' name='page_303'></a>303</span>
+<a name='XVIII_A_GUESTCHAMBER' id='XVIII_A_GUESTCHAMBER'></a>
+<h2>XVIII</h2>
+<h3>A GUEST-CHAMBER</h3>
+</div>
+<p>A light was shining in my eyes and I was talking
+excitedly; that and the odor of brandy I remember&mdash;and
+something else, a steady roaring in my ears;
+then darkness, out of which came a voice, empty, meaningless,
+finally soundless.</p>
+<p>After a while I realized that I was in pain; that, at
+intervals, somebody forced morsels of ice between my
+lips; that the darkness around me had turned grayer.</p>
+<p>Time played tricks on me; centuries passed steadily,
+year following year&mdash;long years they were, too, with
+endless spring-tides, summers, autumns, winters, each
+with full complement of months, and every month
+crowded with days. Space, illimitable space, surrounded
+me&mdash;skyless, starless space. And through its terrific
+silence I heard a clock ticking seconds of time.</p>
+<p>Years and years later a yellow star rose and stood
+still before my open eyes; and after a long while I saw
+it was the flame of a candle: and somebody spoke my
+name.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I know you, Speed,&#8221; I said, drowsily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are all right, Scarlett?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,... all right.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Does the candle-light pain you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No;... do they contract?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A little.... Yes, I am sure the pupils of your eyes
+are contracting. Don&#8217;t talk.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_304' name='page_304'></a>304</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;No;... then it was concussion of the brain?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes;... the shock is passing.... Don&#8217;t talk.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Time moved on again; space slowly contracted into
+a symmetrical shape, set with little points of light;
+sleep and fatigue alternated with glimmers of reason,
+which finally grew into a faint but steady intelligence.
+And, very delicately, memory stirred in a slumbering
+brain.</p>
+<p>Reason and memory were mine again, frail toys
+for a stricken man, so frail I dared not, for a time,
+use them for my amusement&mdash;and one of them was
+broken, too&mdash;memory!&mdash;broken short at the moment
+when full in my face I had felt the hot, fetid breath
+of a lion.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Speed!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes; I am here.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What time is it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>I heard the click of his hunting-case. &#8220;Eleven
+o&#8217;clock.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What day?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Saturday.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;When&mdash;&#8221; I hesitated. I was afraid.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well?&#8221; he asked, quietly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;When was I hurt? Many days ago&mdash;many
+weeks?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You were hurt at half-past three this afternoon.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I tried to comprehend; I could not, and after a while
+I gave up my feeble grasp on time.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What is that roaring sound?&#8221; I asked. &#8220;Not
+drums? Not my lions?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is the sea.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;So near?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Very near.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I turned my head on the white pillow. &#8220;Where is
+this bed? Where is this room?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Shall I tell you?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_305' name='page_305'></a>305</span></p>
+<p>I was silent, struggling with memory.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Tell me,&#8221; I said. &#8220;Whose bed is this?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is hers.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The candle-flame glimmered before my wide-open
+eyes once more, and&mdash;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, you are all right,&#8221; he muttered, then leaned
+heavily against the bedside, dropping his arms on
+the coverlet.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It was a close call&mdash;a close call!&#8221; he said, hoarsely.
+&#8220;We thought it was ended.... They were all over you&mdash;Empress
+dragged you; but they all crowded in too
+close&mdash;they blocked each other, you see;... and we
+used the irons.... Your left arm lay close to the cage
+door and ... we got you away from them, and ... it&#8217;s
+all right now&mdash;it&#8217;s all right&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>He broke down, head buried in his arms. I moved
+my left hand across the sheets so that it rested on his
+elbow. He lay there, gulping for a while; I could not
+see him very clearly, for the muscles that controlled
+my eyes were still slightly paralyzed from the shock
+of the blow that Empress Khatoun had dealt me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s all very well,&#8221; he stammered, with a trace of
+resentment in his quavering voice&mdash;&#8220;it&#8217;s all very well
+for people who are used to the filthy beasts; but I tell
+you, Scarlett, it sickened me. I&#8217;m no coward, as men
+go, but I was afraid&mdash;I was terrified!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yet you dragged me out,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who told you that? How could you know&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It was not necessary to tell me. You said, &#8216;<i>We</i>
+got you away&#8217;; but I know it was you, Speed, because
+it was like you. Look at me! Am I well enough to
+dress?&#8221;</p>
+<p>He raised a haggard face to mine. &#8220;You know
+best,&#8221; he said. &#8220;They tore your coat off, and one of
+them ripped your riding-boot from top to sole; but the
+blow Empress struck you is your only hurt, and she
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_306' name='page_306'></a>306</span>
+all but missed you at that. Had she hit you fairly&mdash;but,
+oh, hell! Do you want to get up?&#8221;</p>
+<p>I said I would in a moment,... and that is all I remember
+that night, all I remember clearly, though it
+seems to me that once I heard drums beating in the
+distance; and perhaps I did.</p>
+<p>Dawn was breaking when I awoke. Speed, partly
+dressed, lay beside me, sleeping heavily. I looked
+around at the pretty boudoir where I lay, at the silken
+curtains of the bed, at the clouds of cupids on the painted
+ceiling, flying through a haze of vermilion flecked
+with gold.</p>
+<p>Raising one hand, I touched with tentative fingers
+my tightly bandaged head, then turned over on my
+side.</p>
+<p>There were my torn clothes, filthy and smeared with
+sawdust, flung over a delicate, gilded chair; there
+sprawled my battered boots, soiling the polished, inlaid
+floor; a candle lay in a pool of hardened wax on
+a golden rococo table, and I saw where the smouldering
+wick had blistered the glazed top. And this was
+her room! Vandalism unspeakable! I turned on my
+snoring comrade.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Idiot, get up!&#8221; I cried, hitting him feebly.</p>
+<p>He was very angry when he found out why I had
+awakened him; perhaps the sight of my bandaged head
+restrained him from violence.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Look here,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I&#8217;ve been up all night, and
+you might as well know it. If you hit me again&mdash;&#8221;
+He hesitated, stared around, yawned, and rubbed his
+eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re right,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I must get up.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He stumbled to the floor, bathed, grumbling all the
+while, and then, to my surprise, walked over to a flat
+trunk which stood under the window and which I recognized
+as mine.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_307' name='page_307'></a>307</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll borrow some underwear,&#8221; he remarked, viciously.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s my trunk doing here?&#8221; I demanded.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Madame de Vassart had them bring it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Had <i>who</i> bring it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Horan and McCadger&mdash;before they left.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Before they left? Have they gone?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I forgot,&#8221; he said, soberly; &#8220;you don&#8217;t know what&#8217;s
+been going on.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He began to dress, raising his head now and then
+to gaze out across the ocean towards Groix, where the
+cruiser once lay at anchor.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of course you don&#8217;t know that the circus has gone,&#8221;
+he remarked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Gone!&#8221; I echoed, astonished.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Gone to Lorient.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He came and sat down on the edge of the gilded
+bedstead, buttoning his collar thoughtfully.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Buckhurst is in town again with a raft of picturesque
+ruffians,&#8221; he said. &#8220;They marched in last
+night, drums beating, colors unfurled&mdash;the red rag,
+you know&mdash;and the first thing they did was to order
+Byram to decamp.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He began to tie his cravat, with a meditative glance
+at the gilded mirror.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I was here with you. Kelly Eyre came for me&mdash;Madame
+de Vassart took my place to watch you&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>A sudden heart-beat choked me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;&mdash;So I,&#8221; he continued, &#8220;posted off to the tent, to
+find a rabble of communist soldiers stealing my balloon-car,
+ropes, bag, and all. I tell you I did what I
+could, but they said the balloon was contraband of
+war, and a military necessity; and they took it, the
+thieving whelps! Then I saw how matters were going
+to end, and I told the governor that he&#8217;d better go
+to Lorient as fast as he could travel before they stole
+the buttons off his shirt.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_308' name='page_308'></a>308</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Scarlett, it was a weird sight. I never saw tents
+struck so quickly. Kelly Eyre, Horan, and I harnessed
+up; Grigg stood guard over the props
+with a horse-pistol. The ladies worked like Trojans,
+loading the wagons; Byram raged up and down
+under the bayonets of those bandits, cursing them
+as only a man who never swears can curse, invoking
+the Stars and Stripes, metaphorically placing
+himself, his company, his money-box, and his camuel
+under the shadow of the broad eagle of the United
+States.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, those were gay times, Scarlett. And we frightened
+them, too, because nobody attempted to touch
+anything.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Speed laughed grimly, and began to pace the floor,
+casting sharp glances at me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Byram&#8217;s people, elephant and all, struck the road
+a little after three o&#8217;clock this morning, in good order,
+not a tent-peg nor a frying-pan missing. They ought
+to be in Lorient by early afternoon.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Gone!&#8221; I repeated, blankly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Gone. Curious how it hurt me to say good-bye.
+They&#8217;re good people&mdash;good, kindly folk. I&#8217;ve grown
+to care for them in these few months ... I may go
+back to them ... some day ... if they want a balloonist ... or
+any kind of a thing.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You stayed to take care of me?&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Partly.... You need care, especially when you
+don&#8217;t need it.&#8221; He began to laugh. &#8220;It&#8217;s only when
+you&#8217;re well that I worry.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I lay looking at him, striving to realize the change
+that had occurred in so brief a time&mdash;trying to understand
+the abrupt severing of ties and conditions to
+which, already, I had become accustomed&mdash;perhaps
+attached.</p>
+<p>&#8220;They all sent their love to you,&#8221; he said. &#8220;They
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_309' name='page_309'></a>309</span>
+knew you were out of danger&mdash;I told them there was
+no fracture, only a slight concussion. Byram came
+to look at you; he brought your back salary&mdash;all of
+it. I&#8217;ve got it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Byram came here?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes. He stood over there beside you, snivelling
+into his red bandanna. And Miss Crystal and Jacqueline
+stood here.... Jacqueline kissed you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>After a moment I said: &#8220;Has Jacqueline gone with
+them?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was another pause, longer this time.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of course,&#8221; I said, &#8220;Byram knows that my usefulness
+as a lion-tamer is at an end.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of course,&#8221; said Speed, simply.</p>
+<p>I sighed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He wants you for the horses,&#8221; added Speed. &#8220;But
+you can do better than that.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know,... perhaps.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Besides, they sail to-day from Lorient. The governor
+made money yesterday&mdash;enough to start again.
+Poor Byram! He&#8217;s frantic to get back to America;
+and, oh, Scarlett, how that good old man can swear!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Help me to sit up in bed,&#8221; I said; &#8220;there&mdash;that&#8217;s
+it! Just wedge those pillows behind my shoulders.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of course. I&#8217;m going to dress. Speed, did you
+say that little Jacqueline went with Byram?&#8221;</p>
+<p>He looked at me miserably.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; he said.</p>
+<p>I was silent.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; he repeated, &#8220;she went, lugging her pet cat
+in her arms. She would go; the life has fascinated
+her. I begged her not to&mdash;I felt I was disloyal to Byram,
+too, but what could I do? I tell you, Scarlett, I
+wish I had never seen her, never persuaded her to try
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_310' name='page_310'></a>310</span>
+that foolish dive. She&#8217;ll miss some day&mdash;like the
+other one.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s my fault more than yours,&#8221; I said. &#8220;Couldn&#8217;t
+you persuade her to give it up?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I offered to educate her, to send her to school, to
+work for her,&#8221; he said. &#8220;She only looked at me out
+of those sea-blue eyes&mdash;you know how the little witch
+can look you through and through&mdash;and then&mdash;and
+then she walked away into the torch-glare, clasping
+her cat to her breast, and I saw her strike a fool of a
+soldier who pretended to stop her! Scarlett, she was
+a strange child&mdash;proud and dainty, too, with all her
+rags&mdash;you remember&mdash;a strange, sweet child&mdash;almost
+a woman, at times, and&mdash;I thought her loyal&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>He walked to the window and stared moodily at the
+sea.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Meanwhile,&#8221; I said, quietly, &#8220;I am going to get
+up.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He gave me a look which I interpreted as, &#8220;Get up
+and be damned!&#8221; I complied&mdash;in part.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, help me into these things, will you?&#8221; I said,
+at length; and instantly he was at my side, gentle and
+patient, lacing my shoes, because it made my head
+ache to bend over, buttoning collar and cravat, and
+slipping my coat on while I leaned against the tumbled
+bed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well!&#8221; I said, with a grimace, and stood up, shakily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; he echoed, &#8220;here we are again, as poor little
+Grigg says.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;With our salaries in our pockets and our possessions
+on our backs.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And no prospects,&#8221; he added, gayly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not a blessed one, unless we count a prospect of
+trouble with Buckhurst.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He won&#8217;t trouble us unless we interfere with him,&#8221;
+observed Speed, drumming nervously on the window.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_311' name='page_311'></a>311</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;But I&#8217;m going to,&#8221; I said, surprised.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Going to interfere?&#8221; he asked, wheeling to scowl
+at me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Certainly.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why? We&#8217;re not in government employ. What
+do we care about this row? If these Frenchmen are
+tired of battering the Germans they&#8217;ll batter each other,
+and we can&#8217;t help it, can we?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;We can help Buckhurst&#8217;s annoying Madame de
+Vassart.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Only by getting her to leave the country,&#8221; said
+Speed. &#8220;She will understand that, too.&#8221; He paused,
+rubbing his nose reflectively. &#8220;Scarlett, what do you
+suppose Buckhurst is up to?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I haven&#8217;t an idea,&#8221; I replied. &#8220;All I know is that,
+in all probability, he came here to attempt to rob the
+treasure-trains&mdash;and that was your theory, too, you
+remember?&#8221;</p>
+<p>And I continued, reminding Speed that Buckhurst
+had collected his ruffianly franc company in the forest;
+that the day the cruiser sailed he had appeared in Paradise
+to proclaim the commune; that doubtless he had
+signalled, from the semaphore, orders for the cruiser&#8217;s
+departure; that a few hours later his red battalion had
+marched into Paradise.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, that&#8217;s all logical,&#8221; said Speed, &#8220;but how
+could Buckhurst know the secret-code signals which
+the cruiser must have received before she sailed? To
+hoist them on the semaphore, he must have had a
+code-book.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I thought a moment. &#8220;Suppose Mornac is with
+him?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Speed fairly jumped. &#8220;That&#8217;s it! That&#8217;s the link
+we were hunting for! It&#8217;s Mornac&mdash;it must be Mornac!
+He is the only man; he had access to everything.
+And now that his Emperor is a prisoner and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_312' name='page_312'></a>312</span>
+his Empress a fugitive, the miserable hound has nothing
+to lose by the anarchy he once hoped to profit
+by. Tell me, Scarlett, does the tail wag the dog,
+after all? And which is the dog, Buckhurst or
+Mornac?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I once thought it was Buckhurst,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;So did I, but&mdash;I don&#8217;t know now. I don&#8217;t know
+what to do, either. I don&#8217;t know anything!&#8221;</p>
+<p>I began to walk about the room, carefully, for my
+knees were weak, though I had no headache.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a shame for a pair of hulking brutes like you
+and me to desecrate this bedroom,&#8221; I muttered. &#8220;Mud
+on the floor&mdash;look at it! Sawdust and candle-wax
+over everything! What&#8217;s that&mdash;all that on the lounge?
+Has a dog or a cat been rolling over it? It&#8217;s plastered
+with tan-colored hairs!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Lion&#8217;s hairs from your coat,&#8221; he observed, grimly.</p>
+<p>I looked at them for a moment rather soberly. They
+glistened like gold in the early sunshine.</p>
+<p>Speed opened his mouth to say something, but closed
+it abruptly as a very faint tapping sounded on our
+door.</p>
+<p>I opened it; Sylvia Elven stood in the hallway.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh,&#8221; she said, in ungracious astonishment, &#8220;then
+you are not on the grave&#8217;s awful verge,... are
+you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I hope you didn&#8217;t expect to discover me there?&#8221;
+I replied, laughing.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Expect it? Indeed I did, monsieur,... or I
+shouldn&#8217;t be here at sunrise, scratching at your door
+for news of you. This,&#8221; she said, petulantly, &#8220;is
+enough to vex any saint!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Any other saint,&#8221; I corrected, gravely. &#8220;I admit
+it, mademoiselle, I am a nuisance; so is my comrade.
+We have only to express our deep gratitude and go.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Go? Do you think we will let you go, with all those
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_313' name='page_313'></a>313</span>
+bandits roaming the moors outside our windows? And
+you call that gratitude?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Does Madame de Vassart desire us to stay?&#8221; I
+asked, trying not to speak too eagerly.</p>
+<p>Sylvia Elven gave me a scornful glance.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Must we implore you, monsieur, to protect us?
+We will, if you wish it. I know I&#8217;m ill-humored, but
+it&#8217;s scarcely daybreak, and we&#8217;ve sat up all night on
+your account&mdash;Madame de Vassart would not allow
+me to go to bed&mdash;and if I am brusque with you, remember
+I was obliged to sleep in a chair&mdash;and I hope
+you feel that you have put me to very great inconvenience.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I feel that way ... about Madame de Vassart,&#8221;
+I said, laughing at the pretty, pouting mouth and
+sleepy eyes of this amusingly exasperated young
+girl, who resembled a rumpled Dresden shepherdess
+more than anything else. I added that we would be
+glad to stay until the communist free-rifles took themselves
+off. For which she thanked me with an exaggerated
+courtesy and retired, furiously conscious
+that she had not only slept in her clothes, but that
+she looked it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That was Madame de Vassart&#8217;s companion, wasn&#8217;t
+it?&#8221; asked Speed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, Sylvia Elven ... I don&#8217;t know what she is&mdash;I
+know what she was&mdash;no, I don&#8217;t, either. I only
+know what Jarras says she was.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Speed raised his eyebrows. &#8220;And what was that?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Actress, at the Od&eacute;on.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Never heard of her being at the Od&eacute;on,&#8221; he said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You heard of her as one of that group at La
+Trappe?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, when I was looking for Buckhurst in Morsbronn,
+Jarras telegraphed me descriptions of the people
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_314' name='page_314'></a>314</span>
+I was to arrest at La Trappe, and he mentioned her as
+Mademoiselle Sylvia Elven, lately of the Od&eacute;on.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That was a mistake,&#8221; said Speed. &#8220;What he
+meant to say was that she was lately a resident of the
+Odeonsplatz. He knew that. It must have been a
+telegraphic error.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;How do you know?&#8221; I asked, surprised.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Because I furnished Jarras with the data. It&#8217;s in
+her dossier.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Odeon&mdash;Odeonsplatz,&#8221; I muttered, trying to understand.
+&#8220;What is the Odeonsplatz? A square in
+some German city, isn&#8217;t it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a square in the capital of Bavaria&mdash;Munich.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But&mdash;but she isn't a German, is she? <i>Is she</i>?&#8221; I
+repeated, staring at Speed, who was looking keenly at
+me, with eyes partly closed.</p>
+<p>There was a long silence.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, upon my soul!&#8221; I said, slowly, emphasizing
+every word with a noiseless blow on the table.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Didn&#8217;t you know it? Wait! Hold on,&#8221; he said,
+&#8220;let&#8217;s go slowly&mdash;let&#8217;s go very slowly. She is partly
+German by birth. That proves nothing. Granted
+that Jarras suspected her, not as a social agitator, but
+as a German agent. Granted he did not tell you what
+he suspected, but merely ordered her arrest with the
+others&mdash;perhaps under cover of Buckhurst&#8217;s arrest&mdash;you
+know what a secret man, the Emperor was&mdash;how,
+if he wanted a man, he&#8217;d never chase him, but run in
+the opposite direction and head him off half-way around
+the world. So, granted all this, I say, what&#8217;s to prove
+Jarras was right?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Does her dossier prove it? You have read it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, her dossier was rather incomplete. We knew
+that she went about a good deal in Paris&mdash;went to the
+Tuileries, too. She was married once. Didn&#8217;t you
+know even <i>that</i>?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_315' name='page_315'></a>315</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Married!&#8221; I exclaimed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;To a Russian brute&mdash;I&#8217;ve forgotten his name, but
+I&#8217;ve seen him&mdash;one of the kind with high cheek-bones
+and black eyes. She got her divorce in England;
+that&#8217;s on record, and we have it in her dossier. Then,
+going back still further, we know that her father was a
+Bavarian, a petty noble of some sort&mdash;baron, I believe.
+Her mother&#8217;s name was Elven, a Breton peasant; it
+was a m&eacute;salliance&mdash;trouble of all sorts&mdash;I forget, but
+I believe her uncle brought her up. Her uncle was
+military attach&eacute; of the German embassy to Paris.... You
+see how she slipped into society&mdash;and you know
+what society under the Empire was.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Speed,&#8221; I said, &#8220;why on earth didn&#8217;t you tell me
+all this before?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;My dear fellow, I supposed Jarras had told you;
+or that, if you didn&#8217;t know it, it did not concern us at
+all.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But it does concern&mdash;a person I know,&#8221; I said,
+quickly, thinking of poor Kelly Eyre. &#8220;And it explains
+a lot of things&mdash;or, rather, places them under a
+new light.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What light?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, for one thing, she has consistently lied to me.
+For another, I believe her to be hand-in-glove with Karl
+Marx and the French leaders&mdash;not Buckhurst, but the
+real leaders of the social revolt; <i>not as a genuine disciple,
+but as a German agent</i>, with orders to foment disorder
+of any kind which might tend to embarrass and weaken
+the French government in this crisis.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re inclined to believe that?&#8221; he asked, much
+interested.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I am. France is full of German agents; the
+Tuileries was not exempt&mdash;you know it as well as I.
+Paris swarmed with spies of every kind, high and low
+in the social scale. The embassies were nests of spies;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_316' name='page_316'></a>316</span>
+every salon a breeding spot of intrigue; the foreign
+governments employed the grande dame as well as
+the grisette. Do you remember the military-balloon
+scandal?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Indistinctly.... Some poor devil gave a woman
+government papers.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Technically they were government papers, but he
+considered them his own. Well, the woman who received
+those papers is down-stairs.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He gave a short whistle of astonishment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are sure, Scarlett?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Perfectly certain.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then, if you are certain, that settles the question
+of Mademoiselle Elven&#8217;s present occupation.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I rose and began to move around the room restlessly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;But, after all,&#8221; I said, &#8220;that concerns us no longer.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;How can it concern two Americans out of a job?&#8221;
+he observed, with a shrug. &#8220;The whole fabric of
+French politics is rotten to the foundation. It&#8217;s tottering;
+a shake will bring it down. Let it tumble. I
+tell you this nation needs the purification of fire. Our
+own country has just gone through it; France can do
+it, too. She&#8217;s got to, or she&#8217;s lost!&#8221;</p>
+<p>He looked at me earnestly. &#8220;I love the country,&#8221;
+he said; &#8220;it&#8217;s fed me and harbored me. But I wouldn&#8217;t
+lift a finger to put a single patch on this makeshift of
+a government; I wouldn&#8217;t stave off the crash if I could.
+And it&#8217;s coming! You and I have seen something of
+the rottenness of the underpinning which props up
+empires. You and I, Scarlett, have learned a few of
+the shameful secrets which even an enemy to France
+would not drag out into the daylight.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I had never seen him so deeply moved.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is there hope&mdash;is there a glimmer of hope to incite
+anybody while these conditions endure?&#8221; he continued,
+bitterly.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_317' name='page_317'></a>317</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;No. France must suffer, France must stand alone
+in terrible humiliation, France must offer the self-sacrifice
+of fire and mount the altar herself!</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then, and only then, shall the nation, purified,
+reborn, rise and live, and build again, setting a beacon
+of civilized freedom high as the beacon we Americans
+are raising,... slowly yet surely raising, to the glory
+of God, Scarlett&mdash;to the glory of God. No other dedication
+can be justified in this world.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_318' name='page_318'></a>318</span>
+<a name='XIX_TRCOURT_GARDEN' id='XIX_TRCOURT_GARDEN'></a>
+<h2>XIX</h2>
+<h3>TR&Eacute;COURT GARDEN</h3>
+</div>
+<p>About nine o&#8217;clock we were summoned by a Breton
+maid to the pretty breakfast-room below, and
+I was ashamed to go with my shabby clothes, bandaged
+head, and face the color of clay.</p>
+<p>The young countess was not present; Sylvia Elven
+offered us a supercilious welcome to a breakfast the
+counterpart of which I had not seen in years&mdash;one of
+those American breakfasts which even we, since the
+Paris Exposition, are beginning to discard for the simpler
+French breakfast of coffee and rolls.</p>
+<p>&#8220;This is all in your honor,&#8221; observed Sylvia, turning
+up her nose at the array of poached eggs, fragrant
+sausages, crisp potatoes, piles of buttered toast, muffins,
+marmalade, and fruit.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It was very kind of you to think of it,&#8221; said Speed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is Madame de Vassart&#8217;s idea, not mine,&#8221; she
+observed, looking across the table at me. &#8220;Will the
+gentleman with nine lives have coffee or chocolate?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The fruit consisted of grapes and those winy Breton
+cider-apples from Bannalec. We began with these in
+decorous silence.</p>
+<p>Speed ventured a few comments on the cultivation of
+fruit, of which he knew nothing; neither he nor his
+subject was encouraged.</p>
+<p>Presently, however, Sylvia glanced up at him with
+a malicious smile, saying: &#8220;I notice that you have
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_319' name='page_319'></a>319</span>
+been in the foreign division of the Imperial Military
+Police, monsieur.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why do you think so?&#8221; asked Speed, calmly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;When you seated yourself in your chair,&#8221; said
+Sylvia, &#8220;you made a gesture with your left hand
+as though to unhook the sabre&mdash;which was not
+there.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Speed laughed. &#8220;But why the police? I might
+have been in the cavalry, mademoiselle; for that matter,
+I might have been an officer in any arm of the service.
+They all carry swords or sabres.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But only the military police and the gendarmerie
+wear aiguilettes,&#8221; she replied. &#8220;When you bend
+over your plate your fingers are ever unconsciously
+searching for those swinging, gold-tipped cords&mdash;to
+keep them out of your coffee-cup, monsieur.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The muscles in Speed&#8217;s lean, bronzed cheeks tightened;
+he looked at her keenly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Might I not have been in the gendarmerie?&#8221; he
+asked. &#8220;How do you know I was not?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Does the gendarmerie wear the sabre-tache?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, mademoiselle, but&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do the military police?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No&mdash;that is, the foreign division did, when it existed.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are sitting, monsieur,&#8221; she said, placidly,
+&#8220;with your left foot so far under the table that it quite
+inadvertently presses my shoe-tip.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Speed withdrew his leg with a jerk, asking pardon.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is a habit perfectly pardonable in a man who is
+careful that his spur shall not scratch or tear a patent-leather
+sabre-tache,&#8221; she said.</p>
+<p>I had absolutely nothing to say; we both laughed
+feebly, I believe.</p>
+<p>I saw temptation struggling with Speed&#8217;s caution;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_320' name='page_320'></a>320</span>
+I, too, was almost willing to drop a hint that might
+change her amusement to speculation, if not to alarm.</p>
+<p>So this was the woman for whose caprice Kelly Eyre
+had wrecked his prospects! Clever&mdash;oh, certainly
+clever. But she had made the inevitable slip that such
+clever people always make sooner or later. And in a
+bantering message to her victim she had completed
+the chain against herself&mdash;a chain of which I might
+have been left in absolute ignorance. Impulse probably
+did it&mdash;reasonless and perhaps malicious caprice&mdash;the
+instinct of a pretty woman to stir up memory in
+a discarded and long-forgotten victim&mdash;just to note
+the effect&mdash;just to see if there still remains one nerve,
+one pulse-beat to respond.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Will the pensive gentleman with nine lives have a
+little more nourishment to sustain him?&#8221; she asked.</p>
+<p>Looking up from my empty plate, I declined politely;
+and we followed her signal to rise.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There is a Mr. Kelly Eyre,&#8221; she said to Speed,
+&#8220;connected with your circus. Has he gone with the
+others?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, mademoiselle.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Really?&#8221; she mused, amiably. &#8220;I knew him as a
+student in Paris, when he was very young&mdash;and I was
+younger. I should have liked to have seen him&mdash;once
+more.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did you not see him?&#8221; I asked, abruptly.</p>
+<p>Her back was toward me; very deliberately she
+turned her pretty head and looked at me over her shoulder,
+studying my face a moment.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I saw him. I should have liked to have seen
+him&mdash;once more,&#8221; she said, as though she had first
+calculated the effect on me of a different reply.</p>
+<p>She led the way into that small room overlooking
+the garden where I had been twice received by
+Madame de Vassart. Here she took leave of us,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_321' name='page_321'></a>321</span>
+abandoning us to our own designs. Mine was to
+find a large arm-chair and sit down in it, and give
+Speed a few instructions. Speed&#8217;s was to prowl
+around Paradise for information, and, if possible,
+telegraph to Lorient for troops to catch Buckhurst
+red-handed.</p>
+<p>He left me turning over the leaves of the &#8220;Chanson
+de Roland,&#8221; saying that he would return in a little while
+with any news he might pick up, and that he would do
+his best to catch Buckhurst in the foolish trap which
+that gentleman had set for others.</p>
+<p>Tiring of the poem, I turned my eyes toward the
+garden, where, in the sunshine, heaps of crisped leaves
+lay drifted along the base of the wall or scattered between
+the rows of herbs which were still ripely green.
+The apricots had lost their leaves, so had the grapevines
+and the fig-trees; but the peach-trees were in
+foliage; pansies and perpetual roses bloomed amid
+sere and seedy thickets of larkspurs, phlox, and dead
+delphinium.</p>
+<p>On the wall a cat sat, sunning her sleek flanks.
+Something about the animal seemed familiar to me,
+and after a while I made up my mind that this was
+Ange Pitou, Jacqueline&#8217;s pet, abandoned by her mistress
+and now a feline derelict. Speed must have been
+mistaken when he told me that Jacqueline had taken
+her cat; or possibly the home-haunting instinct had
+brought the creature back, abandoning her mistress
+to her fortunes.</p>
+<p>If I had been in my own house I should have offered
+Ange Pitou hospitality; as it was, I walked out into
+the sunny garden and made courteous advances which
+were ignored. I watched the cat for a few moments,
+then sat down on the bench. The inertia which follows
+recovery from a shock, however light, left me
+with the lazy acquiescence of a convalescent, willing
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_322' name='page_322'></a>322</span>
+to let the world drift for an hour or two, contented to
+relax, apathetic, comfortable.</p>
+<p>Seaward the gulls sailed like white feathers floating;
+the rocky ramparts of Groix rose clear-cut against
+a horizon where no haze curtained the sea; the breakers
+had receded from the coast on a heavy ebb-tide,
+and I saw them in frothy outline, noiselessly churning
+the shallows beyond the outer bar.</p>
+<p>And then my reverie ended abruptly; a step on the
+gravel walk brought me to my feet.... There she
+stood, lovely in a fresh morning-gown deeply belted
+with turquoise-shells, her ruddy hair glistening, coiled
+low on a neck of snow.</p>
+<p>For the first time she showed embarrassment in her
+greeting, scarcely touching my hand, speaking with
+a new constraint in a voice which grew colder as she
+hesitated.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We were frightened; we are so glad that you were
+not badly hurt. I thought you might find it comfortable
+here&mdash;of course I could not know that you were
+not seriously injured.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is fortunate for me,&#8221; I said, pleasantly, &#8220;for
+I am afraid you would not have offered this shelter if
+you had known how little injured I really was.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I should have offered it&mdash;had I reason to believe
+you would have accepted. I have felt that perhaps
+you might think what I have done was unwarranted.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think you did the most graciously unselfish thing
+a woman could do,&#8221; I said, quickly. &#8220;You offered
+your best; and the man who took it cannot&mdash;dare not&mdash;express
+his gratitude.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The emotion in my voice warned me to cease; the
+faintest color tinted her cheeks, and she looked at me
+with beautiful, grave eyes that slowly grew inscrutable,
+leaving me standing diffident and silent before her.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_323' name='page_323'></a>323</span></p>
+<p>The breeze shifted, bringing with it the hollow sea-thunder.
+She turned her head and glanced out across
+the ocean, hands behind her, fingers linked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I have come here into your garden uninvited,&#8221; I
+said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Shall we sit here&mdash;a moment?&#8221; she suggested,
+without turning.</p>
+<p>Presently she seated herself in one corner of the
+bench; her gaze wandered over the partly blighted
+garden, then once more centred on the seaward skyline.</p>
+<p>The color of her hands, her neck, fascinated me.
+That flesh texture of snow and roses, firmly and delicately
+modelled, which sometimes is seen with red
+hair, I had seen once before in a picture by a Spanish
+master, but never, until now, in real life.</p>
+<p>And she was life incarnate in her wholesome beauty&mdash;a
+beauty of which I had perceived only the sad shadow
+at La Trappe&mdash;a sweet, healthy, exquisite woman,
+moulded, fashioned, colored by a greater Master than
+the Spanish painter dreaming of perfection centuries
+ago.</p>
+<p>In the sun a fragrance grew&mdash;the subtle incense
+from her gown&mdash;perhaps from her hair.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Autumn is already gone; we are close to winter,&#8221;
+she said, under her breath. &#8220;See, there is nothing
+left&mdash;scarcely a blossom&mdash;a rose or two; but the first
+frost will scatter the petals. Look at the pinks; look
+at the dead leaves. Ah, tristesse, tristesse! The life
+of summer is too short; the life of flowers is too short;
+so are our lives, Monsieur Scarlett. Do you believe it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes&mdash;now.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She was very still for a while, her head bent toward
+the sea. Then, without turning: &#8220;Have you not always
+believed it?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, madame.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_324' name='page_324'></a>324</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Then ... why do you believe it ... now?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Because, since we have become friends, life seems
+pitiably short for such a friendship.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She smiled without moving.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is a ... very beautiful ... compliment, monsieur.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It owes its beauty to its truth, madame.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And that reply is illogical,&#8221; she said, turning to
+look at me with brilliant eyes and a gay smile which
+emphasized the sensitive mouth&#8217;s faint droop. &#8220;Illogical,
+because truth is not always beautiful. As
+example: you were very near to death yesterday.
+That is the truth, but it is not beautiful at all.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ah, madame, it is you who are illogical,&#8221; I said,
+laughing.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I?&#8221; she cried. &#8220;Prove it!&#8221;</p>
+<p>But I would not, spite of her challenge and bright
+mockery.</p>
+<p>In that flash all of our comradeship returned, bringing
+with it something new, which I dared not think was
+intimacy.</p>
+<p>Yet constraint fell away like a curtain between us,
+and though she dominated, and I was afraid lest I
+overstep limits which I myself had set, the charm of
+her careless confidence, her pretty, undissembled caprices,
+her pleasure in a delicately intimate badinage,
+gave me something of a self-reliance, a freedom that I
+had not known in a woman&#8217;s presence for many years.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We brought you here because we thought it was
+good for you,&#8221; she said, reverting maliciously to the
+theme that had at first embarrassed her. &#8220;We were
+perfectly certain that you have always been unfit to
+take care of yourself. Now we have the proofs.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mademoiselle Elven said that you harbored us only
+because you were afraid of those bandits who have
+arrived in Paradise,&#8221; I observed.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_325' name='page_325'></a>325</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Afraid!&#8221; she said, scornfully. &#8220;Oh, you are making
+fun of me now. Indeed, when Mr. Buckhurst
+came last night I had my men conduct him to the
+outer gate!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did he come last night?&#8221; I asked, troubled.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221; She shrugged her pretty shoulders.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Alone?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That unspeakable creature, Mornac, was with him.
+I had no idea he was here; had you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>I was silent. Did Mornac mean trouble for me?
+Yet how could he, shorn now of all authority?</p>
+<p>The thought seemed to occur to her, too, and she
+looked up quickly, asking if I had anything to fear.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Only for you,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;For me? Why? I am not afraid of such men.
+I have servants on whom I can call to disembarrass
+me of such people.&#8221; She hesitated; the memory of
+her deception, of what she had suffered at Buckhurst&#8217;s
+hands, brought a glint of anger into her beautiful eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;My innocence shames me,&#8221; she said. &#8220;I merited
+what I received in such company. It was you who
+saved me from myself.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A noble mind thinks nobly,&#8221; I said. &#8220;Theirs is
+the shame, not yours, that you could not understand
+treachery&mdash;that you never can understand it. As for
+me, I was an accident, which warned you in time that
+all the world was not as good and true as you desired
+to believe it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She sat looking at me curiously. &#8220;I wonder,&#8221; she
+said, &#8220;why it is that you do not know your own
+value?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;My value&mdash;to whom?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;To ... everybody&mdash;to the world&mdash;to people.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Am I of any value to you, madame?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The pulsing moments passed and she did not answer,
+and I bit my lip and waited. At last she said, coolly:
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_326' name='page_326'></a>326</span>
+&#8220;A man must appraise himself. If he chooses, he is
+valuable. But values are comparative, and depend
+on individual taste.... Yes, you are of some value
+to me,... or I should not be here with you,... or I
+should not find it my pleasure to be here&mdash;or I should
+not trust you, come to you with my petty troubles, ask
+your experience to help me, perhaps protect me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She bent her head with adorable diffidence. &#8220;Monsieur
+Scarlett, I have never before had a friend who
+thought first of me and last of himself.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I leaned on the back of the bench, resting my bandaged
+forehead on my hand.</p>
+<p>She looked up after a moment, and her face grew
+serious.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are you suffering?&#8221; she asked. &#8220;Your face is
+white as my sleeve.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I feel curiously tired,&#8221; I said, smiling.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then you must have some tea, and I will brew it
+myself. You shall not object! No&mdash;it is useless, because
+I am determined. And you shall lie down in
+the little tea-room, where I found you that day when
+you first came to Tr&eacute;court.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I shall be very happy to do anything&mdash;if you are
+there.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Even drink tea when you abhor it? Then I certainly
+ought to reward you with my presence at the
+rite.... Are you dizzy? You are terribly pale.... Would
+you lean on my arm?&#8221;</p>
+<p>I was not dizzy, but I did so; and if such deceit is
+not pardonable, there is no justice in this world or in
+the next.</p>
+<p>The tea was hot and harmless; I lay thinking while
+she sat in the sunny window-corner, nibbling biscuit
+and marmalade, and watching me gravely.</p>
+<p>&#8220;My appetite is dreadful in these days,&#8221; she said;
+&#8220;age increases it; I have just had my chocolate, yet
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_327' name='page_327'></a>327</span>
+here am I, eating like a school-girl.... I have a strange
+idea that I am exceedingly young,... that I am just
+beginning to live. That tired, thin, shabby girl you
+saw at La Trappe was certainly not I.... And long
+before that, before I knew you, there was another impersonal,
+half&mdash;awakened creature, who watched the
+world surging and receding around her, who grew
+tired even of violets and bonbons, tired of the companionship
+of the indifferent, hurt by the intimacy of the
+unfriendly; and I cannot believe that she was I.... Can
+you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I can believe it; I once saw you then,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>She looked up quickly. &#8220;Where?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;In Paris.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;When?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The day that they received the news from Mexico.
+You sat in your carriage before the gates of the war
+office.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I remember,&#8221; she said, staring at me. Then a
+slight shudder passed over her.</p>
+<p>Presently she said: &#8220;Did you recognize me afterward
+at La Trappe?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,... you had grown more beautiful.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She colored and bent her head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You remembered me all that time?... But why
+didn&#8217;t you&mdash;didn&#8217;t you&mdash;&#8221; She laughed nervously.
+&#8220;Why didn&#8217;t we know each other in those years?
+Truly, Monsieur Scarlett, I needed a friend then, if
+ever;... a friend who thought first of me and last of
+himself.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I did not answer.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Fancy,&#8221; she continued, &#8220;your passing me so long
+ago,... and I totally unconscious, sitting there in my
+carriage,... never dreaming of this friendship which
+I ... care for so much!... Do you remember at La
+Trappe what I told you, there on the staircase?&mdash;how
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_328' name='page_328'></a>328</span>
+sometimes the impulse used to come to me when I saw
+a kindly face in the street to cry out, &#8216;Be friends with
+me!&#8217; Do you remember?... It is strange that I did
+not feel that impulse when you passed me that day in
+Paris&mdash;feel it even though I did not see you&mdash;for I
+sorely needed kindness then, kindness and wisdom;
+and both passed by, at my elbow,... and I did not
+know.&#8221; She bent her head, smiling with an effort.
+&#8220;You should have thrown yourself astride the horse
+and galloped away with me.... They did those things
+once, Monsieur Scarlett&mdash;on this very spot, too, in the
+days of the Saxon pirates.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The whirring monotone of the spinning-wheel suddenly
+filled the house; Sylvia was singing at her wheel:</p>
+<table style='margin: auto' summary=''><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;Woe&nbsp;to&nbsp;the&nbsp;maids&nbsp;of&nbsp;Paradise!<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 6em;">Yvonne!</span><br />
+Twice&nbsp;have&nbsp;the&nbsp;Saxons&nbsp;landed;&nbsp;twice!<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 6em;">Yvonne!</span><br />
+Yet&nbsp;shall&nbsp;Paradise&nbsp;see&nbsp;them&nbsp;thrice,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 6em;">Yvonne!&nbsp;Yvonne!&nbsp;Marivonik!&#8221;</span></p>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>&#8220;The prophecy of that Breton spinning song is
+being fulfilled,&#8221; I said. &#8220;For the third time we Saxons
+have come to Paradise, you see.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But this time our Saxons are not very formidable,&#8221;
+she said, raising her beautiful gray eyes; &#8220;and the
+gwerz says, &#8216;Woe to the maids of Paradise!&#8217; Do you
+intend to bring woe upon us maids of Paradise&mdash;do you
+come to carry us off, monsieur?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you will go with&mdash;me,&#8221; I said, smiling.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All of us?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Only one, madame.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She started to speak, then her eyes fell. She laughed
+uncertainly. &#8220;Which one among us, if you please&mdash;mizilour
+skler ha brillant deuz ar fidelite?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Met na varwin Ket Kontant, ma na varwan fidel,&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_329' name='page_329'></a>329</span>
+I said, slowly, as the words of the song came back to
+me. &#8220;I shall choose only the fairest and loveliest,
+madame. You know it is always that way in the story.&#8221;
+My voice was not perfectly steady, nor was hers when
+she smiled and wished me happiness and a long life
+with the maid of Paradise I had chosen, even though I
+took her by force.</p>
+<p>Then constraint crept in between us, and I was grimly
+weighing the friendship this woman had given me&mdash;weighing
+it in the balance against a single hope.</p>
+<p>Once she looked across at me with questioning eyes
+in which I thought I read dawning disappointment.
+It almost terrified me.... I could not lose her confidence,... I
+could not, and go through life without
+it.... But I could live a hopeless life to its end with
+that confidence.... And I must do so,... and be
+content.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I suppose,&#8221; said I, thinking aloud, &#8220;that I had
+better go to England.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;When?&#8221; she asked, without raising her head.</p>
+<p>&#8220;In a day or two. I can find employment there, I
+think.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is it necessary that you find employment ... so
+soon?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; I said, with a meaningless laugh, &#8220;I fear it
+is.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What will you do?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, the army&mdash;horses&mdash;something of that kind.
+Riding-master, perhaps&mdash;perhaps Scotland Yard. I
+may not be able to pick and choose.... If I ever save
+enough money for the voyage, perhaps you would let
+me come, once in a long while, to pay my respects,
+madame?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,... come, if you wish.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She said no more, nor did I. Presently Sylvia appeared
+with a peasant woman, and the young countess
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_330' name='page_330'></a>330</span>
+went away, followed by the housekeeper with her keys
+at her girdle.</p>
+<p>I rose and walked to the window; then, nerveless
+and depressed, I went out into the garden again to
+smoke a cigar.</p>
+<p>The cat had disappeared; I traversed the garden,
+passed through the side wicket, and found myself on
+the cliffs. Almost immediately I was aware of a young
+girl, a child, seated on the rocks, her chin propped on
+her hands, the sea-wind blowing her curly elf-locks
+across her cheeks and eyes. A bundle tied in a handkerchief
+lay beside her; a cat dozed in her lap, its sleek
+fur stirring in the wind.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Jacqueline!&#8221; I said, gently.</p>
+<p>She raised her head; the movement awakened the
+cat, who stood up in her lap, stretching and yawning
+vigorously.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I thought you were to sail from Lorient to-day?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The cat stopped purring from her knees; the child
+rose, pushing back her hair from her eyes with both
+hands.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where is Speed?&#8221; she asked, drowsily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did you want to see him, Jacqueline?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is why I returned.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;To see Speed?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Parbleu.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And you are going to let the others sail without
+you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And give up the circus forever, Jacqueline?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Y-es.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Just because you want to see Speed?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Only for that.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She stood rubbing her eyes with her small fists, as
+though just awakened.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oui,&#8221; she said, without emotion, &#8220;c&#8217;est comme &ccedil;a,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_331' name='page_331'></a>331</span>
+m&#8217;sieu. Where the heart is, happiness lies. I left
+the others at the city gate; I said, &#8216;Voyons, let us be
+reasonable, gentlemen. I am happy in your circus;
+I am happy with Speed; I can be contented without
+your circus, but I cannot be contented without Speed.
+Voil&agrave;!&#8217;... and then I went.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You walked back all the way from Lorient?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Bien s&ucirc;r! I have no carriage&mdash;I, Jacqueline.&#8221;
+She stretched her slim figure, raised her arms slowly,
+and yawned. &#8220;Pardon,&#8221; she murmured, &#8220;I have
+slept in the gorse&mdash;badly.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Come into the garden,&#8221; I said; &#8220;we can talk while
+you rest.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She thanked me tranquilly, picked up her bundle,
+and followed me with a slight limp. The cat, tail up,
+came behind.</p>
+<p>The young countess was standing at the window
+as we approached in solemn single file along the path,
+and when she caught sight of us she opened the door
+and stepped out on the tiny porch.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why, this is our little Jacqueline,&#8221; she said, quickly.
+&#8220;They have taken your father for the conscription,
+have they not, my child? And now you are homeless!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think so, madame.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then you will stay with me until he returns, won&#8217;t
+you, little one?&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was a moment&#8217;s pause; Jacqueline made a
+grave gesture. &#8220;This is my cat, madame&mdash;Ange
+Pitou.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The countess stared at the cat, then broke out into
+the prettiest peal of laughter. &#8220;Of course you must
+bring your cat! My invitation is also for Ange Pitou,
+you understand.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then we thank you, and permit ourselves to accept,
+madame,&#8221; said Jacqueline. &#8220;We are very glad
+because we are quite hungry, and we have thorns
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_332' name='page_332'></a>332</span>
+from the gorse in our feet&mdash;&#8221; She broke off with
+a joyous little cry: &#8220;There is Speed!&#8221; And Speed,
+entering the garden hurriedly, stopped short in his
+tracks.</p>
+<p>The child ran to him and threw both arms around
+his neck. &#8220;Oh, Speed! Speed!&#8221; she stammered, over
+and over again. &#8220;I was too lonely; I will do what
+you wish; I will be instructed in the graces of education&mdash;truly
+I will. I am glad to come back&mdash;and
+I am so tired, Speed. I will never go away from you
+again.... Oh, Speed, I am contented!... Do you
+love me?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dearly, little sweetheart,&#8221; he said, huskily, trying
+to steady his voice. &#8220;There! Madame the countess
+is waiting. All will be well now.&#8221; He turned, smiling,
+toward the young countess, and lifted his hat,
+then stepped back and fixed me with a blank look of
+dismay, which said perfectly plainly that he had unpleasant
+news to communicate. The countess, I think,
+saw that look, too, for she gave me an almost imperceptible
+nod and took Jacqueline&#8217;s hand in hers.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If there are thorns in your feet we must find them,&#8221;
+she said, sweetly. &#8220;Will you come, Jacqueline?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, madame,&#8221; said the child, with an adoring
+smile at Speed, who bent and kissed her upturned face
+as she passed.</p>
+<p>They went into the house, the countess holding
+Jacqueline&#8217;s thorn-scratched hand, the cat following,
+perfectly self-possessed, to the porch, where she halted
+and sat down, surveying the landscape with dignified
+indifference.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; said I, turning to Speed, &#8220;what new deviltry
+is going on in Paradise now?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Preparations for train-wrecking, I should say,&#8221; he
+replied, bluntly. &#8220;They are tinkering with the trestle.
+Buckhurst&#8217;s ragamuffins have just seized the railroad
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_333' name='page_333'></a>333</span>
+station at Rose-Sainte-Anne, where the main line
+crosses, you know, near the ravine at Lammerin. I
+was sure there was something extraordinary going to
+happen, so I went down to the river, hailed Jeanne
+Rolland, the passeuse, and had her ferry me over to
+Bois-Gilbert. Then I made for the telegraph, gave
+the operator ten francs to let me work the keys, and
+called up the arsenal at Lorient. But it was no use,
+Scarlett, the governor of Lorient can&#8217;t spare a soldier&mdash;not
+a single gendarme. It seems that Uhlans have
+been signalled north of Quimper, and Lorient is frantic,
+and the garrison is preparing to stand siege.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You mean,&#8221; I said, indignantly, &#8220;that they&#8217;re not
+going to try to catch Buckhurst and Mornac?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s what I mean; they&#8217;re scared as rabbits
+over these rumors of Uhlans in the west and north.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; said I, disgusted, &#8220;it appears to me that
+Buckhurst is going to get off scot-free this time&mdash;and
+Mornac, too! Did you know that Mornac was here?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Know it? I saw him an hour ago, marshalling a
+new company of malcontents in the square&mdash;a bad lot,
+Scarlett&mdash;deserters from Chanzy&#8217;s army, from Bourbaki,
+from Garibaldi&mdash;a hundred or more line soldiers,
+dragoons without horses, francs-tireurs, Garibaldians,
+even a Turco, from Heaven knows where&mdash;bad soldiers
+who disgrace France&mdash;marauders, cowardly, skulking
+mobiles&mdash;a sweet lot, Scarlett, to be let loose in Madame
+de Vassart&#8217;s vicinity.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think so, too,&#8221; I said, seriously.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And I earnestly agree with you,&#8221; muttered Speed.
+&#8220;That&#8217;s all <i>I</i> have to report, except that your friend,
+Robert the Lizard, is out yonder flat on his belly under
+a gorse-bush, and he wants to see you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The Lizard!&#8221; I exclaimed. &#8220;Come on, Speed.
+Where is he?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yonder, clothed in somebody&#8217;s line uniform. He&#8217;s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_334' name='page_334'></a>334</span>
+one of them. Scarlett, do you trust him? He has a
+rifle.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, yes,&#8221; I said, impatiently. &#8220;Come on, man!
+It&#8217;s all right; the fellow is watching Buckhurst for me.&#8221;
+And I gave Speed a nervous push toward the moors.
+We started, Speed ostentatiously placing his revolver
+in his side-pocket so that he could shoot through his
+coat if necessary. I walked beside him, closely scanning
+the stretch of open moor for a sign of life, knowing
+all the while that it is easier to catch moon-beams in a
+net than to find a poacher in the bracken. But Speed
+had marked him down as he might mark a squatting
+quail, and suddenly we flushed him, rifle clapped to
+his shoulder.</p>
+<p>&#8220;None of that, my friend,&#8221; growled Speed; but the
+poacher at sight of me had already lowered the weapon.</p>
+<p>I greeted him frankly, offering my hand; he took it,
+then his hard fist fell away and he touched his cap.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I have done what you wanted,&#8221; he said, sullenly.
+&#8220;I have the company&#8217;s rolls&mdash;here they are.&#8221; He
+dragged from his baggy trousers pockets a mass of
+filthy papers, closely covered with smeared writing.
+&#8220;Here is the money, too,&#8221; he said, fishing in the other
+pocket; and, to my astonishment, he produced a flattened,
+soiled mass of bank-notes. &#8220;Count it,&#8221; he
+added, calmly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What money is that?&#8221; I asked, taking it reluctantly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Didn&#8217;t you warn me to get that box&mdash;the steel box
+that Tric-Trac sat down on when he saw me?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is that money from the box?&#8221; I exclaimed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, m&#8217;sieu. I could not bring the box, and there
+had been enough blood shed over it already. Besides,
+when Buckhurst broke it open there was only a bit of
+iron for the scrap-heap left.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I touched Speed&#8217;s arm to call his attention; the poacher
+shrugged his shoulders and continued: &#8220;Tric-Trac
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_335' name='page_335'></a>335</span>
+made no ceremony with me; he told me that he and
+Buckhurst had settled this Dr. Delmont, and the other&mdash;the
+professor&mdash;Tavernier.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Murdered them?&#8221; muttered Speed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Dame!&mdash;the coup du P&egrave;re Fran&ccedil;ois is murder, I
+suppose.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Speed turned to me. &#8220;That&#8217;s the argot for strangling,&#8221;
+he said, grimly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Go on,&#8221; I motioned to the poacher. &#8220;How did
+you get the money?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, pour &ccedil;a&mdash;in my turn I turned sonneur,&#8221; he
+replied, with a savage smile.</p>
+<p>A <i>sonneur</i>, in thieves&#8217; slang, is a creature of the
+footpad type who, tripping his victim flat, seizes him
+by the shoulders and beats his head against the pavement
+until he renders him unconscious&mdash;if he doesn&#8217;t
+kill him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It was pay-day,&#8221; continued the Lizard. &#8220;Buckhurst
+opened the box and I heard him&mdash;he hammered it
+open with a cold chisel. I was standing guard on the
+forest&#8217;s edge; I crept back, hearing the hammering
+and the little bell ringing the Angelus of Tric-Trac.
+It was close to dusk; by the time he got into the box
+it was dark in the woods, and it was easy to jump on
+his back and strike&mdash;not very hard, m&#8217;sieu&mdash;but, I
+tell you, Buckhurst lay for two days with eyes like a
+sick owl&#8217;s! He knew one of his own men had done it.
+He never said a word, but I know he thinks it was
+Tric-Trac.... And when he is ready&mdash;bon soir, Tric-Trac!&#8221;</p>
+<p>He drew his right hand across his corded throat with
+a horridly suggestive motion. Speed watched him
+narrowly.</p>
+<p>I asked the poacher why Buckhurst had come to
+Paradise, and why his banditti had seized the railroad
+at Rose-Sainte-Anne.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_336' name='page_336'></a>336</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Ah,&#8221; cried the Lizard, with a ferocious leer, &#8220;that
+is the kernel under the limpet&#8217;s tent! And I have
+uncovered it&mdash;I, Robert Garenne, bon sang de J&eacute;su!&#8221;</p>
+<p>He stretched out his powerful arm toward the sea.
+&#8220;Where is that cruiser, m&#8217;sieu? Gone? Yes, but
+who sent her off? Buckhurst, with his new signal-book!
+Where? In chase of a sea-swallow, or a frigate
+(bird). Who knows? Listen, messieurs! We are to
+wreck the train for Brest to-night. Do you comprehend?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where?&#8221; I asked, quietly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Just where the trestle at Lammerin crosses the
+ravine below the house of Josephine Tanguy.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Speed looked around at me. &#8220;It&#8217;s the treasure-train
+from Lorient. They&#8217;re probably sending the crown
+diamonds back to Brest in view of the Uhlans being
+seen near Quimper.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;On a false order?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I believe so. I believe that Buckhurst sent the
+cruiser to Brest, and now he&#8217;s started the treasure-trains
+back to Brest in a panic.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;That is the truth,&#8221; said the Lizard; &#8220;Tric-Trac
+told me. They have the code-book of Mornac.&#8221; His
+eyes began to light up with that terrible anger as the
+name of his blood enemy fell from his lips; his nose
+twitched; his upper lip wrinkled into a snarl.</p>
+<p>I thought quietly for a moment, then asked the
+poacher whether there was a guard at the semaphore
+of Saint-Yssel.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, the soldier Rolland, who says he understands
+the telegraph&mdash;a sot from Morlaix.&#8221; He hesitated
+and looked across the open moor toward Paradise.
+&#8220;I must go,&#8221; he muttered; &#8220;I am on guard yonder.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I offered him my hand again; he took it, looking me
+sincerely in the eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Let your private wrongs wait a little longer,&#8221; I
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_337' name='page_337'></a>337</span>
+said. &#8220;I think we can catch Buckhurst and Mornac
+alive. Do you promise?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Y-es,&#8221; he replied.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Strike, then, like a Breton!&#8221;</p>
+<p>We struck palms heavily. Then he turned to Speed
+and motioned him to retire.</p>
+<p>Speed walked slowly toward a half-buried bowlder
+and sat down out of ear-shot.</p>
+<p>&#8220;For your sake,&#8221; said the poacher, clutching my
+hand in a tightening grip&mdash;&#8220;for your sake I have let
+Mornac go&mdash;let him pass me at arm&#8217;s-length, and did
+not strike. You have dealt openly by me&mdash;and justly.
+No man can say I betrayed friendship. But I swear
+to you that if you miss him this time, I shall not miss&mdash;I,
+Robert the Lizard!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You mean to kill Mornac?&#8221; I asked.</p>
+<p>His eyes blazed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ami,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I once spoke of &#8216;<i>a little red deer</i>,&#8217;
+and you half understood me, for you are wise in strange
+ways, as I am.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I remember,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>His strong fingers closed tighter on my hand.
+&#8220;Woman&mdash;or doe&mdash;it&#8217;s all one now; and I am out of
+prison&mdash;the prison <i>he</i> sent me to! Do you understand
+that he wronged me&mdash;me, the soldier Garenne, in garrison
+at Vincennes; he, the officer, the aristocrat?&#8221;</p>
+<p>He choked, crushing my hand in a spasmodic grip.
+&#8220;Ami, the little red deer was beautiful&mdash;to me. He
+took her&mdash;the doe&mdash;a silly maid of Paradise&mdash;and I
+was in irons, m&#8217;sieu, for three years.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He glared at vacancy, tears falling from his staring
+eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Your wife?&#8221; I asked, quietly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, ami.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He dropped my numbed fingers and rubbed his eyes
+with the back of his big hand.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_338' name='page_338'></a>338</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Then Jacqueline is not your little daughter?&#8221; I
+asked, gravely.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hers&mdash;not mine. That has been the most terrible
+of all for me&mdash;since she died&mdash;died so young, too, m&#8217;sieu&mdash;and
+all alone&mdash;in Paris. If he had not done that&mdash;if
+he had been kind to her. And she was only a child,
+ami, yet he left her.&#8221;</p>
+<p>All the ferocity in his eyes was gone; he raised a
+vacant, grief-lined visage to meet mine, and stood
+stupidly, heavy hands hanging.</p>
+<p>Then, shoulders sloping, he shambled off into the
+thicket, trailing his battered rifle.</p>
+<p>When he was very far away I motioned to Speed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think,&#8221; said I, &#8220;that we had better try to do something
+at the semaphore if we are going to stop that
+train in time.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_339' name='page_339'></a>339</span>
+<a name='XX_THE_SEMAPHORE' id='XX_THE_SEMAPHORE'></a>
+<h2>XX</h2>
+<h3>THE SEMAPHORE</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The telegraph station at the semaphore was a
+little, square, stone hut, roofed with slate, perched
+high on the cliffs. A sun-scorched, wooden signal-tower
+rose in front of it; behind it a line of telegraph
+poles stretched away into perspective across the moors.
+Beyond the horizon somewhere lay the war-port of
+Lorient, with its arsenal, armed redoubts, and heavy
+bastions; beyond that was war.</p>
+<p>While we plodded on, hip deep, through gorse and
+thorn and heath, we cautiously watched a spot of red
+moving to and fro in front of the station; and as we
+drew nearer we could see the sentry very distinctly,
+rifle slung muzzle down, slouching his beat in the
+sunshine.</p>
+<p>He was a slovenly specimen, doubtless a deserter
+from one of the three provincial armies now forming
+for the hopeless dash at Belfort and the German eastern
+communications.</p>
+<p>When Speed and I emerged from the golden gorse
+into plain view the sentinel stopped in his tracks,
+shoved his big, red hands into his trousers pockets,
+and regarded us sulkily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What are you going to do with this gentleman?&#8221;
+whispered Speed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Reason with him, first,&#8221; I said; &#8220;a louis is worth
+a dozen kicks.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_340' name='page_340'></a>340</span></p>
+<p>The soldier left his post as we started toward him,
+and advanced, blinking in the strong sunshine, meeting
+us half-way.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now, bourgeois,&#8221; he said, shaking his unkempt
+head, &#8220;this won&#8217;t do, you know. Orders are to keep
+off. And,&#8221; he added, in a bantering tone, &#8220;I&#8217;m here
+to enforce them. Allons! En route, mes amis!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are you the soldier Rolland?&#8221; I asked.</p>
+<p>He admitted that he was with prompt profanity,
+adding that if we didn&#8217;t like his name we had only to
+tell him so and he would arrange the matter.</p>
+<p>I told him that we approved not only his name but
+his personal appearance; indeed, so great was our admiration
+for him that we had come clear across the
+Saint-Yssel moor expressly to pay our compliments
+to him in the shape of a hundred-franc note. I drew
+it from the soiled roll the Lizard had intrusted to me,
+and displayed it for the sentinel&#8217;s inspection.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is that for me?&#8221; he demanded, unconvinced, plainly
+suspicious of being ridiculed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Under certain conditions,&#8221; I said, &#8220;these five louis
+are for you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The soldier winked. &#8220;I know what you want; you
+want to go in yonder and use the telegraph. What
+the devil,&#8221; he burst out, &#8220;do all you bourgeois want
+with that telegraph in there?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Has anybody else asked to use it?&#8221; I inquired,
+disturbed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Anybody else?&#8221; he mimicked. &#8220;Well, I think so;
+there&#8217;s somebody in there now&mdash;here, give your hundred
+francs or I tell you nothing, you understand!&#8221;</p>
+<p>I handed him the soiled note. He scanned it with
+the inborn distrust of the true malefactor, turned it
+over and over, and finally, pronouncing it &#8220;en r&egrave;gle,&#8221;
+shoved it cheerfully into the lining of his red forage
+cap.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_341' name='page_341'></a>341</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;A hundred more if you answer my questions truthfully,&#8221;
+I said, amiably.</p>
+<p>&#8220;&#8217;Cr&eacute; cochon!&#8221; he blurted out; &#8220;fire at will, comrade!
+I&#8217;ll sell you the whole cursed semaphore for a
+hundred more! What can I do for you, captain?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who is in that hut?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A lady&mdash;she comes often&mdash;she gives ten francs
+each time. Zut!&mdash;what is ten francs when a gentleman
+gives a hundred! She pays me for my complaisance&mdash;bon!
+Place aux dames! You pay me better&mdash;bon!
+I&#8217;m yours, gentlemen. War is war, but money
+pulls the trigger!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The miserable creature cocked his forage-cap with a
+toothless smirk and twisted his scant mustache.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who is this lady who pays you ten francs?&#8221; I asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I do not know her name&mdash;but,&#8221; he added, with an
+offensive leer, &#8220;she&#8217;s worth looking over by gentlemen
+like you. Do you want to see her? She&#8217;s in there
+click-clicking away on the key with her pretty little
+fingers&mdash;bon sang! A morsel for a king, gentlemen.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wait here,&#8221; I said, disgusted, and walked toward
+the stone station. The treacherous cur came running
+after me. &#8220;There&#8217;s a side door,&#8221; he whispered; &#8220;step
+in there behind the partition and take a look at her.
+She&#8217;ll be done directly: she never stays more than
+fifteen minutes. Then you can use the telegraph at
+your pleasure, captain.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The side door was partly open; I stepped in noiselessly
+and found myself in a small, dusky closet, partitioned
+from the telegraph office. Immediately the
+rapid clicking of the Morse instrument came to my
+ears, and mechanically I read the message by the
+sound as it rattled on under the fingers of an expert:</p>
+<p>&#8220;&mdash;Must have already found out that the signals
+were not authorized by the government. Before the
+<i>Fer-de-Lance</i> returns to her station the German cruiser
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_342' name='page_342'></a>342</span>
+ought to intercept her off Groix. Did you arrange for
+this?&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was a moment&#8217;s silence, then back came rattling
+the reply in the Morse code, but in German:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, all is arranged. The <i>Augusta</i> took a French
+merchant vessel off Pont Aven yesterday. The <i>Augusta</i>
+ought to pass Groix this evening. You are to
+burn three white lights from Point Paradise if a landing-party
+is needed. It rests with you entirely.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Another silence, then the operator in the next room
+began:</p>
+<p>&#8220;You say that Lorient is alarmed by rumors of Uhlans,
+and therefore sends the treasure-train back to Brest.
+The train, you assure me, carries the diamonds of the
+crown, bar-silver, gold, the Venus of Milo, and ten battle-flags
+from the Invalides. Am I correct?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The insurgents here, under an individual in our pay,
+one John Buckhurst, are preparing to wreck the train
+at the Lammerin trestle.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If the <i>Augusta</i> can reach Point Paradise to-night,
+a landing-party could easily scatter these insurgents,
+seize the treasures, and re-embark in safety.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There is, you declare, nothing to fear from Lorient;
+the only thing, then, to be dreaded is the appearance
+of the <i>Fer-de-Lance</i> off Groix. She is not now in sight;
+I will notify you if she appears. If she does not come
+I will burn three white lights in triangle on Paradise
+headland.&#8221;</p>
+<p>A short pause, then:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are there any Prussian cavalry near enough to
+help us?&#8221;</p>
+<p>And the answer:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Prussian dragoons are scouting toward Bannalec.
+I will send a messenger to them if I can. This is all.
+Be careful. Good-bye.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_343' name='page_343'></a>343</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Good-bye,&#8221; clicked the instrument in the next
+room. There was a rustle of skirts, a tap of small
+shoes on the stone floor. I leaned forward and looked
+through the little partition window; Sylvia Elven stood
+by the table, quietly drawing on her gloves. Her face
+was flushed and thoughtful.</p>
+<p>Slowly she walked toward the door, hesitated, turned,
+hurried back to the instrument, and set the switch.
+Then, without seating herself, she leaned over and gave
+the station call, three <i>S's</i>.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I forgot to say that the two Yankee officers of military
+police, Scarlett and Speed, are a harmless pair.
+You have nothing to fear from them. Good-bye.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And the reply:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Watch them all the same. Be careful, madame,
+they are Yankees. Good-bye.&#8221;</p>
+<p>When she had gone, closing the outer door behind
+her, I sprang to the key, switched on, rattled out the
+three S&#8217;s and got my man, probably before he had
+taken three steps from his table.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I forgot to say,&#8221; I telegraphed, using a light, rapid
+touch to imitate Sylvia&#8217;s&mdash;&#8220;I forgot to say that, in
+case the treasure-train is held back to-night, the Augusta
+must run for the English Channel.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s that?&#8221; came back the jerky reply.</p>
+<p>I repeated.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Donnerwetter!&#8221; rattled the wires. &#8220;The entire
+French iron-clad fleet is looking for her.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And I hope they catch her,&#8221; I telegraphed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are you crazy?&#8221; came the frantic reply. &#8220;Who
+are you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A Yankee, idiot!&#8221; I replied. &#8220;Run for your life,
+you hopeless ass!&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was, of course, no reply, though I sent a few
+jocular remarks flying after what must have been the
+most horrified German spy south of Metz.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_344' name='page_344'></a>344</span></p>
+<p>Then, at a venture, I set the switch on the arsenal
+line, got a quick reply, and succeeded in alarming
+them sufficiently, I think, for in a few moments I was
+telegraphing directly to the governor of Lorient, and
+the wires grew hot with an interchange of observations,
+which resulted in my running to the locker,
+tumbling out all the signal bunting, cones, and balls,
+sorting five flags, two red cones, and a ball, and hastening
+out to the semaphore.</p>
+<p>Speed and the soldier Rolland saw me set the cones,
+hoist away, break out the flags on the halyards, and
+finally drop the white arm of the semaphore.</p>
+<p>I had set the signal for the <i>Fer-de-Lance</i> to land in
+force and wipe Buckhurst and his grotesque crew from
+the face of the earth.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Rolland,&#8221; I said, &#8220;here is another hundred francs.
+Watch that halyard and guard it. To-night you will
+string seven of those little lamps on this other halyard,
+light them, hoist them, and then go up that tower and
+light the three red lamps on the left.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;&#8217;Tendu,&#8221; he said, promptly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you do it I will give you two hundred francs
+to-morrow. Is it a bargain?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The soldier broke out into a torrent of promises which
+I cut short.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That lady will never come here again, I think. If
+she does, she must not touch those halyards. Do
+you hear? If she offers you money, remember I will
+double it. But, Rolland, if you lie to <i>me</i> I will have
+you killed as the Bretons kill pigs; you understand
+how that is done?&#8221;</p>
+<p>He said that he understood, and followed us, fawning
+and whining his cowardly promises of fidelity
+until we ordered the wretch back to the post which he
+had already twice betrayed, and would certainly betray
+again if the opportunity offered.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_345' name='page_345'></a>345</span></p>
+<p>Walking fast over the springy heath, I told Speed
+briefly what I had done&mdash;that the treasure-train would
+not now leave Lorient, that as soon as the <i>Fer-de-Lance</i>
+came in sight of the semaphore Buckhurst&#8217;s
+game must come to an end.</p>
+<p>Far ahead of us we saw the flutter of a light dress on
+the moor; Sylvia Elven, the spy, was going home;
+and from the distance, across the yellow-flowered
+gorse, her gay song floated back to us:</p>
+<table style='margin: auto' summary=''><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;Those&nbsp;who&nbsp;die&nbsp;for&nbsp;a&nbsp;maid<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 10em;">Are&nbsp;paid;</span><br />
+Those&nbsp;who&nbsp;die&nbsp;for&nbsp;a&nbsp;creed<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 10em;">God-speed;</span><br />
+Those&nbsp;who&nbsp;die&nbsp;for&nbsp;their&nbsp;own&nbsp;dear&nbsp;land<br />
+Shall&nbsp;stand&nbsp;forever&nbsp;on&nbsp;God&#8217;s&nbsp;right&nbsp;hand!&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>&#8220;A spy!&#8221; muttered Speed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think,&#8221; said I, &#8220;that she had better leave Paradise
+at once. Oh, the little fool, to risk all for a caprice&mdash;for
+a word to the poor fellow she ruined! Vanity
+does it every time, Speed.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t understand what you mean,&#8221; he said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, and I can&#8217;t explain,&#8221; I replied, thinking of
+Kelly Eyre. &#8220;But Sylvia Elven is running a fearful
+risk here. Mornac knows her record. Buckhurst
+would betray her in a moment if he thought it might
+save his own skin. She ought to leave before the
+<i>Fer-de-Lance</i> sights the semaphore and reads the signal
+to land in force.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then you&#8217;ll have to tell her,&#8221; he said, gloomily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I suppose so,&#8221; I replied, not at all pleased. For
+the prospect of humiliating her, of proving to this
+woman that I was not as stupid as she believed me, gave
+me no pleasure. Rather was I sorry for her, sorry
+for the truly pitiable condition in which she must now
+find herself.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_346' name='page_346'></a>346</span></p>
+<p>As we reached the gates of Tr&eacute;court, dusty and
+tired from our moorland tramp, I turned and looked
+back. My signal was still set; the white arm of
+the semaphore glistened like silver against a brilliant
+sky of sapphire. Seaward I could see no sign of the
+<i>Fer-de-Lance</i>.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The guns I heard at sea must have been fired from
+the German cruiser <i>Augusta</i>,&#8221; I suggested to Speed.
+&#8220;She&#8217;s been hovering off the coast, catching French
+merchant craft. I wish to goodness the <i>Fer-de-Lance</i>
+would come in and give her a drubbing.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, rubbish!&#8221; he said. &#8220;What the deuce do we
+care?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s human to take sides in this war, isn&#8217;t it?&#8221; I
+insisted.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Considering the fashion in which France has treated
+us individually, it seems to me that we may as well
+take the German side,&#8221; he said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are you going to?&#8221; I asked.</p>
+<p>He hesitated. &#8220;Oh, hang it all, no! There&#8217;s something
+about France that holds us poor devils&mdash;I don&#8217;t
+know what. Barring England, she&#8217;s the only human
+nation in the whole snarling pack. Here&#8217;s to her&mdash;damn
+her impudence! If she wants me she can have
+me&mdash;empire, kingdom, or republic. Vive anything&mdash;as
+long as it&#8217;s French!&#8221;</p>
+<p>I was laughing when we entered the court; Jacqueline,
+her big, furry cat in her arms, came to the door
+and greeted Speed with:</p>
+<p>&#8220;You have been away a very long time, and the
+thorns are all out of my arms and my legs, and I have
+been desiring to see you. Come into the house and
+read&mdash;shall we?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Speed turned to me with an explanatory smile. &#8220;I&#8217;ve
+been reading the &#8217;Idyls&#8217; aloud to her in English,&#8221; he
+said, rather shyly. &#8220;She seems to like them; it&#8217;s the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_347' name='page_347'></a>347</span>
+noble music that attracts her; she can&#8217;t understand
+ten words.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I can understand nearly twenty,&#8221; she said, flushing
+painfully.</p>
+<p>Speed, who had no thought of hurting her, colored
+up, too.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t comprehend, little one,&#8221; he said, quickly.
+&#8220;It was in praise, not in blame, that I spoke.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I knew it&mdash;I am silly,&#8221; she said, with quick tears
+trembling in her eyes. &#8220;You know I adore you, Speed.
+Forgive me.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She turned away into the house, saying that she
+would get the book.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Look here, Speed,&#8221; I said, troubled, &#8220;Jacqueline
+is very much like the traditional maid of romance,
+which I never believed existed&mdash;all unspoiled, frankly
+human, innocently daring, utterly ignorant of convention.
+She&#8217;s only a child now, but another year or
+two will bring something else to her.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you suppose I&#8217;ve thought of that?&#8221; he said,
+frowning.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I hope you have.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, I have. When I find enough to do to keep
+soul and body friendly I&#8217;m going to send her to school,
+if that old ruffian, her father, allows it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think he will,&#8221; I said, gravely; &#8220;but after that?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;After what?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;After she&#8217;s educated and&mdash;unhappy?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;She isn&#8217;t any too happy now,&#8221; he retorted.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Granted. But after you have spent all your money
+on her, what then?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What do you mean?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I mean that you&#8217;ll have no child to deal with, but
+a woman in full bloom, a woman fairly aquiver with
+life and intelligence, a high-strung, sensitive, fine-grained
+creature, whose educated ignorance will not
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_348' name='page_348'></a>348</span>
+be educated innocence, remember that! And I tell
+you, Speed, it&#8217;s the heaviest responsibility a man can
+assume.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I know it,&#8221; he replied.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then it&#8217;s all right, if you do know it,&#8221; I said, cheerfully.
+&#8220;All I can say is, I am thankful she isn&#8217;t to
+spend her life in the circus.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Or meet death there,&#8221; he added. &#8220;It&#8217;s not to our
+credit that she escapes it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Jacqueline came dancing back to the porch, cat
+under one arm, book under the other, so frankly happy,
+so charmingly grateful for Speed&#8217;s society, that the
+tragedy of the lonely child touched me very deeply.
+I strove to discover any trace of the bar sinister in her,
+but could not, though now I understood, from her parentage,
+how it was possible for a poacher&#8217;s child to
+have such finely sculptured hands and feet. Perhaps
+her dark, silky lashes and hair were Mornac&#8217;s, but if this
+was so, I trusted that there the aristocratic blood had
+spent its force in the frail body of this child of chance.</p>
+<p>I went into the house, leaving them seated on the
+porch, heads together, while in a low monotone Speed
+read the deathless &#8220;Morte d&#8217;Arthur.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Daylight was waning.</p>
+<p>Out of the west a clear, greenish sky, tinged with
+saffron tints, promised a sea-wind. But the mild land-breeze
+was still blowing and the ebb-tide flowing as I
+entered the corridor and glanced at the corner where
+the spinning-wheel stood. Sylvia sat beside it, reading
+in the Lutheran Bible by the failing light.</p>
+<p>She raised her dreamy eyes as I passed; I had never
+seen her piquantly expressive face so grave.</p>
+<p>&#8220;May I speak to you alone a moment, after dinner?&#8221;
+I asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you wish,&#8221; she replied.</p>
+<p>I bowed and started on, but she called me back.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_349' name='page_349'></a>349</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Did you know that Monsieur Eyre is here?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Kelly Eyre?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oui, monsieur. He returns with an order from
+the governor of Lorient for the balloon.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I was astonished, and asked where Eyre had gone.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He is in your room,&#8221; she said, &#8220;loading your revolver.
+I hope you will not permit him to go alone to
+Paradise.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll see about that,&#8221; I muttered, and hurried up the
+stairs and down the hallway to my bedchamber.</p>
+<p>He sprang to the door as I entered, giving me both
+hands in boyish greeting, saying how delighted they
+all were to know that my injury had proved so
+slight.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That balloon robbery worried me,&#8221; he continued.
+&#8220;I knew that Speed depended on his balloon for a living;
+so as soon as we entered Lorient I went to our consul,
+and he and I made such a row that the governor of
+Lorient gave me an order for the balloon. Here it is,
+Mr. Scarlett.&#8221;</p>
+<p>His heightened color and excitement, his nervous
+impetuosity, were not characteristic of this quiet and
+rather indifferent young countryman of mine.</p>
+<p>I looked at him keenly but pleasantly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are going to load my revolver, and go over to
+Paradise and take that balloon from these bandits?&#8221;
+I asked, smiling.</p>
+<p>&#8220;An order is all right, but it is the more formal when
+backed by a bullet,&#8221; he said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you mean to tell me that you were preparing to
+go over into that hornet&#8217;s nest alone?&#8221;</p>
+<p>He shrugged his shoulders with a reckless laugh.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Give me my revolver,&#8221; I said, coldly.</p>
+<p>His face fell. &#8220;Let me take it, Mr. Scarlett,&#8221; he
+pleaded; but I refused, and made him hand me the
+weapon.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_350' name='page_350'></a>350</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Now,&#8221; I said, sternly, &#8220;I want to know what the
+devil you mean by attempting suicide? Do you suppose
+that those ruffians care a straw for you and your
+order? Kelly, what&#8217;s the matter with you? Is life
+as unattractive as all that?&#8221;</p>
+<p>His flushed and sullen face darkened.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you want to risk your life,&#8221; I said, &#8220;you have
+plenty of chances in your profession. Did you ever
+hear of an aged a&euml;ronaut? Kelly, go back to America
+and break your neck like a gentleman.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He darted a menacing glance at me, but there was
+nothing of irony in my sober visage.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You appear here,&#8221; I said, &#8220;after the others have
+sailed from Lorient. Why? To do Speed this generous
+favor? Yes&mdash;and to do yourself the pleasure
+of ending an embittered life under the eyes of the
+woman who ruined you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The boy flinched as though I had struck him in the
+face. For a moment I expected a blow; his hands
+clinched convulsively, and he focussed me with blazing
+eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t,&#8221; I said, quietly. &#8220;I am trying to be your
+friend; I am trying to save you from yourself, Kelly.
+Don&#8217;t throw away your life&mdash;as I have done. Life is
+a good thing, Kelly, a good thing. Can we not be
+friends though I tell you the truth?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The color throbbed and throbbed in his face. There
+was a chair near him; he groped for it, and sat down
+heavily.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Life is a good thing,&#8221; I said again, &#8220;but, Kelly,
+truth is better. And I must tell you the&mdash;well, something
+of the truth&mdash;as much as you need know ... now.
+My friend, <i>she is not worth it</i>.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you think that makes any difference?&#8221; he said,
+harshly. &#8220;Let me alone, Scarlett. I know!... <i>I
+know</i>, I tell you!&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_351' name='page_351'></a>351</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you mean to tell me that you know she deliberately
+betrayed you?&#8221; I demanded.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I know it&mdash;I tell you I know it!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And ... you love her?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221; He dropped his haggard face on his arms a
+moment, then sat bolt upright. &#8220;Truth is better than
+life,&#8221; he said, slowly. &#8220;I lied to you and to myself
+when I came back. I did come to get Speed&#8217;s balloon,
+but I came ... for her sake,... to be near her,... to
+see her once more before I&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I understand, Kelly.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He winced and leaned wearily back.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are right,&#8221; he said; &#8220;I wanted to end it,... I
+am tired.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I sat thinking for a moment; the light in the room
+faded to a glimmer on the panes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Kelly,&#8221; I said, &#8220;there remains another way to risk
+your neck, and, I think, a nobler way. There is in
+this house a woman who is running a terrible risk&mdash;a
+German spy whose operations have been discovered.
+This woman believes that she has in her pay the communist
+leader of the revolt, a man called Buckhurst.
+She is in error. And she must leave this house to-night.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Eyre&#8217;s face had paled. He bent forward, clasped
+hands between his knees, eyes fastened on me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There will be trouble here to-night&mdash;or, in all probability,
+within the next twenty-four hours. I expect
+to see Buckhurst a prisoner. And when that happens
+it will go hard with Mademoiselle Elven, for he will
+turn on her to save himself.... And you know what
+that means;... a blank wall, Kelly, and a firing-squad.
+There is but one sex for spies.&#8221;</p>
+<p>A deadly fear was stamped on his bloodless face. I
+saw it, tense and quivering, in the gray light of the
+window.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_352' name='page_352'></a>352</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;She must leave to-night, Kelly. She must try to
+cross into Spain. Will you help her?&#8221;</p>
+<p>He nodded, striving to say &#8220;yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You know your own risk?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Her company is death for you both if you are
+taken.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He stood up very straight. In what strange forms
+comes happiness to man!</p>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_353' name='page_353'></a>353</span>
+<a name='XXI_LIKE_HER_ANCESTORS' id='XXI_LIKE_HER_ANCESTORS'></a>
+<h2>XXI</h2>
+<h3>LIKE HER ANCESTORS</h3>
+</div>
+<p>A sense of insecurity, of impending trouble, seemed
+to weigh upon us all that evening&mdash;a physical
+depression, which the sea-wind brought with its flying
+scud, wetting the window-panes like fine rain.</p>
+<p>At intervals from across the moors came the deadened
+rolling of insurgent drums, and in the sky a
+ruddy reflection of a fire brightened and waned as the
+fog thickened or blew inland&mdash;an ominous sign of disorder,
+possibly even a reflection from that unseen war
+raging somewhere beyond the obscured horizon.</p>
+<p>It may have been this indefinable foreboding that
+drew our little company into a temporary intimacy;
+it may have been the immense loneliness of the sea,
+thundering in thickening darkness, that stilled our
+voices to whispers.</p>
+<p>Eyre, ill at ease, walked from window to window,
+looking at the luminous tints on the ragged edges of
+the clouds; Sylvia, over her heavy embroidery, lifted
+her head gravely at moments, to glance after him when
+he halted listless, preoccupied, staring at Speed and
+Jacqueline, who were drawing pictures of Arthur and
+his knights by the lamp-lit table.</p>
+<p>I leaned in the embrasure of the southern window,
+gazing at my lighted lanterns, which dangled from the
+halyards at Saint-Yssel. The soldier Rolland had so
+far kept his word&mdash;three red lamps glimmered through
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_354' name='page_354'></a>354</span>
+a driving mist; the white lanterns hung above, faintly
+shining.</p>
+<p>Full in the firelight of the room sat the young Countess,
+lost in reverie, hands clasping the gilt arms of her
+chair. At her feet dozed Ange Pitou.</p>
+<p>The dignity of a parvenu cat admitted for the first
+time to unknown luxury is a lesson. I said this to
+the young Countess, who smiled dreamily, watching
+the play of color over the drift-wood fire. A ship&#8217;s
+plank was burning there, tufted with golden-green
+flames. Presently a blaze of purest carmine threw a
+deeper light into the room.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I wonder,&#8221; she said, &#8220;what people sailed in that
+ship&mdash;and when? Did they perish on this coast when
+their ship perished? A drift-wood fire is beautiful,
+but a little sad, too.&#8221; She looked up pensively over
+her shoulder. &#8220;Will you bring a chair to the fire?&#8221; she
+asked. &#8220;We are burning part of a great ship&mdash;for
+our pleasure, monsieur. Tell me what ship it was;
+tell me a story to amuse me&mdash;not a melancholy one,
+if you please.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I drew a chair to the blaze; the drift-wood burned
+gold and violet, with scarcely a whisper of its velvet
+flames.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am afraid my story is not going to be very cheerful,&#8221;
+I said, &#8220;and I am also afraid that I must ask you
+to listen to it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She met my eyes with composure, leaned a little
+toward me, and waited.</p>
+<p>And so, sitting there in the tinted glare, I told her
+of the death of Delmont and of Tavernier, and of Buckhurst&#8217;s
+share in the miserable work.</p>
+<p>I spoke in a whisper scarcely louder than the rustle
+of the flames, watching the horror growing in her
+face.</p>
+<p>I told her that the money she had intrusted to them
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_355' name='page_355'></a>355</span>
+for the Red Cross was in my possession, and would be
+forwarded at the first chance; that I hoped to bring
+Buckhurst to justice that very night.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Madame, I am paining you,&#8221; I said; &#8220;but I am
+going to cause you even greater unhappiness.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Tell me what is necessary,&#8221; she said, forming the
+words with tightened lips.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then I must tell you that it is necessary for Mademoiselle
+Elven to leave Tr&eacute;court to-night.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She looked at me as though she had not heard.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is absolutely necessary,&#8221; I repeated. &#8220;She must
+go secretly. She must leave her effects; she must go
+in peasant&#8217;s dress, on foot.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Why?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is better that I do not tell you, madame.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Tell me. It is my right to know.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not now; later, if you insist.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The young Countess passed one hand over her eyes
+as though dazed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Does Sylvia know this?&#8221; she asked, in a shocked
+voice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not yet.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And you are going to tell her?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, madame.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;This is dreadful,&#8221; she muttered.... &#8220;If I did
+not know you,... if I did not trust you so perfectly,... trust
+you with all my heart!... Oh, are
+you certain she must go? It frightens me; it is so
+strange! I have grown fond of her.... And now
+you say that she must go. I cannot understand&mdash;I
+cannot.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, you cannot understand,&#8221; I repeated, gently;
+&#8220;but she can. It is a serious matter for Mademoiselle
+Elven; it could not easily be more serious. It is even
+perhaps a question of life or death, madame.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;In Heaven&#8217;s name, help her, then!&#8221; she said, scarcely
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_356' name='page_356'></a>356</span>
+controlling the alarm that brought a pitiful break in
+her voice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am trying to,&#8221; I said. &#8220;And now I must consult
+Mademoiselle Elven. Will you help me?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What can I do?&#8221; she asked, piteously.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Stand by that window. Look, madame, can you
+see the lights on the semaphore?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Count them aloud.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She counted the white lights for me, then the red
+ones.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Now,&#8221; I said, &#8220;if those lights change in number
+or color or position, come instantly to me. I shall
+be with Mademoiselle Elven in the little tea-room.
+But,&#8221; I added, &#8220;I do not expect any change in the
+lights; it is only a precaution.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I left her in the shadow of the curtains, and passed
+through the room to Sylvia&#8217;s side. She looked up
+quietly from her embroidery frame, then, dropping
+the tinted silks and needles on the cloth, rose and walked
+beside me past Eyre, who stood up as we came abreast
+of him.</p>
+<p>Sylvia paused. &#8220;Monsieur Eyre,&#8221; she said, &#8220;I
+have a question to ask you ... some day,&#8221; and
+passed on with a smile and a slight inclination of her
+head, leaving Eyre looking after her with heavy eyes.</p>
+<p>When we entered the little tea-room she passed on
+to the lounge and seated herself on the padded arm;
+I turned, closed the door, and walked straight toward
+her.</p>
+<p>She glanced up at me curiously; something in my
+face appeared to sober her, for the amused smile on her
+lips faded before I spoke.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What is it?&#8221; she asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am sorry to tell you,&#8221; I said&mdash;&#8220;sorry from my
+heart. You are not very friendly to me, and that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_357' name='page_357'></a>357</span>
+makes it harder for me to say what I have to
+say.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She was watching me intently out of her pretty, intelligent
+eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What do you mean?&#8221; she asked, guardedly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I mean that you cannot stay here,&#8221; I said. &#8220;And
+you know why.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The color flooded her face, and she stood up, confronting
+me, exasperated, defiant.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Will you explain this insult?&#8221; she asked, hotly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes. You are a German spy,&#8221; I said, under my
+breath.</p>
+<p>There was no color in her face now&mdash;nothing but
+a glitter in her blue eyes and a glint from the small,
+white teeth biting her lower lip.</p>
+<p>&#8220;French troops will land here to-night or to-morrow,&#8221;
+I went on, calmly. &#8220;You will see how dangerous your
+situation is certain to become when Buckhurst is taken,
+and when it is understood <i>what use you have made of
+the semaphore</i>.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She winced, then straightened and bent her steady
+gaze on me. Her courage was admirable.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I thank you for telling me,&#8221; she said, simply. &#8220;Have
+I a chance to reach the Spanish frontier?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think you have,&#8221; I replied. &#8220;Kelly Eyre is going
+with you when&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He? No, no, he must not! Does he know what I
+am?&#8221; she broke in, impetuously.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, mademoiselle; and he knows what happens
+to spies.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did he offer to go?&#8221; she asked, incredulously.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Mademoiselle, he insists.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Her lip began to tremble. She turned toward the
+window, where the sea-fog flew past in the rising wind,
+and stared out across the immeasurable blackness of
+the ocean.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_358' name='page_358'></a>358</span></p>
+<p>Without turning her head she said: &#8220;Does he know
+that it may mean his death?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He has suffered worse for your sake!&#8221; I said, bitterly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What?&#8221; she flashed out, confronting me in an
+instant.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You must know that,&#8221; I said&mdash;&#8220;three years of
+hell&mdash;prison&mdash;utter ruin! Do you dare deny you have
+been ignorant of this?&#8221;</p>
+<p>For a space she stood there, struck speechless; then,
+&#8220;Call him!&#8221; she cried. &#8220;Call him, I tell you! Bring
+him here&mdash;I want him here&mdash;here before us both!&#8221;
+She sprang to the door, but I blocked her way.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I will not have Madame de Vassart know what you
+did to him!&#8221; I said. &#8220;If you want Kelly Eyre, I will
+call him.&#8221; And I stepped into the hallway.</p>
+<p>Eyre, passing the long stone corridor, looked up as
+I beckoned; and when he entered the tea-room, Sylvia,
+white as a ghost, met him face to face.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Monsieur,&#8221; she said, harshly, &#8220;why did you not
+come to that book-store?&#8221;</p>
+<p>He was silent. His face was answer enough&mdash;a terrible
+answer.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Monsieur Eyre, speak to me! Is it true? Did
+they&mdash;did you not know that I made an error&mdash;that I
+<i>did</i> go on Monday at the same hour?&#8221;</p>
+<p>His haggard face lighted up; she saw it, and caught
+his hands in hers.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Did you think I knew?&#8221; she stammered. &#8220;Did you
+think I could do that? They told me at the <i>usine</i>
+that you had gone away&mdash;I thought you had forgotten&mdash;that
+you did not care&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Care!&#8221; he groaned, and bowed his head, crushing
+her hands over his face.</p>
+<p>Then she broke down, breathless with terror and
+grief.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_359' name='page_359'></a>359</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;I was not a spy then&mdash;truly I was not, Kelly.
+There was no harm in me&mdash;I only&mdash;only asked for the
+sketches because&mdash;because&mdash;I cared for you. I have
+them now; no soul save myself has ever seen them&mdash;even
+afterward, when I drifted into intrigue at the
+Embassy&mdash;when everybody knew that Bismarck meant
+to force war&mdash;everybody except the French people&mdash;I
+never showed those little sketches! They were&mdash;were
+mine! Kelly, they were all I had left when you
+went away&mdash;to a fortress!&mdash;and I did not know!&mdash;I did
+not know!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hush!&#8221; he groaned. &#8220;It is all right&mdash;it is all
+right now.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you believe me?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, yes. Don&#8217;t cry&mdash;don&#8217;t be unhappy&mdash;now.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She raised her head and fumbled in her corsage with
+shaking fingers, and drew from her bosom a packet of
+papers.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Here are the sketches,&#8221; she sobbed; &#8220;they have
+cost you dear! Now leave me&mdash;hate me! Let them
+come and take me&mdash;I do not want to live any more.
+Oh, what punishment on earth!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Her suffering was unendurable to the man who had
+suffered through her; he turned on me, quivering in
+every limb.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We must start,&#8221; he said, hoarsely. &#8220;Give me your
+revolver.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I drew it from my hip-pocket and passed it to him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Scarlett,&#8221; he began, &#8220;if we don&#8217;t reach&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>A quick rapping at the door silenced him; the young
+Countess stood in the hallway, bright-eyed, but composed,
+asking for me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The red and the white lights are gone,&#8221; she said.
+&#8220;There are four green lights on the tower and four
+blue lights on the halyards.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I turned to Eyre. &#8220;This is interesting,&#8221; I said,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_360' name='page_360'></a>360</span>
+grimly. &#8220;I set signals for the <i>Fer-de-Lance</i> to land in
+force. Somebody has changed them. You had better
+get ready to go.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Sylvia had shrunk away from Eyre. The Countess
+looked at her blankly, then at me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Madame,&#8221; I said, &#8220;there is little enough of happiness
+in the world&mdash;so little that when it comes it
+should be welcomed, even by those who may not share
+in it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And I bent nearer and whispered the truth.</p>
+<p>Then I went to Sylvia, who stood there tremulous,
+pallid.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You serve your country at a greater risk than do
+the soldiers of your King,&#8221; I said. &#8220;There is no courage
+like that which discounts a sordid, unhonored
+death. You have my respect, mademoiselle.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sylvia!&#8221; murmured the young Countess, incredulously;
+&#8220;you a spy?&mdash;here&mdash;under my roof?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Sylvia unconsciously stretched out one hand toward
+her.</p>
+<p>Eyre stepped to her side, with an angry glance at
+Madame de Vassart.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&mdash;I love you, madame,&#8221; whispered Sylvia. &#8220;I
+only place my own country first. Can you forgive
+me?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The Countess stood as though stunned; Eyre passed
+her slowly, supporting Sylvia to the door.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Madame,&#8221; I said, &#8220;will you speak to her? Your
+countries, not your hearts, are at war. She did her
+duty.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;A spy!&#8221; repeated the Countess, in a dull voice.
+&#8220;A spy! And she brings this&mdash;this shame on me!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Sylvia turned, standing unsteadily. For a long
+time they looked at each other in silence, their eyes
+wet with tears. Then Eyre lifted Sylvia&#8217;s hand and
+kissed it, and led her away, closing the door behind.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_361' name='page_361'></a>361</span></p>
+<p>The Countess still stood in the centre of the room,
+transfixed, rigid, staring through her tears at the
+closed door. With a deep-drawn breath she straightened
+her shoulders; her head drooped; she covered her
+face with clasped hands.</p>
+<p>Standing there, did she remember those who, one
+by one, had betrayed her? Those who first whispered
+to her that love of country was a narrow creed; those
+who taught her to abhor violence, and then failed at
+the test&mdash;Bazard, firing to kill, going down to death
+under the merciless lance of an Uhlan; Buckhurst,
+guilty of every crime that attracted him; and now
+Sylvia, her friend, false to the salt she had eaten, false
+to the roof above her, false, utterly false to all save
+the land of her nativity.</p>
+<p>And she, &Eacute;line de Tr&eacute;court, a soldier&#8217;s daughter and
+a Frenchwoman, had been used as a shield by those who
+were striking her own mother-land&mdash;the country she
+once had denied; the country whose frontiers she knew
+not in her zeal for limitless brotherhood; the blackened,
+wasted country she had seen at Strasbourg; the
+land for which the cuirassiers of Morsbronn had died!</p>
+<p>&#8220;What have I done?&#8221; she cried, brokenly&mdash;&#8220;what
+have I done that this shame should come upon me?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You have done nothing,&#8221; I said, &#8220;neither for good
+nor evil in this crisis. But Sylvia has; Sylvia the
+spy. That a man should give up his life for a friend
+is good; that a woman offer hers for her country is
+better. What has it cost her? The friendship of the
+woman she worships&mdash;you, madame! It has cost her
+that already, and the price may include her life and the
+life of the man she loves. She has done her duty; the
+sacrifice is still burning; I pray it may spare her and
+spare him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I walked to the door and laid my hand on the brass
+knob.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_362' name='page_362'></a>362</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;The world is merciless to failures,&#8221; I said. &#8220;Yet
+even a successful spy is scarcely tolerated among the
+Philistines; a captured spy is a horror for friends to
+forget and for enemies to destroy in righteous indignation.
+Madame, I know, for I have served your
+country in Algiers as a spy,... not from patriotism,
+for I am an alien, but because I was fitted for it in my
+line of duty. Had I been caught I should have looked
+for nothing but contempt from France; from the Kabyle,
+for neither admiration nor mercy. I tell you
+this that you may understand my respect for this
+woman, whose motives are worthy of it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The Countess looked at me scornfully. &#8220;It is well,&#8221;
+she said, &#8220;for those who understand and tolerate
+treachery to condone it. It is well that the accused
+be judged by their peers. We of Tr&eacute;court know only
+one tongue. But that is the language of truth, monsieur.
+All else is foreign.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where did the nobility learn this tongue&mdash;to our
+exclusion?&#8221; I asked, bluntly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;When our forefathers faced the tribunals!&#8221; she
+flashed out. &#8220;Did you ever hear of a spy among us?
+Did you ever hear of a lie among us?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You have been taught history by your peers,
+madame,&#8221; I said, with a bow; &#8220;I have been taught
+history by mine.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The sorry romance!&#8221; she said, bitterly. &#8220;It has
+brought me to this!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It has brought others to their senses,&#8221; I said,
+sharply.</p>
+<p>&#8220;To their knees, you mean!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes&mdash;to their knees at last.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;To the guillotine&mdash;yes!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No, madame, to pray for their native land&mdash;too late!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think,&#8221; she said, &#8220;that we are not fitted to understand
+each other.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_363' name='page_363'></a>363</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;It remains,&#8221; I said, &#8220;for me to thank you for your
+kindness to us all, and for your generosity to me in
+my time of need.... It is quite useless for me to
+dream of repaying it.... I shall never forget it.... I
+ask leave to make my adieux, madame.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She flushed to her temples, but did not answer.</p>
+<p>As I stood looking at her, a vivid flare of light flashed
+through the window behind me, crimsoning the walls,
+playing over the ceiling with an infernal radiance.
+At the same instant the gate outside crashed open,
+a hubbub of voices swelled into a roar; then the outer
+doors were flung back and a score of men sprang into
+the hallway, soldiers with the red torch-light dancing
+on rifle-barrels and bayonets.</p>
+<p>And before them, revolver swinging in his slender
+hand, strode Buckhurst, a red sash tied across his
+breast, his colorless eyes like diamonds.</p>
+<p>Speed and Jacqueline came hurrying through the
+hall to where I stood; Buckhurst&#8217;s smile was awful as
+his eyes flashed from Speed to me.</p>
+<p>Behind him, close to his shoulder, the torch-light fell
+on Mornac&#8217;s smooth, false face, stretched now into a
+ferocious grimace; behind him crowded the soldiers
+of the commune, rifles slung, craning their unshaven
+faces to catch a glimpse of us.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Demi-battalion, halt!&#8221; shouted an officer, and
+flung up his naked sabre.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Halt,&#8221; repeated Buckhurst, quietly.</p>
+<p>Madame de Vassart&#8217;s servants had come running
+from kitchen and stable at the first alarm, and now
+stood huddled in the court-yard, bewildered, cowed by
+the bayonets which had checked them.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Buckhurst,&#8221; I said, &#8220;what the devil do you mean
+by this foolery?&#8221; and I started for him, shouldering
+my way among his grotesque escort.</p>
+<p>For an instant I looked into his deadly eyes; then he
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_364' name='page_364'></a>364</span>
+silently motioned me back; a dozen bayonets were
+levelled, forcing me to retire, inch by inch, until I felt
+Speed&#8217;s grip on my arm.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That fellow means mischief,&#8221; he whispered.
+&#8220;Have you a pistol?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I gave mine to Eyre,&#8221; I said, under my breath.
+&#8220;If he means us harm, don&#8217;t resist or they may take
+revenge on the Countess. Speed, keep her in the room
+there! Don&#8217;t let her come out.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But the Countess de Vassart was already in the hall,
+facing Buckhurst with perfect composure.</p>
+<p>Twice she ordered him to leave; he looked up from
+his whispered consultation with Mornac and coolly motioned
+her to be silent.</p>
+<p>Once she spoke to Mornac, quietly demanding a
+reason for the outrage, and Mornac silenced her with a
+brutal gesture.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Madame,&#8221; I said, &#8220;it is I they want. I beg you
+to retire.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are my guest,&#8221; she said. &#8220;My place is here.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Your place is where I please to put you!&#8221; broke
+in Mornac; and to Buckhurst: &#8220;I tell you she&#8217;s as
+guilty as the others. Let me attend to this and make
+a clean sweep!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Citizen Mornac will endeavor to restrain his zeal,&#8221;
+observed Buckhurst, with a sneer. And then, as I
+looked at this slender, pallid man, I understood who
+was the dominant power behind the curtain; and so
+did Speed, for I felt him press my elbow significantly.</p>
+<p>He turned and addressed us, suavely, bowing with a
+horrid, mock deference to the Countess:</p>
+<p>&#8220;In the name of the commune! The ci-devant
+Countess de Vassart is accused of sheltering the individual
+Scarlett, late inspector of Imperial Police; the
+individual Speed, ex-inspector of Imperial Gendarmes;
+the individual Eyre, under general suspicion; the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_365' name='page_365'></a>365</span>
+woman called Sylvia Elven, a German spy. As war-delegate
+of the commune, I am here to accuse!&#8221;</p>
+<p>There was a silence, then a low, angry murmur from
+the soldiers, which grew louder until Buckhurst turned
+on them. He did not utter a word, but the sullen roar
+died out, a bayonet rattled, then all was still in the
+dancing torch-light.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I accuse,&#8221; continued Buckhurst, in a passionless
+voice, &#8220;the individual Scarlett of treachery to the commune;
+of using the telegraph for treacherous ends; of
+hoisting signals with the purpose of attracting government
+troops to destroy us. I accuse the individual
+Speed of aiding his companion in using the telegraph
+to stop the government train, thus depriving the commune
+of the funds which rightfully belong to it&mdash;the
+treasures wrung from wretched peasants by the aristocrats
+of an accursed monarchy and a thrice-accursed
+empire!&#8221;</p>
+<p>A roaring cheer burst from the excited soldiers,
+drowning the voice of Buckhurst.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Silence!&#8221; shouted Mornac, savagely. And as the
+angry voices were stilled, one by one, above the banging
+of rifle-stocks and the rattle of bayonets, Buckhurst&#8217;s
+calm voice rose in a sinister monotone.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I accuse the woman Sylvia Elven of communication
+with Prussian agents; of attempted corruption of
+soldiers under my command. I accuse the citoyenne
+&Eacute;line Tr&eacute;court, lately known as the Countess de Vassart,
+of aiding, encouraging, and abetting these enemies
+of France!&#8221;</p>
+<p>He waited until the short, fierce yell of approval had
+died away. Then:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Call the soldier Rolland!&#8221; he said.</p>
+<p>My heart began to hammer in my throat. &#8220;I believe
+it&#8217;s going hard with us,&#8221; I muttered to Speed.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Listen,&#8221; he motioned.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_366' name='page_366'></a>366</span></p>
+<p>I listened to the wretched creature Rolland while he
+told what had happened at the semaphore. In his
+eagerness he pushed close to where I stood, menacing
+me with every gesture, cursing and lashing himself
+into a rage, ignoring all pretence of respect and discipline
+for his own superiors.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What are you waiting for?&#8221; he shouted, insolently,
+turning on Buckhurst. &#8220;I tell the truth; and
+if this man can afford to pay hundreds of francs for
+a telegram, he must be rich enough to pluck, I tell
+you!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You say he bribed you?&#8221; asked Buckhurst, gently.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes; I&#8217;ve said it twenty times, haven&#8217;t I?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And you took the bribes?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Parbleu!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And you thought if you admitted it and denounced
+the man who bribed you that you would help divide a
+few millions with us, you rogue?&#8221; suggested Buckhurst,
+admiringly.</p>
+<p>The wretch laughed outright.</p>
+<p>&#8220;And you believe that you deserve well of the commune?&#8221;
+smiled Buckhurst.</p>
+<p>The soldier grinned and opened his mouth to answer,
+and Buckhurst shot him through the face; and,
+as he fell, shot him again, standing wreathed in the
+smoke of his own weapon.</p>
+<p>The deafening racket of the revolver, the smoke, the
+spectacle of the dusty, inert thing on the floor over
+which Buckhurst stood and shot, seemed to stun
+us all.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I think,&#8221; said Buckhurst, in a pleasantly persuasive
+voice, &#8220;that there will be no more bribery in
+this battalion.&#8221; He deliberately opened the smoking
+weapon; the spent shells dropped one by one from
+the cylinder, clinking on the stone floor.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No&mdash;no more bribery,&#8221; he mused, touching the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_367' name='page_367'></a>367</span>
+dead man with the carefully polished toe of his shoe.
+&#8220;Because,&#8221; he added, reloading his revolver, &#8220;I do not
+like it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He turned quietly to Mornac and ordered the corpse
+to be buried, and Mornac, plainly unnerved at the
+murderous act of his superior, repeated the order, cursing
+his men to cover the quaver in his voice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;As for you,&#8221; observed Buckhurst, glancing up at
+us where we stood speechless together, &#8220;you will be
+judged and sentenced when this drum-head court decides.
+Go into that room!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The Countess did not move.</p>
+<p>Speed touched her arm; she looked up quietly, smiled,
+and stepped across the threshold. Speed followed;
+Jacqueline slipped in beside him, and then I turned on
+Buckhurst, who had just ordered his soldiers to surround
+the house outside.</p>
+<p>&#8220;As a matter of fact,&#8221; I said, when the last armed
+ruffian had departed, &#8220;I am the only person in this
+house who has interfered with your affairs. The
+others have done nothing to harm you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;The court will decide that,&#8221; he replied, balancing
+his revolver in his palm.</p>
+<p>I eyed him for an instant. &#8220;Do you mean harm to
+this unfortunate woman?&#8221; I asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;My friend,&#8221; he replied, in a low voice, &#8220;you have
+very stupidly upset plans that have cost me months
+to perfect. You have, by stopping that train, robbed
+me of something less than twenty millions of francs.
+I have my labor for my pains; I have this mob of
+fools on my hands; I may lose my life through this
+whim of yours; and if I don&#8217;t, I have it all to begin
+again. And you ask me what I am going to do!&#8221;</p>
+<p>His eyes glittered.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If I strike her I strike you. Ask yourself whether
+or not I will strike.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_368' name='page_368'></a>368</span></p>
+<p>All the blood seemed to leave my heart; I straightened
+up with an effort.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There are some murders,&#8221; I said, &#8220;that even you
+must recoil at.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think you appreciate me,&#8221; he replied, with
+a deathly smile.</p>
+<p>He motioned toward the door with levelled weapon.
+I turned and entered the tea-room, and he locked the
+door from the outside.</p>
+<p>The Countess, seated on the sofa, looked up as I
+appeared. She was terribly pale, but she smiled as
+my heavy eyes met hers.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Is it to be farce or tragedy, monsieur?&#8221; she asked,
+without a tremor in her clear voice.</p>
+<p>I could not have uttered a word to save my life. Speed,
+pacing the room, turned to read my face; and I think
+he read it, for he stopped short in his tracks. Jacqueline,
+watching him with blue, inscrutable eyes, turned sharply
+toward the window and peered out into the darkness.</p>
+<p>Beyond the wall of the garden the fog, made luminous
+by the torches of the insurgents, surrounded the house
+with a circle of bright, ruddy vapor.</p>
+<p>Speed came slowly across the room with me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do they mean to shoot us?&#8221; he asked, bluntly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Messieurs,&#8221; said the Countess, with a faint smile,
+&#8220;your whispers are no compliment to my race. Pray
+honor me by plain speaking. Are we to die?&#8221;</p>
+<p>We stood absolutely speechless before her.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ah, Monsieur Scarlett,&#8221; she said, gravely, &#8220;do
+you also fail me ... at the end?... You, too&mdash;even
+you?... Must I tell you that we of Tr&eacute;court
+fear nothing in this world?&#8221;</p>
+<p>She made a little gesture, exquisitely imperious.</p>
+<p>I stepped toward her; she waited for me to seat myself
+beside her.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_369' name='page_369'></a>369</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Are we to die?&#8221; she asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes, madame.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Thank you,&#8221; she said, softly.</p>
+<p>I looked up. My head was swimming so that I could
+scarcely see her, scarcely perceive the deep, steady
+tenderness in her clear eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you not understand?&#8221; she asked. &#8220;You are
+my friend. I wished to know my fate from you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Madame,&#8221; I said, hoarsely, &#8220;how can you call
+me friend when you know to what I have brought
+you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You have brought me to know myself,&#8221; she said,
+simply. &#8220;Why should I not be grateful? Why do you
+look at me so sadly, Monsieur Scarlett? Truly, you
+must know that my life has been long enough to
+prove its uselessness.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It is not true!&#8221; I cried, stung by remorse for all
+I had said. &#8220;Such women as you are the hope of
+France! Such women as you are the hope of the
+world! Ah, that you should consider the bitterness
+and folly of such a man as I am&mdash;that you should
+consider and listen to the sorry wisdom of a homeless
+mountebank&mdash;a wandering fool&mdash;a preacher of empty
+platitudes, who has brought you to this with his cursed
+meddling!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You taught me truth,&#8221; she said, calmly; &#8220;you
+make the last days of my life the only ones worth living.
+I said to you but an hour since&mdash;when I was
+angry&mdash;that we were unfitted to comprehend each other.
+It is not true. We are fitted for that. I had rather
+die with you than live without the friendship which I
+believe&mdash;which I know&mdash;is mine. Monsieur Scarlett,
+it is not love. If it were, I could not say this to you&mdash;even
+in death&#8217;s presence. It is something better;
+something untroubled, confident, serene.... You see
+it is not love.... And perhaps it has no name.... For
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_370' name='page_370'></a>370</span>
+I have never before known such happiness, such
+peace, as I know now, here with you, talking of our
+death. If we could live,... you would go away.... I
+should be alone.... And I have been alone all my
+life,... and I am tired. You see I have nothing to
+regret in a death that brings me to you again.... Do
+you regret life?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Not now,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You are kind to say so. I do believe&mdash;yes, I know
+that you truly care for me.... Do you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then it will not be hard.... Perhaps not even
+very painful.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The key turning in the door startled us. Buckhurst
+entered, and through the hallway I saw his dishevelled
+soldiers running, flinging open doors, tearing, trampling,
+pillaging, wrecking everything in their path.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Your business will be attended to in the garden at
+dawn,&#8221; he observed, blinking about the room, for the
+bright lamp-light dazzled him.</p>
+<p>Speed, who had been standing by the window with
+Jacqueline, wheeled sharply, took a few steps into the
+room, then sank into a chair, clasping his lank hands
+between his knees.</p>
+<p>The Countess did not even glance up as the sentence
+was pronounced; she looked at me and laid her left
+hand on mine, smiling, as though waiting for the moment
+to resume an interrupted conversation.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you hear?&#8221; demanded Buckhurst, raising his
+voice.</p>
+<p>There was no answer for a moment; then Jacqueline
+stepped from the window and said: &#8220;Am I free to go?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You!&#8221; said Buckhurst, contemptuously; &#8220;who in
+hell are you?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am Jacqueline.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Really,&#8221; sneered Buckhurst.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_371' name='page_371'></a>371</span></p>
+<p>He went away, slamming and locking the door; and
+I heard Mornac complaining that the signals had gone
+out on the semaphore and that there was more treachery
+abroad.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Get me a horse!&#8221; said Buckhurst. &#8220;There are
+plenty of them in the stables. Mornac, you stay here;
+I&#8217;ll ride over to the semaphore. Gut this house and
+fire it after you&#8217;ve finished that business in the garden
+to-morrow morning.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where are you going?&#8221; demanded Mornac&#8217;s angry
+voice. &#8220;Do you expect me to stay here while you
+start for Paris?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;You have your orders,&#8221; said Buckhurst, menacingly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, have I? What are they? To stay here when
+the country is roused&mdash;stay here and perhaps be shelled
+by that damned cruiser out there&mdash;&#8221;</p>
+<p>His voice was stifled as though a hand had clutched
+his throat; there came the swift sound of a struggle, the
+banging of scabbards and spurs, the scuffle of heavy
+boots.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are you mad?&#8221; burst out Mornac&#8217;s strangled voice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are you?&#8221; breathed Buckhurst. &#8220;Silence, you
+fool. Do you obey orders or not?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Their voices receded. Speed sprang to the door to
+listen, then ran back to the window.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Scarlett,&#8221; he whispered, &#8220;there are the lights of a
+vessel at anchor off Groix.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I was beside him in an instant. &#8220;It&#8217;s the cruiser,&#8221;
+I said. &#8220;Oh, Speed, for a chance to signal!&#8221;</p>
+<p>We looked at each other desperately.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We could set the room afire,&#8221; he said; &#8220;they might
+land to see what had happened.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And find us all shot.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Jacqueline, standing beside Speed, said, quietly: &#8220;I
+could swim it. Wait. Raise the window a little.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_372' name='page_372'></a>372</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;You cannot dive from that cliff!&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>She cautiously unlocked the window and peered out
+into the dark garden.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The cliff falls sheer from the wall yonder,&#8221; she
+whispered. &#8220;I shall try to drop. I learned much in
+the circus. I am not afraid, Speed. I shall drop into
+the sea.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;To your death,&#8221; I said.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Possibly, m&#8217;sieu. It is a good death, however.
+I am not afraid.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Close the window,&#8221; muttered Speed. &#8220;They&#8217;d
+shoot her from the wall, anyway.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Again the child gravely asked permission to try.</p>
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said Speed, harshly, and turned away. But
+in that instant Jacqueline flung open the window and
+vaulted into the garden. Before I could realize what
+had happened she was only a glimmering spot in the
+darkness. Then Speed and I followed her, running
+swiftly toward the foot of the garden, but we were too
+late; a slim, white shape rose from the top of the wall
+and leaped blindly out through the ruddy torch glare
+into the blackness beyond.</p>
+<p>We heard a soldier&#8217;s startled cry, a commotion,
+curses, and astonished exclamations from the other
+side of the wall.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It was something, I tell you!&#8221; roared a soldier.
+&#8220;Something that jumped over the cliff!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;It was an owl, idiot!&#8221; retorted his comrade.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I tell you I saw it!&#8221; protested the other, in a shaking
+voice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Then you saw a witch of Ker-Ys,&#8221; bawled another.
+&#8220;Look out for your skin in the first battle. It&#8217;s death
+to see such things.&#8221;</p>
+<p>I looked at Speed. He stood wide-eyed, staring at
+vacancy.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Could she do it?&#8221; I asked, horrified.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_373' name='page_373'></a>373</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;God knows,&#8221; he whispered.</p>
+<p>Soldiers were beginning to clamber up the garden
+wall from the outside; torches were raised to investigate.
+As we shrank back into the shadow of the
+shrubbery I stumbled over something soft&mdash;Jacqueline&#8217;s
+clothes, lying in a circle as she had stepped out
+of them.</p>
+<p>Speed took them. I followed him, creeping back to
+the window, where we entered in time to avoid discovery
+by a wretch who had succeeded in mounting the
+wall, torch in hand.</p>
+<p>One or two soldiers climbed over and dropped into
+the garden, prowling around, prodding the bushes
+with their bayonets, even coming to press their dirty
+faces and hands against our window.</p>
+<p>&#8220;They&#8217;re all here!&#8221; sang out one. &#8220;It was an owl,
+I tell you!&#8221; And he menaced us with his rifle in
+pantomime and retired, calling his companions to follow.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where is Jacqueline?&#8221; asked the Countess, looking
+anxiously at the little blue skirt on Speed&#8217;s knees.
+&#8220;Have they harmed that child?&#8221;</p>
+<p>I told her.</p>
+<p>A beautiful light grew in her eyes as she listened.
+&#8220;Did I not warn you that we Bretons know how to
+die?&#8221; she said.</p>
+<p>I looked dully at Speed, who sat by the window,
+brooding over the little woollen skirt on his knees,
+stroking it, touching the torn hem, and at last folding
+it with unaccustomed and shaky hands.</p>
+<p>There were noises outside our door, loud voices,
+hammering, the sound of furniture being dragged over
+stone floors, and I scarcely noticed it when our door
+was opened again.</p>
+<p>Then somebody called out our names; a file of half-drunken
+soldiers grounded arms in the passageway
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_374' name='page_374'></a>374</span>
+with a bang that brought us to our feet, as Mornac,
+flushed with wine, entered unsteadily, drawn sword
+in hand.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m damned if I stay here any longer,&#8221; he broke
+out, angrily. &#8220;I&#8217;ll see whether my rascals can&#8217;t shoot
+straight by torch-light. Here, you! Scarlett, I mean!
+And you, Speed; and you, too, madame; patter your
+prayers, for you&#8217;ll get no priest. Lieutenant, withdraw
+the guard at the wall. Here, captain, march the battalion
+back to Paradise and take the servants!&#8221;</p>
+<p>A second later the drums began to beat, but Mornac,
+furious, silenced them.</p>
+<p>&#8220;They can hear you at sea!&#8221; he shouted. &#8220;Do you
+want a boat-load of marines at your heels? Strike out
+those torches! Four will do for the garden. March!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The shuffling tread of the insurgent infantry echoed
+across the gravel court-yard; torches behind the walls
+were extinguished; blackness enveloped the cliffs.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; broke out Speed, hoarsely, &#8220;good-bye, Scarlett.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He held out his hand.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good-bye,&#8221; I said, stunned.</p>
+<p>I dropped my hand as two soldiers placed themselves
+on either side of him.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, good-bye,&#8221; he repeated, aimlessly; and then,
+remembering, he went to the Countess and offered his
+hand.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I am so sorry for you,&#8221; she said, with a pallid smile.
+&#8220;You have much to live for. But you must not feel
+lonely, monsieur; you will be with us&mdash;we shall be
+close to you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She turned to me, and her hands fell to her side.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Are you contented?&#8221; she asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; I answered.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I, too,&#8221; she said, sweetly, and offered her hands.</p>
+<p>I held them very tightly. &#8220;You say,&#8221; I whispered,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_375' name='page_375'></a>375</span>
+&#8220;that it is not&mdash;love. But you do not speak for me.
+I love you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>A bright blush spread over brow and neck.</p>
+<p>&#8220;So&mdash;it was love&mdash;after all,&#8221; she said, under her
+breath. &#8220;God be with us to-day&mdash;I love you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;March!&#8221; cried Mornac, as two soldiers took station
+beside me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I beg you will be gentle with this lady,&#8221; I said,
+angrily, as two more soldiers pushed up beside the
+young Countess and laid their hands on her shoulders.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Who the devil are you giving orders to?&#8221; shouted
+Mornac, savagely. &#8220;March!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Speed passed out first; I followed; the Countess came
+behind me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Courage,&#8221; I stammered, looking back at her as we
+stumbled out into the torch-lit garden.</p>
+<p>She smiled adorably. Her forefathers had mounted
+the guillotine smiling.</p>
+<p>Mornac pointed to the garden wall near the bench
+where we had sat together. A soldier dressed like a
+Turco lifted a torch and set it in the flower-bed under
+the wall, illuminating the spot where we were to stand.
+As this soldier turned to come back I saw his face.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Salah Ben-Ahmed!&#8221; I cried, hoarsely. &#8220;Do Marabouts
+do this butcher&#8217;s work?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The Turco stared at me as though stunned.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Salah Ben-Ahmed is a disgraced soldier!&#8221; I said,
+in a ringing voice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a lie!&#8221; he shouted, in Arabic&mdash;&#8220;it&#8217;s a lie, O
+my inspector! Speak! Have these men tricked me?
+Are you not Prussians?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Silence! Silence!&#8221; bawled Mornac. &#8220;Turco, fall
+in! Fall in, I say! What! You menace me?&#8221; he
+snarled, cocking his revolver.</p>
+<p>Then a man darted out of the red shadows of the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_376' name='page_376'></a>376</span>
+torch-light and fell upon Mornac with a knife, and
+dragged him down and rolled on him, stabbing him
+through and through, while the mutilated wretch
+screamed and screamed until his soul struggled out
+through the flame-shot darkness and fled to its last
+dreadful abode.</p>
+<p>The Lizard rose, shaking his fagot knife; they fell
+upon him, clubbing and stabbing with stock and bayonet,
+but he swung his smeared and sticky blade, clearing
+a circle around him. And I think he could have
+cut his way free had not Tric-Trac shot him in the
+back of the head.</p>
+<p>Then a frightful tumult broke loose. Three of the
+torches were knocked to the ground and trampled out
+as the insurgents, doubly drunken with wine and the
+taste of blood, seized me and tried to force me against
+the wall; but the Turco, with his shrill, wolf-like battle
+yelp, attacked them, sabre-bayonet in hand. Speed,
+too, had wrested a rifle from a half-stupefied ruffian,
+and now stood at bay before the Countess; I saw him
+wielding his heavy weapon like a flail; then in the
+darkness Tric-Trac shot at me, so close that the powder-flame
+scorched my leg. He dropped his rifle to
+spring for my throat, knocking me flat, and, crouching
+on me, strove to strangle me; and I heard him whining
+with eagerness while I twisted and writhed to free my
+windpipe from his thin fingers.</p>
+<p>At last I tore him from my body and struggled to
+my feet. He, too, was on his legs with a bound, running,
+doubling, dodging; and at his heels I saw a
+dozen sailors, broadaxes glittering, chasing him from
+tree to shrub.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Speed!&#8221; I shouted&mdash;&#8220;the sailors from the <i>Fer-de-Lance</i>!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The curtains of the house were on fire; through the
+hallway poured the insurgent soldiery, stampeding
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_377' name='page_377'></a>377</span>
+in frantic flight across the court out into the moors;
+and the marines, swarming along the cliffs, shot at
+them as they ran, and laughed savagely when a man
+fell into the gorse, kicking like a wounded rabbit.</p>
+<p>Speed marked their flight, advancing coolly, pistol
+flashing; the Turco, Ben-Ahmed, dark arms naked to
+the shoulder, bounded behind the frightened wretches,
+cornering, hunting them through flower-beds and
+bushes, stealthily, keenly, now creeping among the
+shadows, now springing like a panther on his prey,
+until his blue jacket reeked and his elbows dripped.</p>
+<p>I had picked up a rifle with a broken bayonet; the
+Countess, clasping my left arm, stood swaying in the
+rifle-smoke, eyes closed; and, when a horrid screeching
+arose from the depths of the garden where they were
+destroying Tric-Trac, she fell to shuddering, hiding
+her face on my shoulder.</p>
+<p>Suddenly Speed appeared, carrying a drenched little
+figure, partly wrapped in a sailor&#8217;s pea-jacket, slim
+limbs drooping, blue with cold.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Put out that fire in there,&#8221; he said, hoarsely; &#8220;we
+must get her into bed. Hurry, for God&#8217;s sake, Scarlett!
+There&#8217;s nobody in the house!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Jacqueline! Jacqueline! brave little Bretonne,&#8221;
+murmured the Countess, bending forward and gathering
+the unconscious child into her strong, young arms.</p>
+<p>Through the dim dawn, through smoke and fading
+torch-light, we carried Jacqueline into the house, now
+lighted up with an infernal red from the burning dining-room.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The house is stone; we can keep the flames to one
+room if we work hard,&#8221; I said. A sailor stood by the
+door wiping the stained blade of his broadaxe, and I
+called on him to aid us.</p>
+<p>A fresh company of sailors passed on the double,
+rifles trailing, their officer shouting encouragement,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_378' name='page_378'></a>378</span>
+And as we came in view of the semaphore, I saw the
+signal tower on fire from base to top.</p>
+<p>The gray moorland was all flickering with flashes
+where the bulk of the insurgent infantry began firing
+in retreat; the marines&#8217; fusillade broke out from Paradise
+village; rifle after rifle cracked along the river-bank.
+Suddenly the deep report of a cannon came
+echoing landward from the sea; a shell, with lighted
+fuse trailing sparks, flew over us with a rushing whistle
+and exploded on the moors.</p>
+<p>All this I saw from the house where I stood with
+Speed and a sailor, buried in smoke, chopping out
+blazing woodwork, tearing the burning curtains from
+the windows. The marines fired steadily from the
+windows above us.</p>
+<p>&#8220;They want the Red Terror!&#8221; laughed the sailors.
+&#8220;They shall have it!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hunt them out! Hunt them out!&#8221; cried an officer,
+briskly. &#8220;Fire!&#8221; rang out a voice, and the volley
+broke crashing, followed by the clear, penetrating
+boatswain&#8217;s whistle sounding the assault.</p>
+<p>Blackened, scorched, almost suffocated, I staggered
+back to the tea-room, where the Countess stood clasping
+Jacqueline, huddled in a blanket, and smoothing
+the child&#8217;s wet curls away from a face as white as
+death.</p>
+<p>Together we carried her back through the smoking
+hallway, up the stairs to my bedroom, and laid her in
+the bed.</p>
+<p>The child opened her eyes as we drew the blankets.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where is Speed?&#8221; she asked, dreamily.</p>
+<p>A moment later he came in, and she turned her head
+languidly and smiled.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Jacqueline! Jacqueline!&#8221; he whispered, bending
+close above her.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Do you love me, Speed?&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_379' name='page_379'></a>379</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Ah, Jacqueline,&#8221; he stammered, &#8220;more than you
+can understand.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Suddenly a step sounded on the stairs, a rifle-stock
+grounded, clanging, and a sonorous voice rang out:</p>
+<p>&#8220;Salute, O my brother of the toug! The enemies of
+France are dead!&#8221;</p>
+<p>And in the silence around him Salah Ben-Ahmed
+the Marabout recited the fatha, bearing witness to the
+eternal unity of God.</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>Late that night the light cavalry from Lorient rode
+into Paradise. At dawn the colonel, established in
+the mayory, from whence its foolish occupant had
+fled, sent for Speed and me, and when we reported he
+drew from his heavy dolman our commissions, restoring
+us to rank and pay in the regiment <i>de marche</i> which
+he commanded.</p>
+<p>At sunrise I had bade good-bye to the sweetest woman
+on earth; at noon we were miles to the westward, riding
+like demons on Buckhurst&#8217;s heavy trail.</p>
+<p>I am not sure that we ever saw him again, though
+once, weeks later, Speed and I and a dozen hussars
+gave chase to a mounted man near St. Brieuc, and that
+man might have been Buckhurst. He led us a magnificent
+chase straight to the coast, where we rode
+plump into a covey of Prussian hussars, who were
+standing on their saddles, hacking away at the telegraph-wires
+with their heavy, curved sabres.</p>
+<p>That was our first and last sight of the enemy in
+either Prussian or communistic guise, though in the
+long, terrible days and nights of that winter of &#8217;71,
+when three French armies froze, and the white death,
+not the Prussians, ended all for France, rumors of insurrection
+came to us from the starving capital, and
+we heard of the red flag flying on the H&ocirc;tel-de-Ville,
+and the rising of the carbineers under Flourens; and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_380' name='page_380'></a>380</span>
+some spoke of the leader of the insurrection and called
+him John Buckhurst.</p>
+<p>That Buckhurst could have penetrated Paris neither
+Speed nor I believed; but, as all now know, we were
+wrong, though the testimony concerning his
+death<a name='FNanchor_A' id='FNanchor_A'></a><a href='#Footnote_A' class='fnanchor'>[A]</a> at
+the hands of his terrible colleague, Mortier, was not
+in evidence until a young ruffian, known as &#8220;The
+Mouse,&#8221; confessed before he expiated his crimes on
+Sartory Plain in 1872.</p>
+<p>Thus, for three blank, bitter months, freezing and
+starving, the 1st Regiment <i>de marche</i> of Lorient Hussars
+stood guard at Brest over the diamonds of the
+crown of France.</p>
+<hr class='fn' />
+<div class='footnote'><a name='Footnote_A' id='Footnote_A'></a><a href='#FNanchor_A'><span class='label'>[A]</span></a>
+<p>This affair is dealt with in <i>Ashes of Empire</i>.</p>
+</div>
+<hr class='major' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_381' name='page_381'></a>381</span>
+<a name='XXII_THE_SECRET' id='XXII_THE_SECRET'></a>
+<h2>XXII</h2>
+<h3>THE SECRET</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The news of the collapse of the army of the East
+found our wretchedly clothed and half-starved
+hussars still patrolling the environs of Brest from
+Belair to the Pont Tournant, and from the banks of
+the Elorn clear around the ramparts to Lannion Bay,
+where the ice-sheathed iron-clads lay with banked
+fires off the Port Militaire, and the goulet guard-boats
+patrolled the Port de Commerce from the Passe de
+l&#8217;Ouest to the hook on the Digue and clear around to
+Cap Espagnol.</p>
+<p>All Brest, from the battlements of the Ch&acirc;teau of St.
+Martin, in Belair, was on watch, so wrought up was the
+governor over the attempt on the treasure-train. For
+three months our troopers scarcely left their saddles,
+except to be taken to the hospital in Recouvrance.</p>
+<p>The rigor of the constant alert wore us to shadows;
+rockets from the goulet, the tocsin, the warning boom
+of a gun from the castle, found us spurring our jaded
+horses through ice and snow to scour the landward
+banlieue and purge it of a dreaded revolt. The names
+of Marx, of Flourens, of Buckhurst, were constantly repeated;
+news of troubles at Bordeaux, rumors of the
+red flag at Marseilles, only served to increase the rigid
+system of patrol, which brought death to those in the
+trenches as well as to our sleet-soaked videttes.</p>
+<p>Suddenly the nightmare ended with a telegram.
+Paris had surrendered.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_382' name='page_382'></a>382</span></p>
+<p>Immediately the craze to go beset us all; our improvised
+squadrons became clamoring mobs of peasants,
+wild to go home. Deserters left us every night;
+they shot some in full flight; some were shot after drum-head
+s&eacute;ances in which Speed and I voted in vain for
+acquittal. But affairs grew worse; our men neglected
+their horses; bands of fugitives robbed the suburbs,
+roving about, pillaging, murdering, even burning the
+wretched hovels where nothing save the four walls
+remained even for the miserable inmates.</p>
+<p>Our hussars were sent on patrol again, but they deserted
+with horses and arms in scores, until, when we
+rode into the Rue du Bois d&#8217;Amour, scarce a squadron
+clattered into the smoky gateway, and the infantry of
+the line across the street jeered and cursed us from their
+barracks.</p>
+<p>On the last day of February our regiment was disbanded,
+and the officers ordered to hold themselves in
+readiness to recruit the d&eacute;bris of a dragoon regiment,
+one squadron of which at once took possession of our
+miserable barracks.</p>
+<p>On the first day of March, by papers from London,
+we learned that the war was at an end, and that the
+preliminary treaty of Sunday, the 26th, had been signed
+at Versailles.</p>
+<p>The same mail brought to me an astonishing offer
+from Cairo, to assist in the reorganization and accept
+a commission in the Egyptian military police. Speed
+and I, shivering in our ragged uniforms by the barrack
+stove, discussed the matter over a loaf of bread
+and a few sardines, until we fell asleep in our greasy
+chairs and dreamed of hot sunshine, and of palms, and
+of a crimson sunset against which a colossal basking
+monster, half woman, half lion, crouched, wallowing
+to her stone breasts in a hot sea of sand.</p>
+<p>When I awoke in the black morning hours I knew
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_383' name='page_383'></a>383</span>
+that I should go. All the roaming instinct in me was
+roused. I, a nomad, had stayed too long in one stale
+place; I must be moving on. A feverish longing seized
+me; inertia became unbearable; the restless sea called
+me louder and louder, thundering on the breakwater;
+the gulls, wheeling above the arsenal at dawn, screamed
+a challenge.</p>
+<p>Leave of absence, and permission to travel pending
+acceptance of my resignation, I asked for and obtained
+before the stable trumpets awoke my comrade from his
+heavy slumber by the barrack stove.</p>
+<p>I made my packet&mdash;not much&mdash;a few threadbare garments
+folded around her letters, one to mark each
+miserable day that had passed since I spurred my
+horse out of Tr&eacute;court on the track of the wickedest man
+I ever knew.</p>
+<p>Speed awoke with the trumpets, and stared at me
+where I knelt before the stove in my civilian clothes,
+strapping up my little packet.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh,&#8221; he said, briefly, &#8220;I knew you were going.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;So did I,&#8221; I replied. &#8220;Will you ride to Tr&eacute;court
+with me? I have two weeks&#8217; permission for you.&#8221;</p>
+<p>He had no clothing but the uniform he wore, and no
+baggage except a razor, a shirt, a tooth-brush, and a
+bundle of letters, all written on Madame de Vassart&#8217;s
+crested paper, but not signed by her.</p>
+<p>We bolted our breakfast of soup and black bread,
+and bawled for our horses, almost crazed with impatience,
+now that the moment had come at last.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good-bye!&#8221; shouted the shivering dragoon officers,
+wistfully, as we wheeled our horses and spurred, clattering,
+towards the black gates. &#8220;Good-bye and good
+luck! We drink to those you love, comrades!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;And they shall drink to you! Good-bye! Good-bye!&#8221;
+we cried, till the salt sea-wind tore the words
+from our teeth and bowed our heads as we galloped
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_384' name='page_384'></a>384</span>
+through the suburbs and out into the icy high-road,
+where, above us, the telegraph-wires sang their whirring
+dirge, and the wind in the gorse whistled, and the
+distant forest sounded and resounded with the gale&#8217;s
+wailing.</p>
+<p>On, on, hammering the flinty road with steel-shod
+hoofs, racing with the racing clouds, thundering across
+the pontoon, where benumbed soldiers huddled to
+stare, then bounding forward through the narrow
+lanes of hamlets, where pinched faces peered out at
+us from hovels, and gaunt dogs fled from us into the
+frozen hedge.</p>
+<p>Far ahead we caught sight of the smoke of a locomotive.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Landerneau!&#8221; gasped Speed. &#8220;Ride hard, Scarlett!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The station-master saw us and halted the moving
+train at a frantic signal from Speed, whose uniform
+was to be reckoned with by all station-masters, and
+ten minutes later we stood swaying in a cattle-car,
+huddled close to our horses to keep warm, while the
+locomotive tore eastward, whistling frantically, and an
+ocean of black smoke poured past, swarming with
+sparks. Crossing the Aune trestle with a ripping roar,
+the train rushed through Ch&acirc;teaulin, south, then east,
+then south.</p>
+<p>Toward noon, Speed, clinging to the stall-bars,
+called out to me that he could see Quimper, and in a
+few moments we rolled into the station, dropped two
+cars, and steamed out again into the beautiful Breton
+country, where the winter wheat was green as new grass
+and the gorse glimmered, and the clear streams rushed
+seaward between their thickets of golden willows and
+green briers, already flushing with the promise of new
+buds.</p>
+<p>Rosporden we passed at full speed; scarcely a patch
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_385' name='page_385'></a>385</span>
+of melting snow remained at Bannalec; and when we
+steamed slowly into Quimperl&eacute;, the La&iuml;ta ran crystal-clear
+as a summer stream, and I saw the faint blue of
+violets on the southern slope of the beech-woods.</p>
+<p>Some gendarmes aided us to disembark our horses,
+and a sub-officer respectfully offered us hospitality at
+the barracks across the square; but we were in our saddles
+the moment our horses&#8217; hoofs struck the pavement,
+galloping for Paradise, with a sweet, keen wind
+blowing, hinting already of the sea.</p>
+<p>This was that same road which led me into Paradise
+on that autumn day which seemed years and years
+ago. The forests were leafless but beautiful; the blackthorns
+already promised their scented snow to follow
+the last melting drift which still glimmered among the
+trees in deep woodland gullies. A violet here and
+there looked up at us with blue eyes; in sheltered spots,
+fresh, reddish sprouts pricked the moist earth, here a
+whorl of delicate green, there a tender spike, guarding
+some imprisoned loveliness; buds on the beeches were
+brightening under a new varnish; naked thickets, no
+longer dead gray, softened into harmonies of pink
+and gold and palest purple.</p>
+<p>Once, halting at a bridge, above the quick music
+of the stream we heard an English robin singing all
+alone.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I never longed for spring as I do now,&#8221; broke out
+Speed. &#8220;The horror of this black winter has scarred
+me forever&mdash;the deathly whiteness, month after month;
+the freezing filth of that ghastly city; the sea, all slime
+and ice!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Gallop,&#8221; I said, shuddering. &#8220;I can smell the
+moors of Paradise already. The winds will cleanse
+us.&#8221;</p>
+<p>We spoke no more; and at last the road turned to the
+east, down among the trees, and we were traversing
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_386' name='page_386'></a>386</span>
+the square of Paradise village, where white-capped
+women turned to look after us, and children stared at
+us from their playground around the fountain, and the
+sleek magpies fluttered out of our path as we galloped
+over the bridge and breasted the sweet, strong moor
+wind, spicy with bay and gorse.</p>
+<p>Speed flung out his arm, pointing. &#8220;The circus
+camp was there,&#8221; he said. &#8220;They have ploughed the
+clover under.&#8221;</p>
+<p>A moment later I saw the tower of Tr&eacute;court, touched
+with a ray of sunshine, and the sea beyond, glittering
+under a clearing sky.</p>
+<p>As we dismounted in the court-yard the sun flashed
+out from the fringes of a huge, snowy cloud.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There is Jacqueline!&#8221; cried Speed, tossing his
+bridle to me in his excitement, and left me planted
+there until a servant came from the stable.</p>
+<p>Then I followed, every nerve quivering, almost dreading
+to set foot within, lest happiness awake me and I
+find myself in the freezing barracks once more, my
+brief dream ended.</p>
+<p>In the hallway a curious blindness came over me. I
+heard Jacqueline call my name, and I felt her hands
+in mine, but scarcely saw her; then she slipped away
+from me, and I found myself seated in the little tea-room,
+listening to the dull, double beat of my own heart, trembling
+at distant sounds in the house&mdash;waiting, endlessly
+waiting.</p>
+<p>After a while a glimmer of common-sense returned
+to me. I squared my shoulders and breathed deeply,
+then rose and walked to the window.</p>
+<p>The twigs on the peach-trees had turned wine-color;
+around the roots of the larkspurs delicate little palmated
+leaves clustered; crocus spikes pricked the grass
+everywhere, and the tall, polished shoots of the peonies
+glistened, glowing crimson in the sun. A heavy cat
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_387' name='page_387'></a>387</span>
+sunned its sleek flanks on the wall, brilliant eyes half
+closed, tail tucked under. Ange Pitou had grown
+very fat in three months.</p>
+<p>A step at the door, and I wheeled, trembling. But
+it was only a Breton maid, who bore some letters on a
+salver of silver.</p>
+<p>&#8220;For me?&#8221; I asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;If you please,&#8221; she said, demurely.</p>
+<p>Two letters, and I knew the writing on one. The
+first I read standing:</p>
+<div style='font-size:smaller'>
+<p style='margin-left:0.0em; margin-right:0.0em; text-align:right'>&#8220;<span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Buffalo, N. Y.</span>, <i>Feb</i>. 3, 1871.<br /></p>
+<p>&#8220;<span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Mr. Scarlett, Dear Sir and Friend,</span>&mdash;Trusting you&#8217;re
+well I am pleased to admit the same, the blind Goddess having
+smiled on me and the circus since we quit that damn terra firma
+for a more peeceful climb.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We are enjoying winter quarters near to the majestic phenomena
+of Niagara, fodder is cheap and vittles bountiful.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Would be pleased to have you entertain idees of joining us,
+and the same to Mr. Speed&mdash;you can take the horses. I have
+a lion man from Jersey City. We open in Charleston S. C.
+next week no more of La continong for me, <i>savvy voo</i>! home is
+good enough for me. That little Jacqueline left me I got a girl
+and am training her but she ain&#8217;t Jacqueline. Annimals are
+well Mrs. Grigg sends her love and is joined by all especially
+the ladies and others too numerous to mention. Hoping to hear
+from you soon about the horses I remain yours truly and courteously,</p>
+<p style='margin-left:0.0em; margin-right:0.0em; text-align:right'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>&#8220;H. Byram Esq</span>.&#8221;<br /></p>
+</div>
+<p>The second letter I opened carelessly, smiling a
+little:</p>
+<div style='font-size:smaller'>
+<p style='margin-left:0.0em; margin-right:0.0em; text-align:right'>&#8220;<span style='font-variant: small-caps'>New York</span>, <i>Feb</i>. 1, 1871.<br /></p>
+<p>&#8220;<span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Dear Mr. Scarlett,</span>&mdash;We were married yesterday. We
+have life before us, but are not afraid. I shall never forget you;
+my wife can never forget the woman you love. We have both
+passed through hell&mdash;but <i>we have passed through alive</i>. And
+we pray for the happiness of you and yours.</p>
+<p style='margin-left:0.0em; margin-right:0.0em; text-align:right'>&#8220;<span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Kelly Eyre</span>.&#8221;<br /></p>
+</div>
+<p>Sobered, I laid this letter beside the first, turned
+thoughtfully away into the room, then stood stock-still.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_388' name='page_388'></a>388</span></p>
+<p>The Countess de Vassart stood in the doorway, a
+smile trembling on her lips. In her gray eyes I read
+hope; and I took her hands in mine. She stood silent
+with bent head, exquisite in her silent shyness; and I
+told her I loved her, and that I asked for her love; that
+I had found employment in Egypt, and that it was sufficient
+to justify my asking her to wed me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;As for my name,&#8221; I said, &#8220;you know that is not
+the name I bear; yet, knowing that, you have given
+me your love. You read my dossier in Paris; you
+know <i>why</i> I am alone, without kin, without a family,
+without a home. Yet you believe that I am not tainted
+with dishonor. And I am not. Listen, this is what
+happened; this is why I gave up all; and ... this is
+my name!&#8221; ...</p>
+<p>And I bent my head and whispered the truth for the
+first time in my life to any living creature.</p>
+<p>When I had ended I stood still, waiting, head still
+bowed beside hers.</p>
+<p>She laid her hand on my hot face and slowly drew it
+close beside hers.</p>
+<p>&#8220;What shall I promise you?&#8221; she whispered.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Yourself, &Eacute;line.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Take me.... Is that all?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Your love.&#8221;</p>
+<p>She turned in my arms and clasped her hands behind
+my head, pressing her mouth to mine.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MAIDS OF PARADISE***</p>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Maids of Paradise, by Robert W. (Robert
+William) Chambers
+
+
+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: The Maids of Paradise
+
+
+Author: Robert W. (Robert William) Chambers
+
+
+
+Release Date: March 9, 2009 [eBook #28295]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MAIDS OF PARADISE***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Roger Frank and the Project Gutenberg Online
+Distributed Proofreading Canada Team (http://www.pgdpcanada.net)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 28295-h.htm or 28295-h.zip:
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/8/2/9/28295/28295-h/28295-h.htm)
+ or
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/8/2/9/28295/28295-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MAIDS OF PARADISE
+
+A Novel
+
+by
+
+ROBERT W. CHAMBERS
+
+Author of "Cardigan" "The Conspirators" "Maid-at-Arms" etc.
+
+Illustrated
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: "'LOOK THERE!' SHE CRIED, IN TERROR" [See p. 81]]
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+New York and London
+Harper & Brothers
+Publishers 1903
+
+Copyright, 1902, by Robert W. Chambers.
+All rights reserved.
+
+Published September, 1903.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+As far as the writer knows, no treasure-trains were actually sent to
+the port of Lorient from the arsenal at Brest. The treasures remained
+at Brest.
+
+Concerning the German armored cruiser _Augusta_, the following are the
+facts: About the middle of December she forced the blockade at
+Wilhelmshafen and ran for Ireland, where, owing to the complaisance of
+the British authorities, she was permitted to coal.
+
+From there she steamed towards Brest, capturing a French merchant
+craft off that port, another near Rochefort, and finally a third. That
+ended her active career during the war; a French frigate chased her
+into the port of Vigo and kept her there.
+
+To conclude, certain localities and certain characters have been
+sufficiently disguised to render recognition improbable. This is
+proper because "The Lizard" is possibly alive to-day, as are also the
+mayor of Paradise, Sylvia Elven, Jacqueline, and Speed, the latter
+having barely escaped death in the _Virginius_ expedition. The
+original of Buckhurst now lives in New York, and remains a type whose
+rarity is its only recommendation.
+
+Those who believe they recognize the Countess de Vassart are doubtless
+in error. Mornac, long dead, is safe in his disguise; Tric-Trac was
+executed on the Place de la Roquette, and celebrated in doggerel by an
+unspeakable ballad writer. There remains Scarlett; dead or alive, I
+wish him well.
+
+ ROBERT W. CHAMBERS.
+Ormond, Florida, _Feb. 7_, 1902.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: To E.M.C.]
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ CHAP. PAGE
+ I. At the Telegraph 3
+ II. The Government Interferes 21
+ III. La Trappe 34
+ IV. Prisoners 50
+ V. The Immortals 65
+ VI. The Game Begins 87
+ VII. A Struggle Foreshadowed 110
+ VIII. A Man to Let 136
+ IX. The Road to Paradise 159
+ X. The Town-Crier 171
+ XI. In Camp 180
+ XII. Jacqueline 195
+ XIII. Friends 207
+ XIV. The Path of the Lizard 229
+ XV. Forewarned 253
+ XVI. A Restless Man 265
+ XVII. The Circus 280
+ XVIII. A Guest-Chamber 303
+ XIX. Trecourt Garden 318
+ XX. The Semaphore 339
+ XXI. Like Her Ancestors 353
+ XXII. The Secret 381
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+ "'LOOK THERE!' SHE CRIED, IN TERROR" _Frontispiece_
+ "'ACROSS THAT MEADOW,' SAID THE YOUNG GIRL" _Facing p_. 22
+ "TO RIGHT AND LEFT, PRUSSIAN LANCERS WERE RIDING" " 62
+ "A COMPANY OF TURCOS CAME UP" " 74
+ "'HALT! HALT!' HE SHOUTED" " 84
+ "EVERY BRIDGE WAS GUARDED" " 124
+ "SISTERS OF CHARITY WERE GIVING FIRST AID" " 132
+ "I WAS ON MY KNEES" " 298
+
+
+
+
+PART FIRST
+
+
+
+
+THE MAIDS OF PARADISE
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+AT THE TELEGRAPH
+
+
+On the third day of August, 1870, I left Paris in search of John
+Buckhurst.
+
+On the 4th of August I lost all traces of Mr. Buckhurst near the
+frontier, in the village of Morsbronn. The remainder of the day I
+spent in acquiring that "general information" so dear to the
+officials in Paris whose flimsy systems of intelligence had already
+begun to break down.
+
+On August 5th, about eight o'clock in the morning, the military
+telegraph instrument in the operator's room over the temporary
+barracks of the Third Hussars clicked out the call for urgency, not
+the usual military signal, but a secret sequence understood only by
+certain officers of the Imperial Military Police. The operator on duty
+therefore stepped into my room and waited while I took his place at
+the wire.
+
+I had been using the code-book that morning, preparing despatches for
+Paris, and now, at the first series of significant clicks, I dropped
+my left middle finger on the key and repeated the signal to Paris,
+using the required variations. Then I rose, locked the door, and
+returned to the table.
+
+"Who is this?" came over the wire in the secret code; and I answered
+at once: "Inspector of Foreign Division, Imperial Military Police, on
+duty at Morsbronn, Alsace."
+
+After considerable delay the next message arrived in the Morse code:
+"Is that you, Scarlett?"
+
+And I replied: "Yes. Who are you? Why do you not use the code? Repeat
+the code signal and your number."
+
+The signal was repeated, then came the message: "This is the
+Tuileries. You have my authority to use the Morse code for the sake of
+brevity. Do you understand? I am Jarras. The Empress is here."
+Instantly reassured by the message from Colonel Jarras, head of the
+bureau to which I was attached, I answered that I understood. Then the
+telegrams began to fly, all in the Morse code:
+
+_Jarras._ "Have you caught Buckhurst?"
+
+_I._ "No."
+
+_Jarras._ "How did he get away?"
+
+_I._ "There's confusion enough on the frontier to cover the escape of
+a hundred thieves."
+
+_Jarras._ "Your reply alarms the Empress. State briefly the present
+position of the First Corps."
+
+_I._ "The First Corps still occupies the heights in a straight line
+about seven kilometres long; the plateau is covered with vineyards.
+Two small rivers are in front of us; the Vosges are behind us; the
+right flank pivots on Morsbronn, the left on Neehwiller; the centre
+covers Woerth. We have had forty-eight hours' heavy rain."
+
+_Jarras._ "Where are the Germans?"
+
+_I._ "Precise information not obtainable at headquarters of the First
+Corps."
+
+_Jarras._ "Does the Marshal not know where the Germans are?"
+
+_I._ "Marshal MacMahon does not know definitely."
+
+_Jarras._ "Does the Marshal not employ his cavalry? Where are they?"
+
+_I._ "Septeuil's cavalry of the second division lie between
+Elsasshausen and the Grosserwald; Michel's brigade of heavy cavalry
+camps at Eberbach; the second division of cavalry of the reserve,
+General Vicomte de Bonnemain, should arrive to-night and go into
+bivouac between Reichshofen and the Grosserwald."
+
+There was a long pause; I lighted a cigar and waited. After a while
+the instrument began again:
+
+_Jarras._ "The Empress desires to know where the chateau called La
+Trappe is."
+
+_I._ "La Trappe is about four kilometres from Morsbronn, near the
+hamlet of Trois-Feuilles."
+
+_Jarras._ "It is understood that Madame de Vassart's group of
+socialists are about to leave La Trappe for Paradise, in Morbihan. It
+is possible that Buckhurst has taken refuge among them. Therefore you
+will proceed to La Trappe. Do you understand?"
+
+_I._ "Perfectly."
+
+_Jarras._ "If Buckhurst is found you will bring him to Paris at once.
+Shoot him if he resists arrest. If the community at La Trappe has not
+been warned of a possible visit from us, you will find and arrest the
+following individuals:
+
+"Claude Tavernier, late professor of law, Paris School of Law;
+
+"Achille Bazard, ex-instructor in mathematics, Fontainebleau
+Artillery School;
+
+"Dr. Leo Delmont, ex-interne, Charity Hospital, Paris;
+
+"Mlle. Sylvia Elven, lately of the Odeon;
+
+"The Countess de Vassart, well known for her eccentricities.
+
+"You will affix the government seals to the house as usual; you will
+then escort the people named to the nearest point on the Belgian
+frontier. The Countess de Vassart usually dresses like a common
+peasant. Look out that she does not slip through your fingers. Repeat
+your instructions." I repeated them from my memoranda.
+
+There was a pause, then click! click! the instrument gave the code
+signal that the matter was ended, and I repeated the signal, opened my
+code-book, and began to translate the instructions into cipher for
+safety's sake.
+
+When I had finished and had carefully destroyed my first pencilled
+memoranda, the steady bumping of artillery passing through the street
+under the windows drew my attention.
+
+It proved to be the expected batteries of the reserve going into park,
+between the two brigades of Raoult's division of infantry. I
+telegraphed the news to the observatory on the Col du Pigeonnier, then
+walked back to the window and looked out.
+
+It had begun to rain again; down the solitary street of Morsbronn the
+artillery rolled, jolting; cannoneers, wrapped in their wet, gray
+overcoats, limbers, caissons, and horses plastered with mud. The slim
+cannon, with canvas-wrapped breeches uptilted, dripped from their
+depressed muzzles, like lank monsters slavering and discouraged.
+
+A battery of Montigny mitrailleuses passed, grotesque, hump-backed
+little engines of destruction. To me there was always something
+repulsive in the shape of these stunted cannon, these malicious metal
+cripples with their heavy bodies and sinister, filthy mouths.
+
+Before the drenched artillery had rattled out of Morsbronn the rain
+once more fell in floods, pouring a perpendicular torrent from the
+transparent, gray heavens, and the roar of the downpour on slate roofs
+and ancient gables drowned the pounding of the passing cannon.
+
+Where the Vosges mountains towered in obscurity a curtain of rain
+joined earth and sky. The rivers ran yellow, brimful, foaming at the
+fords. The semaphore on the mountain of the Pigeonnier was not
+visible; but across the bridge, where the Gunstett highway spanned the
+Sauer, gray masses of the Niederwald loomed through the rain.
+
+Somewhere in that spectral forest Prussian cavalry were hidden,
+watching the heights where our drenched divisions lay. Behind that
+forest a German army was massing, fresh from the combat in the north,
+where the tragedy of Wissembourg had been enacted only the day before,
+in the presence of the entire French army--the awful spectacle of a
+single division of seven thousand men suddenly enveloped and crushed
+by seventy thousand Germans.
+
+The rain fell steadily but less heavily. I went back to my instrument
+and called up the station on the Col du Pigeonnier, asking for
+information, but got no reply, the storm doubtless interfering.
+
+Officers of the Third Hussars were continually tramping up and down
+the muddy stairway, laughing, joking, swearing at the rain, or
+shouting for their horses, when the trumpets sounded in the street
+below.
+
+I watched the departing squadron, splashing away down the street,
+which was now running water like a river; then I changed my civilian
+clothes for a hussar uniform, sent a trooper to find me a horse, and
+sat down by the window to stare at the downpour and think how best I
+might carry out my instructions to a successful finish.
+
+The colony at La Trappe was, as far as I could judge, a product of
+conditions which had, a hundred years before, culminated in the French
+Revolution. Now, in 1870, but under different circumstances, all
+France was once more disintegrating socially. Opposition to the
+Empire, to the dynasty, to the government, had been seething for
+years; now the separate crystals which formed on the edges of the
+boiling under-currents began to grow into masses which, adhering to
+other masses, interfered with the healthy functions of national life.
+
+Until recently, however, while among the dissatisfied there existed a
+certain tendency towards cohesion, and while, moreover, adhesive
+forces mutually impelled separate groups of malcontents to closer
+union, the government found nothing alarming in the menaces of
+individuals or of isolated groups. The Emperor always counted on such
+opposition in Paris; the palace of the Tuileries was practically a
+besieged place, menaced always by the faubourgs--a castle before which
+lay eternally the sullen, unorganized multitude over which the
+municipal police kept watch.
+
+That opposition, hatred, and treason existed never worried the
+government, but that this opposition should remain unorganized
+occupied the authorities constantly.
+
+Groups of individuals who proclaimed themselves devotees of social
+theories interested us only when the groups grew large or exhibited
+tendencies to unite with similar groups.
+
+Clubs formed to discuss social questions were usually watched by the
+police; violent organizations were not observed very closely, but
+clubs founded upon moderate principles were always closely surveyed.
+
+In the faubourgs, where every street had its bawling orator, and where
+the red flag was waved when the community had become sufficiently
+drunk, the government was quietly content to ignore proceedings,
+wisely understanding that the mouths of street orators were the
+safety-valves of the faubourgs, and that through them the ebullitions
+of the under-world escaped with nothing more serious than a few vinous
+shrieks. There were, however, certain secret and semi-secret
+organizations which caused the government concern. First among these
+came the International Society of Workingmen, with all its
+affiliations--the "Internationale," as it was called. In its wake
+trailed minor societies, some mild and harmless, some dangerous and
+secret, some violent, advocating openly the destruction of all
+existing conditions. Small groups of anarchists had already attracted
+groups of moderate socialistic tendencies to them, and had absorbed
+them or tainted them with doctrines dangerous to the state.
+
+In time these groups began to adhere even more closely to the large
+bodies of the people; a party was born, small at first, embodying
+conflicting communistic principles.
+
+The government watched it. Presently it split, as do all parties; yet
+here the paradox was revealed of a small party splitting into two
+larger halves. To one of these halves adhered the Red Republicans, the
+government opposition of the Extreme Left, the Opportunists, the
+Anarchists, certain Socialists, the so-called Communards, and finally
+the vast mass of the sullen, teeming faubourgs. It became a party
+closely affiliated with the Internationale, a colossal, restless,
+unorganized menace, harmless only because unorganized.
+
+And the police were expected to keep it harmless. The other remaining
+half of the original party began to dwindle almost immediately, until
+it became only a group. _With one exception_, all those whom the
+police and the government regarded as inclined to violence left the
+group. There remained, _with this one exception_, a nucleus of
+earnest, thoughtful people whose creed was in part the creed of the
+Internationale, the creed of universal brotherhood, equality before
+the law, purity of individual living as an example and an incentive to
+a national purity.
+
+To this inoffensive group came one day a young widow, the Countess de
+Vassart, placing at their disposal her great wealth, asking only to be
+received among them as a comrade.
+
+Her history, as known to the police, was peculiar and rather sad: at
+sixteen she had been betrothed to an elderly, bull-necked colonel of
+cavalry, the notorious Count de Vassart, who needed what money she
+might bring him to maintain his reputation as the most brilliantly
+dissolute old rake in Paris.
+
+At sixteen, Eline de Trecourt was a thin, red-haired girl, with rather
+large, grayish eyes. Speed and I saw her once, sitting in her carriage
+before the Ministry of War a year after her marriage. There had been
+bad news from Mexico, and there were many handsome equipages standing
+at the gates of the war office, where lists of killed and wounded were
+posted every day.
+
+I noticed her particularly because of her reputed wealth and the evil
+reputation of her husband, who, it was said, was so open in his
+contempt for her that the very afternoon of their marriage he was seen
+publicly driving on the Champs-Elysees with a pretty and popular
+actress of the Odeon.
+
+As I passed, glancing up at her, the sadness of her face impressed me,
+and I remember wondering how much the death of her husband had to do
+with it--for his name had appeared in the evening papers under the
+heading, "Killed in Action."
+
+It was several years later before the police began to take an interest
+in the Comtesse Eline de Vassart. She had withdrawn entirely from
+society, had founded a non-sectarian free school in Passy, was
+interested in certain charities and refuges for young working-girls,
+when on a visit to England, she met Karl Marx, then a fugitive and
+under sentence of death.
+
+From that moment social questions occupied her, and her doings
+interested the police, especially when she returned to Paris and took
+her place once more in Royalist circles, where every baby was bred
+from the cradle to renounce the Tuileries, the Emperor, and all his
+works.
+
+Serious, tender-hearted, charitable, and intensely interested in all
+social reforms, she shocked the conservative society of the noble
+faubourg, aroused the distrust of the government, offended the
+Tuileries, and finally committed the mistake of receiving at her own
+house that notorious group of malcontents headed by Henri Rochefort,
+whose revolutionary newspaper, _La Marseillaise_, doubtless needed
+pecuniary support.
+
+Her dossier--for, alas! the young girl already had a dossier--was
+interesting, particularly in its summing-up of her personal
+character:
+
+"To the naive ignorance of a convent pensionnaire, she adds an
+innocence of mind, a purity of conduct, and a credulity which render
+her an easy prey to the adroit, who play upon her sympathies. She is
+dangerous only as a source of revenue for dangerous men."
+
+It was from her salon that young Victor Noir went to his death at
+Auteuil on the 10th of January; and possibly the shock of the murder
+and the almost universal conviction that justice under the Empire was
+hopeless drove the young Countess to seek a refuge in the country
+where, at her house of La Trappe, she could quietly devote her life to
+helping the desperately wretched, and where she could, in security,
+hold council with those who also had chosen to give their lives to
+the noblest of all works--charity and the propaganda of universal
+brotherhood.
+
+And here, at La Trappe, the young aristocrat first donned the robe of
+democracy, dedicated her life and fortune to the cause, and worked
+with her own delicate hands for every morsel of bread that passed her
+lips.
+
+Now this was all very well while it lasted, for her father, the
+choleric old Comte de Trecourt, had died rich, and the young girl's
+charities were doubled, and there was nobody to stay her hand or draw
+the generous purse-strings; nobody to advise her or to stop her. On
+the contrary, there were plenty of people standing around with
+outstretched, itching, and sometimes dirty hands, ready to snatch at
+the last centime.
+
+Who was there to administer her affairs, who among the generous,
+impetuous, ill-balanced friends that surrounded her? Not the
+noble-minded geographer, Elisee Reclus; not the fiery citizen-count,
+Rochefort; not the handsome, cultivated Gustave Flourens, already
+"fey" with the doom to which he had been born; not that kindly
+visionary, the Vicomte de Coursay-Delmont, now discarding his ancient
+title to be known only among his grateful, penniless patients as
+Doctor Delmont; and surely not Professor Tavernier, nor yet that
+militant hermit, the young Chevalier de Gray, calling himself plain
+Monsieur Bazard, who chose democracy instead of the brilliant career
+to which Grammont had destined him, and whose sensitive and perhaps
+diseased mind had never recovered from the shock of the murder of his
+comrade, Victor Noir.
+
+But the simple life at La Trappe, the negative protest against the
+Empire and all existing social conditions, the purity of motive, the
+serene and inspired self-abnegation, could not save the colony at La
+Trappe nor the young chatelaine from the claws of those who prey upon
+the innocence of the generous.
+
+And so came to this ideal community one John Buckhurst, a stranger,
+quiet, suave, deadly pale, a finely moulded man, with delicately
+fashioned hands and feet, and two eyes so colorless that in some
+lights they appeared to be almost sightless.
+
+In a month from that time he was the power that moved that community
+even in its most insignificant machinery. With marvellous skill he
+constructed out of that simple republic of protestants an absolute
+despotism. And he was the despot.
+
+The avowed object of the society was the advancement of universal
+brotherhood, of liberty and equality, the annihilation of those
+arbitrary barriers called national frontiers--in short, a society for
+the encouragement of the millennium, which, however, appeared to be
+coy.
+
+And before the eyes of his brother dreamers John Buckhurst quietly
+cancelled the entire programme at one stroke, and nobody understood
+that it was cancelled when, in a community founded upon equality and
+fraternity, he raised another edifice to crown it, a sort of working
+model as an example to the world, but _limited_. And down went
+democracy without a sound.
+
+This working model was a superior community which was established at
+the Breton home of the Countess de Vassart, a large stone house in the
+hamlet of Paradise, in Morbihan.
+
+An intimation from the Tuileries interrupted a meeting of the council
+at the house in Paradise; an arrest was threatened--that of Professor
+Reclus--and the indignant young Countess was requested to retire to
+her chateau of La Trappe. She obeyed, but invited her guests to
+accompany her. Among those who accepted was Buckhurst.
+
+About this time the government began to take a serious interest in
+John Buckhurst. On the secret staff of the Imperial Military Police
+were always certain foreigners--among others, myself and a young man
+named James Speed; and Colonel Jarras had already decided to employ us
+in watching Buckhurst, when war came on France like a bolt from the
+blue, giving the men of the Secret Service all they could attend to.
+
+In the shameful indecision and confusion attending the first few days
+after the declaration of war against Prussia, Buckhurst slipped
+through our fingers, and I, for one, did not expect to hear of him
+again. But I did not begin to know John Buckhurst, for, within three
+days after he had avoided an encounter with us, Buckhurst was believed
+to have committed one of the most celebrated crimes of the century.
+
+The secret history of that unhappy war will never be fully written.
+Prince Bismarck has let the only remaining cat out of the bag; the
+other cats are dead. Nor will all the strange secrets of the Tuileries
+ever be brought to light, fortunately.
+
+Still, at this time, there is no reason why it should not be generally
+known that the crown jewels of France were menaced from the very first
+by a conspiracy so alarming and apparently so irresistible that the
+Emperor himself believed, even in the beginning of the fatal campaign,
+that it might be necessary to send the crown jewels of France to the
+Bank of England for safety.
+
+On the 19th of July, the day that war was declared, certain of the
+crown jewels, kept temporarily at the palace of the Tuileries, were
+sent under heavy guards to the Bank of France. Every precaution was
+taken; yet the great diamond crucifix of Louis XI. was missing when
+the guard under Captain Siebert turned over the treasures to the
+governor of the Bank of France.
+
+Instantly absolute secrecy was ordered, which I, for one, believed to
+be a great mistake. Yet the Emperor desired it, doubtless for the same
+reasons which always led him to suppress any affair which might give
+the public an idea that the opposition to the government was worthy of
+the government's attention.
+
+So the news of the robbery never became public property, but from one
+end of France to the other the gendarmerie, the police, local,
+municipal, and secret, were stirred up to activity.
+
+Within forty-eight hours, an individual answering Buckhurst's
+description had sold a single enormous diamond for two hundred and
+fifty thousand francs to a dealer in Strasbourg, a Jew named Fishel
+Cohen, who, counting on the excitement produced by the war and the
+topsy-turvy condition of the city, supposed that such a transaction
+would create no interest.
+
+Mr. Cohen was wrong; an hour after he had recorded the transaction at
+the Strasbourg Diamond Exchange he and the diamond were on their way
+to Paris, in charge of a detective. A few hours later the stone was
+identified at the Tuileries as having been taken from the famous
+crucifix of Louis XI.
+
+From Fishel Cohen's agonized description of the man who had sold him
+the diamond, Colonel Jarras believed he recognized John Buckhurst. But
+how on earth Buckhurst had obtained access to the jewels, or how he
+had managed to spirit away the cross from the very centre of the
+Tuileries, could only be explained through the theory of accomplices
+among the trusted intimates of the imperial entourage. And if there
+existed such a conspiracy, who was involved?
+
+It is violating no secret now to admit that every soul in the
+Tuileries, from highest to lowest, was watched. Even the governor of
+the Bank of France did not escape the attentions of the secret police.
+For it was certain that somebody in the imperial confidence had
+betrayed that confidence in a shocking manner, and nobody could know
+how far the conspiracy had spread, or who was involved in the most
+daring and shameless robbery that had been perpetrated in France since
+Cardinal de Rohan and his gang stole the celebrated necklace of Marie
+Antoinette.
+
+Nor was it at all certain that the remaining jewels of the French
+crown were safe in Paris. The precautions taken to insure their
+safety, and the result of those precautions, are matters of history,
+but nobody outside of a small, strangely assorted company of people
+could know what actually happened to the crown jewels of France in
+1870, or what pieces, if any, are still missing.
+
+My chase after Buckhurst began as soon as Colonel Jarras could summon
+me; and as Buckhurst had last been heard of in Strasbourg, I went
+after him on a train loaded with red-legged, uproarious soldiers, who
+sang all day:
+
+ "Have you seen Bismarck
+ Drinking in the gay cafe,
+ With that other brother spark--
+ Monsieur Badinguet?"
+
+and had drunk themselves into a shameful frenzy long before the train
+thundered into Avricourt.
+
+I tracked Buckhurst to Morsbronn, where I lost all traces of him; and
+now here I was with my orders concerning the unfortunate people at La
+Trappe, staring out at the dismal weather and wondering where my
+wild-goose chase would end.
+
+I went to the door and called for the military telegraph operator,
+whose instrument I had been permitted to monopolize. He came, a
+pleasant, jaunty young fellow, munching a crust of dry bread and
+brushing the crumbs from his scarlet trousers.
+
+"In case I want to communicate with you I'll signal the tower on the
+Col du Pigeonnier," I said. "Come up to the loft overhead."
+
+The loft in the house which had now been turned into a cavalry
+barracks was just above my room, a large attic under the dripping
+gables, black with the stains of centuries, littered with broken
+furniture, discarded clothing, and the odds and ends cherished by the
+thrifty Alsatian peasant, who never throws away anything from the day
+of his birth to the day of his death. And, given a long line of
+forefathers equally thrifty, and an ancient high-gabled house where
+his ancestors first began collecting discarded refuse, the attic of
+necessity was a marvel of litter and decay, among which generations of
+pigeons had built nests and raised countless broods of squealing
+squabs.
+
+Into this attic we climbed, edged our way toward a high window out of
+which the leaded panes had long since tumbled earthward, and finally
+stood together, looking out over the mountains of the Alsatian
+frontier.
+
+The rain had ceased; behind the Col du Pigeonnier sunshine fell
+through a rift in the watery clouds. It touched the rushing river,
+shining on foaming fords where our cavalry pickets were riding in the
+valley mist.
+
+Somewhere up in the vineyards behind us an infantry band was playing;
+away among the wet hills to the left the strumming vibrations of wet
+drums marked the arrival of a regiment from goodness knows where; and
+presently we saw them, their gray overcoats and red trousers soaked
+almost black with rain, rifles en bandouliere, trudging patiently up
+the muddy slope above the town. Something in the plodding steps of
+those wet little soldiers touched me. Bravely their soaked drums
+battered away, bravely they dragged their clumsy feet after them,
+brightly and gayly the breaking sun touched their crimson forage-caps
+and bayonets and the swords of mounted officers; but to me they were
+only a pathetic troop of perplexed peasants, dragged out of the bosom
+of France to be huddled and herded in a strange pasture, where death
+watched them from the forest yonder, marking them for slaughter with
+near-sighted Teutonic eyes.
+
+A column of white cloud suddenly capped the rocks on the vineyard
+above. Bang! and something came whistling with a curious, bird-like
+cry over the village of Morsbronn, flying far out across the valley:
+and among the pines of the Prussian forest a point of flame flashed, a
+distant explosion echoed.
+
+Down in the street below us an old man came tottering from his little
+shop, peering sideways up into the sky.
+
+"Il pleut, berger," called out the operator beside me, in a bantering
+voice.
+
+"It will rain--bullets," said the old man, simply, and returned to
+his shop to drag out a chair on the doorsill and sit and listen to the
+shots which our cavalry outposts were exchanging with the Prussian
+scouts.
+
+"Poor old chap," said the operator; "it will be hard for him. He was
+with the Grand Emperor at Jena."
+
+"You speak as though our army was already on the run," I said.
+
+"Yes," he replied, indifferently, "we'll soon be on the run."
+
+After a moment I said: "I'm going to ride to La Trappe. I wish you
+would send those messages to Paris."
+
+"All right," he said.
+
+Half an hour later I rode out of Morsbronn, clad in the uniform of the
+Third Hussars, a disguise supposed to convey the idea to those at La
+Trappe that the army and not the police were responsible for their
+expulsion.
+
+The warm August sunshine slanted in my face as I galloped away up the
+vineyard road and out on to the long plateau where, on every hillock,
+a hussar picket sat his wiry horse, carbine poised, gazing steadily
+toward the east.
+
+Over the sombre Prussian forests mist hung; away to the north the sun
+glittered on the steel helmets and armor of the heavy cavalry, just
+arriving. And on the Col du Pigeonnier I saw tiny specks move, flags
+signalling the arrival of the Vicomte de Bonnemain with the "grosse
+cavalerie," the splendid cuirassier regiments destined in a few hours
+to join the cuirassiers of Waterloo, riding into that bright Valhalla
+where all good soldiers shall hear the last trumpet call,
+"Dismount!"
+
+With a lingering glance at the rivers which separated us from German
+soil, I turned my horse and galloped away into the hills.
+
+A moist, fern-bordered wood road attracted me; I reasoned that it must
+lead, by a short cut, across the hills to the military highway which
+passed between Trois-Feuilles and La Trappe. So I took it, and
+presently came into four cross-roads unknown to me.
+
+This grassy carrefour was occupied by a flock of turkeys, busily
+engaged in catching grasshoppers; their keeper, a prettily shaped
+peasant girl, looked up at me as I drew bridle, then quietly resumed
+the book she had been reading.
+
+"My child," said I, "if you are as intelligent as you are beautiful,
+you will not be tending other people's turkeys this time next year."
+
+"Merci, beau sabreur!" said the turkey-girl, raising her blue eyes.
+Then the lashes veiled them; she bent her head a little, turning it so
+that the curve of her cheeks gave to her profile that delicate
+contour which is so suggestive of innocence when the ears are small
+and the neck white.
+
+"My child," said I, "will you kindly direct me, with appropriate
+gestures, to the military highway which passes the Chateau de la
+Trappe?"
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+THE GOVERNMENT INTERFERES
+
+
+"There is a short cut across that meadow," said the young girl,
+raising a rounded, sun-tinted arm, bare to the shoulder.
+
+"You are very kind," said I, looking at her steadily.
+
+"And, after that, you will come to a thicket of white birches."
+
+"Thank you, mademoiselle."
+
+"And after that," she said, idly following with her blue eyes the
+contour of her own lovely arm, "you must turn to the left, and there
+you will cross a hill. You can see it from where we stand--"
+
+She glanced at me over her outstretched arm. "You are not listening,"
+she said.
+
+I shifted a troubled gaze to the meadow which stretched out all
+glittering with moist grasses and tufts of rain-drenched wild
+flowers.
+
+The girl's arm slowly fell to her side, she looked up at me again, I
+felt her eyes on me for a moment, then she turned her head toward the
+meadow.
+
+A deadened report shook the summer air--the sound of a cannon fired
+very far away, perhaps on the citadel of Strasbourg. It was so
+distant, so indistinct, that here in this peaceful country it lingered
+only as a vibration; the humming of the clover bees was louder.
+
+Without turning my head I said: "It is difficult to believe that
+there is war anywhere in the world--is it not, mademoiselle?"
+
+"Not if one knows the world," she said, indifferently.
+
+"Do you know it, my child?"
+
+"Sufficiently," she said.
+
+She had opened again the book which she had been reading when I first
+noticed her. From my saddle I saw that it was Moliere. I examined her,
+in detail, from the tips of her small wooden shoes to the scarlet
+velvet-banded skirt, then slowly upward, noting the laced bodice of
+velvet, the bright hair under the butterfly coiffe of Alsace, the
+delicate outline of nose and brow and throat. The ensemble was
+theatrical.
+
+"Why do you tend turkeys?" I asked.
+
+"Because it pleases me," she replied, raising her eyebrows in faint
+displeasure.
+
+"For that same reason you read Monsieur Moliere?" I suggested.
+
+"Doubtless, monsieur."
+
+"Who are you?"
+
+"Is a passport required in France?" she replied, languidly.
+
+"Are you what you pretend to be, an Alsatian turkey tender?"
+
+"Parbleu! There are my turkeys, monsieur."
+
+"Of course, and there is your peasant dress and there are your wooden
+shoes, and there also, mademoiselle, are your soft hands and your
+accented speech and your plays of Moliere."
+
+"You are very wise for a hussar," she said.
+
+"Perhaps," said I, "but I have asked you a question which remains
+parried."
+
+She balanced the hazel rod across her shoulders with a faintly
+malicious smile.
+
+"One might almost believe that you are not a hussar, but an officer
+of the Imperial Police," she said.
+
+[Illustration: "'ACROSS THAT MEADOW,' SAID THE YOUNG GIRL"]
+
+"If you think that," said I, "you should answer my question the
+sooner--unless you come from La Trappe. Do you?"
+
+"Sometimes."
+
+"Oh! And what do you do at the Chateau de la Trappe?"
+
+"I tend poultry--sometimes," she replied.
+
+"And at other times?"
+
+"I do other things, monsieur."
+
+"What things?"
+
+"What things? Mon Dieu, I read a little, as you perceive, monsieur."
+
+"Who are you?" I demanded.
+
+"Oh, a mere nobody in such learned company," she said, shaking her
+head with a mock humility that annoyed me intensely.
+
+"Very well," said I, conscious every moment of her pleasure in my
+discomfiture; "under the circumstances I am going to ask you to
+accept my escort to La Trappe; for I think you are Mademoiselle Elven,
+recently of the Odeon theatre."
+
+At this her eyes widened and the smile on her face became less
+genuine. "Indeed, I shall not go with you," she said.
+
+"I'm afraid I'll have to insist," said I.
+
+She still balanced her hazel rod across her shoulders, a smile curving
+her mouth.
+
+"Monsieur," she said, "do you ride through the world pressing every
+peasant girl you meet with such ardent entreaties? Truly, your fashion
+of wooing is not slow, but everybody knows that hussars are headlong
+gentlemen--'Nothing is sacred from a hussar,'" she hummed,
+deliberately, in a parody which made me writhe in my saddle.
+
+"Mademoiselle," said I, taking off my forage-cap, "your ridicule is
+not the most disagreeable incident that I expect to meet with to-day.
+I am attempting to do my duty, and I must ask you to do yours."
+
+"By taking a walk with you, beau monsieur?"
+
+"I'm afraid so."
+
+"And if I refuse?"
+
+"Then," said I, amiably, "I shall be obliged to set you on my
+horse." And I dismounted and went toward her.
+
+"Set me on--on that horse?" she repeated, with a disturbed smile.
+
+"Will you come on foot, then?"
+
+"No, I will not!" she said, with a click of her teeth.
+
+I looked at my watch--it lacked five minutes to one.
+
+"In five minutes we are going to start," said I, cheerfully, and
+stood waiting, twisting the gilt hilt-tassels of my sabre with nervous
+fingers.
+
+After a silence she said, very seriously, "Monsieur, would you dare
+use violence toward me?"
+
+"Oh, I shall not be very violent," I replied, laughing. I held the
+opened watch in my hand so that she could see the dial if she chose.
+
+"It is one o'clock," I said, closing the hunting-case with a snap.
+
+She looked me steadily in the eyes.
+
+"Will you come with me to La Trappe?"
+
+She did not stir.
+
+I stepped toward her; she gave me a breathless, defiant stare; then in
+an instant I caught her up and swung her high into my saddle, before
+either she or I knew exactly what had happened.
+
+Fury flashed up in her eyes and was gone, leaving them almost blank
+blue. As for me, amazed at what I had done, I stood at her stirrup,
+breathing very fast, with jaws set and chin squared.
+
+She was clever enough not to try to dismount, woman enough not to make
+an awkward struggle or do anything ungraceful. In her face I read an
+immense astonishment; fascination seemed to rivet her eyes on me,
+following my every movement as I shortened one stirrup for her,
+tightened the girths, and laid the bridle in her half-opened hand.
+
+Then, in silence, I led the horse forward through the open gate out
+into the wet meadow.
+
+Wading knee-deep through soaking foliage, I piloted my horse with its
+mute burden across the fields; and, after a few minutes a violent
+desire to laugh seized me and persisted, but I bit my lip and called
+up a few remaining sentiments of decency.
+
+As for my turkey-girl, she sat stiffly in the saddle, with a firmness
+and determination that proved her to be a stranger to horses. I
+scarcely dared look at her, so fearful was I of laughing.
+
+As we emerged from the meadow I heard the cannon sounding again at a
+great distance, and this perhaps sobered me, for presently all desire
+of laughter left me, and I turned into the road which led through the
+birch thicket, anxious to accomplish my mission and have done with it
+as soon as might be.
+
+"Are we near La Trappe?" I asked, respectfully.
+
+Had she pouted, or sulked, or burst into reproaches, I should have
+cared little--in fact, an outburst might have relieved me.
+
+But she answered me so sweetly, and, too, with such composure, that my
+heart smote me for what I had done to her and what I was still to do.
+
+"Would you rather walk?" I asked, looking up at her.
+
+"No, thank you," she said, serenely.
+
+So we went on. The spectacle of a cavalryman in full uniform leading a
+cavalry horse on which was seated an Alsatian girl in bright peasant
+costume appeared to astonish the few people we passed. One of these
+foot-farers, a priest who was travelling in our direction, raised his
+pallid visage to meet my eyes. Then he stole a glance at the girl in
+the saddle, and I saw a tint of faded color settle under his
+transparent skin.
+
+The turkey-girl saluted the priest with a bright smile.
+
+"Fortune of war, father," she said, gayly. "Behold! Alsace in
+chains."
+
+"Is she a prisoner?" said the priest, turning directly on me. Of all
+the masks called faces, never had I set eyes on such a deathly one,
+nor on such pale eyes, all silvery surface without depth enough for a
+spark of light to make them seem alive.
+
+"What do you mean by a prisoner, father?" I asked.
+
+"I mean a prisoner," he said, doggedly.
+
+"When the church cross-examines the government, the towers of Notre
+Dame shake," I said, pleasantly. "I mean no discourtesy, father; it
+is a proverb in Paris."
+
+"There is another proverb," observed the turkey-girl, placidly.
+"Once a little inhabitant of hell stole the key to paradise. His
+punishment was dreadful. They locked him in."
+
+I looked up at her, perplexed and irritated, conscious that she was
+ridiculing me, but unable to comprehend just how. And my irritation
+increased when the priest said, calmly, "Can I aid you, my child?"
+
+She shook her head with a cool smile.
+
+"I am quite safe under the escort of an officer of the Imperial--"
+
+"Wait!" I said, hastily, but she continued, "of the Imperial
+Military Police."
+
+Above all things I had not wanted it known that the Imperial Police
+were moving in this affair at La Trappe, and now this little fool had
+babbled to a strange priest--of all people in the world!
+
+"What have the police to do with this harmless child?" demanded the
+priest, turning on me so suddenly that I involuntarily took a step
+backward.
+
+"Is this the confessional, father?" I replied, sharply. "Go your way
+in peace, and leave to the police what alone concerns the police."
+
+"Render unto Caesar," said the girl, quietly. "Good-bye, father."
+
+Turning to look again at the priest, I was amazed to find him close to
+me, too close for a man with such eyes in his head, for a man who
+moved so swiftly and softly, and, in spite of me, a nervous movement
+of my hand left me with my fingers on the butt of my pistol.
+
+"What the devil is all this?" I blurted out. "Stand aside, father.
+Do you think the Holy Inquisition is back in France? Stand aside then!
+I salute your cloth!"
+
+And I passed on ahead, one hand on the horse's neck, the other
+touching the visor of my scarlet forage-cap. Once I looked back. The
+priest was standing where I had passed him.
+
+We met a dozen people in all, I think, some of them peasants, one or
+two of the better class--a country doctor and a notary among them.
+None appeared to know my turkey-girl, nor did she even glance at them;
+moreover, all answered my inquiries civilly enough, directing me to La
+Trappe, and professing ignorance as to its inhabitants.
+
+"Why do all the people I meet carry bundles?" I demanded of the
+notary.
+
+"Mon Dieu, monsieur, they are too near the frontier to take risks,"
+he replied, blinking through his silver-rimmed spectacles at my
+turkey-girl.
+
+"You mean to say they are running away from their village of
+Trois-Feuilles?" I asked.
+
+"Exactly," he said. "War is a rude guest for poor folk."
+
+Disgusted with the cowardice of the hamlet of Trois-Feuilles, I passed
+on without noticing the man's sneer. In a moment, however, he repassed
+me swiftly, going in the same direction as were we, toward La Trappe.
+
+"Wait a bit!" I called out. "What is your business in that
+direction, monsieur the notary?"
+
+He looked around, muttered indistinctly about having forgotten
+something, and started on ahead of us, but at a sharp "Stop!" from me
+he halted quickly enough.
+
+"Your road lies the other way," I observed, and, as he began to
+protest, I cut him short.
+
+"You change your direction too quickly to suit me," I said. "Come,
+my friend the weather-cock, turn your nose east and follow it or I may
+ask you some questions that might frighten you."
+
+And so I left him also staring after us, and I had half a mind to go
+back and examine his portfolio to see what a snipe-faced notary might
+be carrying about with him.
+
+When I looked up at my turkey-girl, she was sitting more easily in the
+saddle, head bent thoughtfully.
+
+"You see, mademoiselle, I take no chances of not finding my friends
+at home," I said.
+
+"What friends, monsieur?"
+
+"My friends at La Trappe."
+
+"Oh! And ... you think that the notary we passed might have desired
+to prepare them for your visit, monsieur?"
+
+"Possibly. The notary of Trois-Feuilles and the Chateau de la Trappe
+may not be unknown to each other. Perhaps even mademoiselle the
+turkey-girl may number the learned Trappists among her friends."
+
+"Perhaps," she said.
+
+Walking on along the muddy road beside her, arm resting on my horse's
+neck, I thought over again of the chances of catching Buckhurst, and
+they seemed slim, especially as after my visit the house at La Trappe
+would be vacant and the colony scattered, or at least out of French
+jurisdiction, and probably settled across the Belgian frontier.
+
+Of course, if the government ordered the expulsion of these people,
+the people must go; but I for one found the order a foolish one,
+because it removed a bait that might attract Buckhurst back where we
+stood a chance of trapping him.
+
+But in a foreign country he could visit his friends freely, and
+whatever movement he might ultimately contemplate against the French
+government could easily be directed from that paradise of anarchists,
+Belgium, without the necessity of his exposing himself to any
+considerable danger.
+
+I was sorry that affairs had taken this turn.
+
+A little breeze began blowing; the scarlet skirt of my turkey-girl
+fluttered above her wooden shoes, and on her head the silk bow
+quivered like a butterfly on a golden blossom.
+
+"They say when the Lord fashioned the first maid of Alsace half the
+angels cried themselves ill with jealousy," said I, looking up at
+her.
+
+"And the other half, monsieur?"
+
+"The sterner half started for Alsace in a body. They were controlled
+with difficulty, mademoiselle. That is why St. Peter was given a key
+to lock them in, not to lock us poor devils out."
+
+After a silence she said, musing: "It is a curious thing, but you
+speak as though you had seen better days."
+
+"No," I said, "I have never seen better days. I am slowly rising in
+the world. Last year I was a lieutenant; I am now inspector."
+
+"I meant," she said, scornfully, "that you had been well-born--a
+gentleman."
+
+"Are gentlemen scarce in the Imperial Military Police?"
+
+"It is not a profession that honors a man."
+
+"Of all people in the world," said I, "the police would be the most
+gratified to believe that this violent world needs no police."
+
+"Monsieur, there is another remedy for violence."
+
+"And what may that remedy be, mademoiselle?"
+
+"Non-resistance--absolute non-resistance," said the girl, earnestly,
+bending her pretty head toward me.
+
+"That is not human nature," I said, laughing.
+
+"Is the justification of human nature our aim in this world?"
+
+"Nor is it possible for mankind to submit to violence," I added.
+
+"I believe otherwise," she said, gravely.
+
+As we mounted the hill along a sandy road, bordered with pines and
+with cool, green thickets of broom and gorse, I looked up at her and
+said: "In spite of your theories, mademoiselle, you yourself refused
+to accompany me."
+
+"But I did not resist your violence," she replied, smiling.
+
+After a moment's silence I said: "For a disciple of a stern and
+colorless creed, you are very human. I am sorry that you believe it
+necessary to reform the world."
+
+She said, thoughtfully: "There is nothing joyless in my creed--above
+all, nothing stern. If it be fanaticism to desire for all the world
+that liberty of thought and speech and deed which I, for one, have
+assumed, then I am, perhaps, a fanatic. If it be fanaticism to detest
+violence and to deplore all resistance to violence, I am a very
+guilty woman, monsieur, and deserve ill of the Emperor's Military
+Police."
+
+This she said with that faintly ironical smile hovering sometimes in
+her eyes, sometimes on her lips, so that it was hard to face her and
+feel quite comfortable.
+
+I began, finally, an elaborate and logical argument, forgetting that
+women reason only with their hearts, and she listened courteously. To
+meet her eyes when I was speaking interrupted my train of thought, and
+often I was constrained to look out across the hills at the heavy,
+solid flanks of the mountains, which seemed to steady my logic and
+bring rebellious thought and wandering wisdom to obedience.
+
+I explained my theory of the acceptance of three things--human nature,
+the past, and the present. Given these, the solution of future
+problems must be a different solution from that which she proposed.
+
+At moments the solemn absurdity of it all came over me--the
+turkey-girl, with her golden head bent, her butterfly coiffe
+a-flutter, discussing ethics with an irresponsible fly-by-night, who
+happened at that period of his career to carry a commission in the
+Imperial Police.
+
+The lazy roadside butterflies flew up in clouds before the
+slow-stepping horse; the hill rabbits, rising to their hindquarters,
+wrinkled their whiskered noses at us; from every thicket speckled
+hedge-birds peered at us as we went our way solemnly deciding those
+eternal questions already ancient when the Talmud branded woman with
+the name of Lilith.
+
+At length, as we reached the summit of the sandy hill, "There is La
+Trappe, monsieur," said my turkey-girl, and once more stretched out
+her lovely arm.
+
+There appeared to be nothing mysterious about the house or its
+surroundings; indeed, a sunnier and more peaceful spot would be hard
+to find in that land of hills, ravines, and rocky woodlands, outposts
+of those cloudy summits soaring skyward in the south.
+
+The house itself was visible through gates of wrought iron, swinging
+wide between pillars of stone, where an avenue stretched away under
+trees to a granite terrace, glittering in the sun. And under the
+terrace a quiet pool lay reflecting tier on tier of stone steps which
+mounted to the bright esplanade above.
+
+There was no porter at the gate to welcome me or to warn me back; the
+wet road lay straight in front, barred only by sunbeams.
+
+"May we enter?" I asked, politely.
+
+She did not answer, and I led the horse down that silent avenue of
+trees towards the terrace and the glassy pool which mirrored the steps
+of stone.
+
+Masses of scarlet geraniums, beds of living coals, glowed above the
+terrace. As we drew nearer, the water caught the blaze of color,
+reflecting the splendor in subdued tints of smothered flame. And
+always, in the pool, I saw the terrace steps, reversed, leading down
+into depths of sombre fire.
+
+"And here we dismount," said I, and offered my aid.
+
+She laid her hands on my shoulders; I swung her to the ground, where
+her sabots clicked and her silver neck-chains jingled in the silence.
+
+I looked around. How intensely still was everything--the leaves, the
+water! The silent blue peaks on the horizon seemed to be watching me;
+the trees around me were so motionless that they also appeared to be
+listening with every leaf.
+
+This quarter of the world was too noiseless for me; there might have
+been a bird-note, a breeze to whisper, a minute stirring of unseen
+life--but there was not.
+
+"Is that house empty?" I asked, turning brusquely on my companion.
+
+"The Countess de Vassart will give you your answer," she replied.
+
+"Kindly announce me, then," I said, grimly, and together we mounted
+the broad flight of steps to the esplanade, above which rose the gray
+mansion of La Trappe.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+LA TRAPPE
+
+
+There was a small company of people gathered at a table which stood in
+the cool shadows of the chateau's eastern wing. Towards these people
+my companion directed her steps; I saw her bend close to the ear of a
+young girl who had already turned to look at me. At the same instant a
+heavily built, handsome man pushed back his chair and stood up,
+regarding me steadily through his spectacles, one hand grasping the
+back of the seat from which he had risen.
+
+Presently the young girl to whom my companion of the morning had
+whispered rose gracefully and came toward me.
+
+Slender, yet with that charming outline of body which youth wears as a
+promise, she moved across the terrace in her flowing robe of crape,
+and welcomed me with a gesture and a pleasant word, which I scarcely
+heard, so stupidly I stood, silenced by the absolute loveliness of the
+girl. Did I say loveliness? No, not that, but something newer,
+something far more fresh, far sweeter, that made mere physical beauty
+a thing less vital than the colorless shadow of a crystal.
+
+She was not only beautiful, she was Beauty itself, incarnate, alive,
+soul and body. Later I noticed that she was badly sun-burned under the
+eyes, that her delicate nose was adorned by an adorable freckle, and
+that she had red hair.... Could this be the Countess de Vassart? What
+a change!
+
+I stepped forward to meet her, and took off my forage-cap.
+
+"Is it true, monsieur, that you have come to arrest us?" she asked,
+in a low voice.
+
+"Yes, madame," I replied, already knowing that she was the Countess.
+She hesitated; then:
+
+"Will you tell me your name? I am Madame de Vassart."
+
+Cap in hand I followed her to the table, where the company had already
+risen. The young Countess presented me with undisturbed simplicity; I
+bowed to my turkey-girl, who proved, after all, to be the actress from
+the Odeon, Sylvia Elven; then I solemnly shook hands with Dr. Leo
+Delmont, Professor Claude Tavernier, and Monsieur Bazard,
+ex-instructor at the Fontainebleau Artillery School, whom I
+immediately recognized as the snipe-faced notary I had met on the
+road.
+
+"Well, sir," exclaimed Dr. Delmont, in his deep, hearty voice, "if
+this peaceful little community is come under your government's
+suspicion, I can only say, Heaven help France!"
+
+"Is not that what we all say in these times, doctor?" I asked.
+
+"When I say 'Heaven help France!' I do not mean Vive l'Empereur!'"
+retorted the big doctor, dryly.
+
+Professor Tavernier, a little, gray-headed savant with used-up eyes,
+asked me mildly if he might know why they all were to be expelled from
+France. I did not reply.
+
+"Is thought no longer free in France?" asked Dr. Delmont, in his
+heavy voice.
+
+"Thought is free in France," I replied, "but its expression is
+sometimes inadvisable, doctor."
+
+"And the Emperor is to be the judge of when it is advisable to
+express one's thoughts?" inquired Professor Tavernier.
+
+"The Emperor," I said, "is generous, broad-minded, and wonderfully
+tolerant. Only those whose attitude incites to disorder are held in
+check."
+
+"According to the holy Code Napoleon," observed Professor Tavernier,
+with a shrug.
+
+"The code kills the body, Napoleon the soul," said Dr. Delmont,
+gravely.
+
+"It was otherwise with Victor Noir," suggested Mademoiselle Elven.
+
+"Yes," added Delmont, "he asked for justice and they gave him ...
+Pierre!"
+
+"I think we are becoming discourteous to our guest, gentlemen," said
+the young Countess, gently.
+
+I bowed to her. After a moment I said: "Doctor, if you do truly
+believe in that universal brotherhood which apparently even tolerates
+within its boundaries a poor devil of the Imperial Police, if your
+creed really means peace and not violence, suffering and patience, not
+provocation and revolt, demonstrate to the government by the example
+of your submission to its decrees that the theories you entertain are
+not the chimeras of generous but unbalanced minds."
+
+"We never had the faintest idea of resisting," said Monsieur Bazard,
+the notary, otherwise the Chevalier de Grey, a lank, hollow-eyed young
+fellow, already marked heavily with the ravages of pulmonary disease.
+But the fierce glitter in his eyes gave the lie to his words.
+
+"Yesterday, Madame la Comtesse," I said, turning to the Countess de
+Vassart, "the Emperor could easily afford to regard with equanimity
+the movement in which you are associated. To-day that is no longer
+possible."
+
+The young Countess gave me a bewildered look.
+
+"Is it true," she asked, "that the Emperor does not know we have
+severed all connection with the Internationale?"
+
+"If that is so," said I, "why does Monsieur Bazard return across the
+fields to warn you of my coming? And why do you harbor John Buckhurst
+at La Trappe? Do you not know he is wanted by the police?"
+
+"But we do not know why," said Dr. Delmont, bending forward and
+pouring himself a glass of red wine. This he drank slowly, eating a
+bit of black bread with it.
+
+"Monsieur Scarlett," said Mademoiselle Elven, suddenly, "why does
+the government want John Buckhurst?"
+
+"That, mademoiselle, is the affair of the government and of John
+Buckhurst," I said.
+
+"Pardon," interrupted Delmont, heavily, "it is the affair of every
+honest man and woman--where a Bonaparte is concerned."
+
+"I do not understand you, doctor," I said.
+
+"Then I will put it brutally," he replied. "We free people fear a
+family a prince of which is a common murderer."
+
+I did not answer; the world has long since judged the slayer of Victor
+Noir.
+
+After a troubled silence the Countess asked me if I would not share
+their repast, and I thanked her and took some bread and grapes and a
+glass of red wine.
+
+The sun had stolen into the corner where we had been sitting, and the
+Countess suggested that we move down to the lawn under the trees; so
+Dr. Delmont and Professor Tavernier lifted the table and bore it down
+the terrace steps, while I carried the chairs to the lawn.
+
+It made me uncomfortable to play the role I was playing among these
+misguided but harmless people; that I showed it in my face is certain,
+for the Countess looked up at me and said, smilingly: "You must not
+look at us so sorrowfully, Monsieur Scarlett. It is we who pity you."
+
+And I replied, "Madame, you are generous," and took my place among
+them and ate and drank with them in silence, listening to the breeze
+in the elms.
+
+Mademoiselle Elven, in her peasant's dress, rested her pretty arm
+across her chair and sighed.
+
+"It is all very well not to resist violence," she said, "but it
+seems to me that the world is going to run over us some day. Is there
+any harm in stepping out of the way, Dr. Delmont?"
+
+The Countess laughed outright.
+
+"Not at all," she said. "But we must not attempt to box the world's
+ears as we run. Must we, doctor?"
+
+Turning her lovely, sun-burned face to me, she continued: "Is it not
+charming here? The quiet is absolute. It is always still. We are
+absurdly contented here; we have no servants, you see, and we all
+plough and harrow and sow and reap--not many acres, because we need
+little. It is one kind of life, quite harmless and passionless,
+monsieur. I have been raking hay this morning. It is so strange that
+the Emperor should be troubled by the silence of these quiet
+fields--"
+
+The distress in her eyes lasted only a moment; she turned and looked
+out across the green meadows, smiling to herself.
+
+"At first when I came here from Paris," she said, "I was at a loss
+to know what to do with all this land. I owe much happiness to Dr.
+Delmont, who suggested that the estate, except what we needed, might
+be loaned free to the people around us. It was an admirable thought;
+we have no longer any poor among us--"
+
+She stopped short and gave me a quick glance. "Please understand me,
+Monsieur Scarlett. I make no merit of giving what I cannot use. That
+would be absurd."
+
+"The world knows, madame, that you have given all you have," I said.
+
+"Then why is your miserable government sending her into exile?" broke
+in Monsieur Bazard, harshly.
+
+"I will tell you," I said, surprised at his tone and manner. "The
+colony at La Trappe is the head and centre of a party which abhors
+war, which refuses resistance, which aims, peacefully perhaps, at
+political and social annihilation. In time of peace this colony is not
+a menace; in time of war it is worse than a menace, monsieur."
+
+I turned to Dr. Delmont.
+
+"With the German armies massing behind the forest borders yonder, it
+is unsafe for the government to leave you here at La Trappe, doctor.
+You are _too neutral_."
+
+"You mean that the government fears treason?" demanded the doctor,
+growing red.
+
+"Yes," I said, "if you insist."
+
+The Countess had turned to me in amazement.
+
+"Treason!" she repeated, in an unsteady voice. "Is it treason for a
+small community to live quietly here in the Alsatian hills, harming
+nobody, asking nothing save freedom of thought? Is it treason for a
+woman of the world to renounce the world? Is it treason for her to
+live an unostentatious life and use her fortune to aid others to live?
+Treason! Monsieur, the word has an ugly ring to me. I am a soldier's
+daughter!"
+
+There was something touchingly illogical in the last words--this young
+apostle of peace naively displaying her credentials as though the mere
+word "soldier" covered everything.
+
+"Your government insults us all," said Bazard, between his teeth.
+
+Mademoiselle Elven leaned forward, her blue eyes shining angrily.
+
+"Because I have learned that the boundaries of nations are not the
+frontiers of human hearts, am I a traitor? Because I know no country
+but the world, no speech but the universal speech that one reads in a
+brother's eyes, because I know no barriers, no boundaries, no limits
+to human brotherhood, am I a traitor?"
+
+She made an exquisite gesture with half-open arms; all the poetry of
+the Theatre Francais was in it.
+
+"Look at me! I had all that life could give, save freedom, and that I
+have now--freedom in thought, in speech, in action, freedom to love as
+friends love, freedom to love as lovers love. Ah, more! freedom from
+caste, from hate and envy and all suspicion, freedom to give, freedom
+to receive, freedom in life and in death! Am I a traitor? What do I
+betray? Shame on your Emperor!"
+
+The young Countess, too, had risen in her earnestness and had laid one
+slender, sun-tanned hand upon the table.
+
+"War?" she said. "What is this war to us? The Emperor? What is he to
+us? We who have set a watch on the world's outer ramparts, guarding
+the white banner of universal brotherhood! What is this war to us!"
+
+"Are you not a native of France?" I asked, bluntly.
+
+"I am a native of the world, monsieur."
+
+"Do you mean to say that you care nothing for your own birthland?" I
+demanded, sharply.
+
+"I love the world--all of it--every inch--and if France is part of
+the world, so is this Prussia that we are teaching our poor peasants
+to hate."
+
+"Madame," said I, "the women of France to-day think differently. Our
+Creator did not make love of country a trite virtue, but a passion,
+and set it in our bodies along with our other passions. If in you it
+is absent, that concerns pathology, not the police!"
+
+I did not mean to wound her--I was intensely in earnest; I wanted her
+to show just a single glimmer of sympathy for her own country. It
+seemed as though I could not endure to look at such a woman and know
+that the primal passion, born with those who had at least wept for
+their natal Eden, was meaningless to her.
+
+She had turned a trifle pale; now she sank back into her chair,
+looking at me with those troubled gray eyes in which Heaven itself had
+set truth and loyalty.
+
+I said: "I do not believe that you care nothing for France. Train and
+curb and crush your own heart as you will, you cannot drive out that
+splendid earth-born humanity which is part of us--else we had all been
+born in heaven!"
+
+"Come," said Bazard, in a rage-choked voice, "let it end here,
+Monsieur Scarlett. If the government sends you here as a spy and an
+official, pray remember that you are not also sent as a missionary."
+
+My ears began to burn. "That is true," I said, looking at the
+Countess, whose face had become expressionless. "I ask your pardon
+for what I have said and ... for what I am about to do."
+
+There was a silence. Then, in a low voice, I placed them under formal
+arrest, one by one, touching each lightly on the shoulder as
+prescribed by the code. And when I came to the Countess, she rose,
+without embarrassment. I moved my lips and stretched out my arm,
+barely touching her. I heard Bazard draw a deep breath. She was my
+prisoner.
+
+"I must ask you to prepare for a journey," I said. "You have your
+own horses, of course?"
+
+Without answering, Dr. Delmont walked away towards the stables;
+Professor Tavernier followed him, head bent.
+
+"We shall want very little," said the Countess, calmly, to
+Mademoiselle Elven. "Will you pack up what we need? And you, Monsieur
+Bazard, will you be good enough to go to Trois-Feuilles and hire old
+Brauer's carriage?" Turning to me she said: "I must ask for a little
+delay; I have no longer a carriage of my own. We keep two horses to
+plough and draw grain; they can be harnessed to the farm-wagon for our
+effects."
+
+Monsieur Bazard's hectic visage flushed, he gave me a crazy stare,
+and, for a moment, I fancied there was murder in his bright eyes.
+Doubtless, however, devotion to his creed of non-resistance conquered
+the impulse, and he walked quickly away across the meadows, his
+skeleton hands clinched under his loose sleeves.
+
+Mademoiselle Elven also departed tip-tap! up the terrace in her
+coquettish wooden shoes, leaving me alone with the Countess under the
+trees.
+
+"Madame," said I, "before I affix the government seals to the doors
+of your house I must ask you to conduct me to the roof of the east
+wing."
+
+She bent her head in acquiescence; I followed her up the terrace into
+a stone hall where the dark Flemish pictures stared back at me and my
+spurred heels jingled in the silence. Up, up, and still up, winding
+around a Gothic spiral, then through a passage under the battlements
+and out across the slates, with wind and setting sun in my face and
+the sighing tree-tops far below.
+
+Without glancing at me the Countess walked to the edge of the leads
+and looked down along the sheer declivity of the stone facade.
+Slender, exquisite, she stood there, a lonely shape against the sky,
+and I saw the sun glowing on her burnished red-gold hair, and her
+sun-burned hands, half unclosed, hanging at her side.
+
+South, north, and west the mountains towered, purple as the bloom on
+October grapes; the white arm of the semaphore on the Pigeonnier was
+tinted with rose color; green velvet clothed the world, under a silver
+veil.
+
+In the north a spark of white fire began to flicker on the crest of
+Mount Tonnerre. It was the mirror of a heliograph flashing out across
+leagues of gray-green hills to the rocky pulpit of the Pigeonnier.
+
+I unslung my glasses and levelled them. The shining arm of the
+semaphore fell to a horizontal position and remained rigid; down came
+the signal flags, up went a red globe and two cones. Another string of
+flags blossomed along the bellying halliards; the white star flashed
+twice on Mount Tonnerre and went out.
+
+Instantly I drew a flag from my pouch, tied it to the point of my
+sabre, and stepped out along the projecting snout of a gargoyle.
+Below, under my feet, the tree-tops rustled in the wind.
+
+I had been flagging the Pigeonnier vigorously for ten minutes without
+result, when suddenly a dark dot appeared on the tower beneath the
+semaphore, then another. My glasses brought out two officers, one with
+a flag; and, still watching them through the binoculars, I signalled
+slowly, using my free hand: "This is La Trappe. Telegraph to
+Morsbronn that the inspector of Imperial Police requires a peloton of
+mounted gendarmes at once."
+
+Then I sat down on the sun-warmed slates and waited, amusing myself by
+watching the ever-changing display of signal flags on the distant
+observatory.
+
+It may have been half a minute before I saw two officers advance to
+the railing of the tower and signal: "Attention, La Trappe!"
+
+Pencil and pad on my knee, I managed to use my field-glasses and jot
+down the message:
+
+"Peloton of mounted gendarmes goes to you as soon as possible.
+Repeat."
+
+I repeated, then raised my glasses. Another message came by flag:
+"Attention, La Trappe. Uhlans reported near the village of
+Trois-Feuilles; have you seen them?"
+
+Prussian Uhlans! Here in the rear of our entire army! Nonsense! And I
+signalled a vigorous:
+
+"No. Have you?"
+
+To which came the disturbing reply: "Be on your guard. We are ordered
+to display the semaphore at danger. Report is credited at
+headquarters. Repeat."
+
+I repeated. Raising my glasses again, I could plainly see a young
+officer, an unlighted cigar between his teeth, jotting down our
+correspondence, while the other officer who had flagged me furled up
+his flags and laid them aside, yawning and stretching himself to his
+full height.
+
+So distinctly did my powerful binoculars bring the station into range
+that I could even see the younger officer light a match, which the
+wind extinguished, light another, and presently blow a tiny cloud of
+smoke from his cigar.
+
+The Countess de Vassart had come up to where I was standing on the
+gargoyle, balanced over the gulf below. Very cautiously I began to
+step backward, for there was not room to turn around.
+
+"Would you care to look at the Pigeonnier, madame?" I asked, glancing
+at her over my shoulder.
+
+"I beg you will be careful," she said. "It is a useless risk to
+stand out there."
+
+I had never known the dread of great heights which many people feel,
+and I laughed and stepped backward, expecting to land on the parapet
+behind me. But the point of my scabbard struck against the
+battlements, forcing me outward; I stumbled, staggered, and swayed a
+moment, striving desperately to recover my balance; I felt my gloved
+fingers slipping along the smooth face of the parapet, my knees gave
+way with horror; then my fingers clutched something--an arm--and I
+swung back, slap against the parapet, hanging to that arm with all my
+weight. A terrible effort and I planted my boots on the leads and
+looked up with sick eyes into the eyes of the Countess.
+
+"Can you stand it?" I groaned, clutching her arm with my other hand.
+
+"Yes--don't be afraid," she said, calmly. "Draw me toward you; I
+cannot draw you over."
+
+"Press your knees against the battlements," I gasped.
+
+She bent one knee and wedged it into a niche.
+
+"Don't be afraid; you are not hurting me," she said, with a ghastly
+smile.
+
+I raised one hand and caught her shoulder, then, drawn forward, I
+seized the parapet in both arms, and vaulted to the slate roof.
+
+A fog seemed to blot my eyes; I shook from hair to heel and laid my
+head against the solid stone, while the blank, throbbing seconds past.
+The Countess stood there, shocked and breathless. I saw her sleeve in
+rags, and the snowy skin all bruised beneath.
+
+I tried to thank her; we both were badly shaken, and I do not know
+that she even heard me. Her burnished hair had sagged to her white
+neck; she twisted it up with unsteady fingers and turned away. I
+followed slowly, back through the dim galleries, and presently she
+seemed to remember my presence and waited for me as I felt my way
+along the passage.
+
+"Every little shadow is a yawning gulf," I said. "My nerve is gone,
+madame. The banging of my own sabre scares me."
+
+I strove to speak lightly, but my voice trembled, and so did hers when
+she said: "High places always terrify me; something below seems to
+draw me. Did you ever have that dreadful impulse to sway forward into
+a precipice?"
+
+There was a subtle change in her voice and manner, something almost
+friendly in her gray eyes as she looked curiously at me when we came
+into the half-light of an inner gallery.
+
+What irony lurks in blind chance that I should owe this woman my
+life--this woman whose home I had come to confiscate, whose friends I
+had arrested, who herself was now my prisoner, destined to the shame
+of exile!
+
+Perhaps she divined my thoughts--I do not know--but she turned her
+troubled eyes to the arched window, where a painted saint imbedded in
+golden glass knelt and beat his breast with two heavy stones.
+
+"Madame," I said, slowly, "your courage and your goodness to me have
+made my task a heavy one. Can I lighten it for you in any manner?"
+
+She turned towards me, almost timidly. "Could I go to Morsbronn
+before--before I cross the frontier? I have a house there; there are a
+few things I would like to take--"
+
+She stopped short, seeing, doubtless, the pain of refusal in my face.
+"But, after all, it does not matter. I suppose your orders are
+formal?"
+
+"Yes, madame."
+
+"Then it is a matter of honor?"
+
+"A soldier is always on his honor; a soldier's daughter will
+understand that."
+
+"I understand," she said.
+
+After a moment she smiled and moved forward, saying:
+
+"How the world tosses us--flinging strangers into each other's arms,
+parting brothers, leading enemies across each other's paths! One has a
+glimpse of kindly eyes--and never meets them again. Often and often I
+have seen a good face in the lamp-lit street that I could call out to,
+'Be friends with me!' Then it is gone--and I am gone--Oh, it is
+curiously sad, Monsieur Scarlett!"
+
+"Does your creed teach you to care for everybody, madame?"
+
+"Yes--I try to. Some attract me so strongly--some I pity so. I think
+that if people only knew that there was no such thing as a stranger in
+the world, the world might be a paradise in time."
+
+"It might be, some day, if all the world were as good as you,
+madame."
+
+"Oh, I am only a perplexed woman," she said, laughing. "I do so long
+for the freedom of all the world, absolute individual liberty and no
+law but that best of all laws--the law of the unselfish."
+
+We had stopped, by a mutual impulse, at the head of the stone
+stairway.
+
+"Why do you shelter such a man as John Buckhurst?" I asked,
+abruptly.
+
+She raised her eyes to me with perfect composure.
+
+"Why do you ask?"
+
+"Because I have come here from Paris to arrest him."
+
+She bent her head thoughtfully and laid the tips of her fingers on the
+sculptured balustrade.
+
+"To me," she said, "there's no such thing as a political crime."
+
+"It is not for a political crime that we want John Buckhurst," I
+said, watching her. "It is for a civil outrage."
+
+Her face was like marble; her hands tightened on the fretted
+carving.
+
+"What crime is he charged with?" she asked, without moving.
+
+"He is charged with being a common thief," I said.
+
+Now there was color enough in her face, and to spare, for the
+blood-stained neck and cheek, and even the bare shoulder under the
+torn crape burned pink.
+
+"It is brutal to make such a charge!" she said. "It is shameful!--"
+her voice quivered. "It is not true! Monsieur, give me your word of
+honor that the government means what it says and nothing more!"
+
+"Madame," I said, "I give my word of honor that no political crime
+is charged against that man."
+
+"Will you pledge me your honor that if he answers satisfactorily to
+that false charge of theft, the government will let him go free?"
+
+"I will take it upon myself to do so," said I. "But what in Heaven's
+name is this man to you, madame? He is a militant anarchist, whose
+creed is not yours, whose propaganda teaches merciless violence, whose
+programme is terror. He is well known in the faubourgs; Belleville is
+his, and in the Chateau Rouge he has pointed across the river to the
+rich quarters, calling it the promised land! Yet here, at La Trappe,
+where your creed is peace and non-resistance, he is welcomed and
+harbored, he is deferred to, he is made executive head of a free
+commune which he has turned into a despotism ... for his own ends!"
+
+She was gazing at me with dilated eyes, hands holding tight to the
+balustrade.
+
+"Did you not know that?" I asked, astonished.
+
+"No," she said.
+
+"You are not aware that John Buckhurst is the soul and centre of the
+Belleville Reds?"
+
+"It is--it is false!" she stammered.
+
+"No, madame, it is true. He wears a smug mask here; he has deceived
+you all."
+
+She stood there, breathing rapidly, her head high.
+
+"John Buckhurst will answer for himself," she said, steadily.
+
+"When, madame?"
+
+For answer she stepped across the hall and laid one hand against the
+blank stone wall. Then, reaching upward, she drew from between the
+ponderous blocks little strips of steel, colored like mortar, dropping
+them to the stone floor, where they rang out. When she had flung away
+the last one, she stepped back and set her frail shoulder to the wall;
+instantly a mass of stone swung silently on an unseen pivot, a yellow
+light streamed out, and there was a tiny chamber, illuminated by a
+lamp, and a man just rising from his chair.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+PRISONERS
+
+
+Instantly I recognized in him the insolent priest who had confronted
+me on my way to La Trappe that morning. I knew him, although now he
+was wearing neither robe nor shovel-hat, nor those square shoes too
+large to buckle closely over his flat insteps.
+
+And he knew me.
+
+He appeared admirably cool and composed, glancing at the Countess for
+an instant with an interrogative expression; then he acknowledged my
+presence by bowing almost humorously.
+
+"This is Monsieur Scarlett, of the Imperial Military Police," said
+the Countess, in a clear voice, ending with that slightly rising
+inflection which demands an answer.
+
+"Mr. Buckhurst," I said, "I am an Inspector of Military Police, and
+I cannot begin to tell you what a pleasure this meeting is to me."
+
+"I have no doubt of that, monsieur," said Buckhurst, in his smooth,
+almost caressing tones. "It, however, inconveniences me a great deal
+to cross the frontier to-day, even in your company, otherwise I should
+have surrendered with my confreres."
+
+"But there is no question of _your_ crossing the frontier, Mr.
+Buckhurst," I said.
+
+His colorless eyes sought mine, then dropped. They were almost stone
+white in the lamp-light--white as his delicately chiselled face and
+hands.
+
+"Are we not to be exiled?" he asked.
+
+"_You_ are not," I said.
+
+"Am I not under arrest?"
+
+I stepped forward and placed him formally under arrest, touching him
+slightly on the shoulder. He did not move a muscle, yet, beneath the
+thin cloth of his coat I could divine a frame of iron.
+
+"Your creed is one of non-resistance to violence," I said--"is it
+not?"
+
+"Yes," he replied. I saw that gray ring around the pale pupil of his
+eyes contracting, little by little.
+
+"You have not asked me why I arrest you," I suggested, "and,
+monsieur, I must ask you to step back from that table--quick!--don't
+move!--not one finger!"
+
+For a second he looked into the barrel of my pistol with concentrated
+composure, then glanced at the table-drawer which he had jerked open.
+A revolver lay shining among the litter of glass tubes and papers in
+the drawer.
+
+The Countess, too, saw the revolver and turned an astonished face to
+my prisoner.
+
+"Who brought you here?" asked Buckhurst, quietly of me.
+
+"I did," said the Countess, her voice almost breaking. "Tell this
+man and his government that you are ready to face every charge against
+your honor! There is a dreadful mistake; they--they think you are--"
+
+"A thief," I interposed, with a smile. "The government only asks you
+to prove that you are not."
+
+Slowly Buckhurst turned his eyes on the Countess; the faintest glimmer
+of white teeth showed for an instant between the gray lines that were
+his lips.
+
+"So _you_ brought this man here?" he said. "Oh, I am glad to know
+it."
+
+"Then you cannot be that same John Buckhurst who stands in the
+tribune of the Chateau Rouge and promises all Paris to his chosen
+people," I remarked, smiling.
+
+"No," he said, slowly, "I cannot be that man, nor can I--"
+
+"Stop! Stand back from that table!" I cried.
+
+"I beg your pardon," he said, coolly.
+
+"Madame," said I, without taking my eyes from him, "in a community
+dedicated to peace, a revolver is an anachronism. So I think--if you
+move I will shoot you, Mr. Buckhurst!--so I think I had better take
+it, table-drawer and all--"
+
+"Stop!" said Buckhurst.
+
+"Oh no, I can't stop now," said I, cheerfully, "and if you attempt
+to upset that lamp you will make a sad mistake. Now walk to the door!
+Turn your back! Go slowly!--halt!"
+
+With the table-drawer under one arm and my pistol-hand swinging, I
+followed Buckhurst out into the hall.
+
+Daylight dazzled me; it must have affected Buckhurst, too, for he
+reached out to the stone balustrade and guided himself down the steps,
+five paces in front of me.
+
+Under the trees on the lawn, beside the driveway, I saw Dr. Delmont
+standing, big, bushy head bent thoughtfully, hands clasped behind his
+back.
+
+Near him, Tavernier and Bazard were lifting a few boxes into a
+farm-wagon. The carriage from Trois-Feuilles was also there, a stumpy
+Alsatian peasant on the box. But there were yet no signs of the escort
+of gendarmes which had been promised me.
+
+As Buckhurst appeared, walking all alone ahead of me, Dr. Delmont
+looked up with a bitter laugh. "So they found you, too? Well,
+Buckhurst, this is too bad. They might have given you one more day on
+your experiments."
+
+"What experiments?" I asked, glancing at the bottles and retorts in
+the table-drawer.
+
+"Nitrogen for exhausted soil," said the Countess, quietly.
+
+I set the table-drawer on the grass, rested my pistol on my hip, and
+looked around at my prisoners, who now were looking intently at me.
+
+"Gentlemen," said I, "let me warn you not to claim comradeship with
+Mr. Buckhurst. And I will show you one reason why."
+
+I picked up from the table-drawer a little stick about five inches
+long and held it up.
+
+"What is that, doctor? You don't know? Oh, you think it might be some
+sample of fertilizer containing concentrated nitrogen? You are
+mistaken, it is not nitrogen, but nitro-glycerine."
+
+Buckhurst's face changed slightly.
+
+"Is it not, Mr. Buckhurst?" I asked.
+
+He was silent.
+
+"Would you permit me to throw this bit of stuff at your feet?" And I
+made a gesture.
+
+The superb nerve of the man was something to remember. He did not
+move, but over his face there crept a dreadful pallor, which even the
+others noticed, and they shrank away from him, shocked and amazed.
+
+"Here, gentlemen," I continued, "is a box with a German
+label--'Oberlohe, Hanover.' The silicious earth with which
+nitro-glycerine is mixed to make dynamite comes from Oberlohe, in
+Hanover."
+
+I laid my pistol on the table, struck a match, and deliberately
+lighted my stick of dynamite. It burned quietly with a brilliant
+flame, and I laid it on the grass and let it burn out like a lump of
+Greek fire.
+
+"Messieurs," I said, cocking and uncocking my pistol, "it is not
+because this man is a dangerous, political criminal and a maker of
+explosives that the government has sent me here to arrest him ... or
+kill him. It is because he is a common thief,... a thief who steals
+crucifixes,... like this one--"
+
+I brushed aside a pile of papers in the drawer and drew out a big gold
+crucifix, marvellously chiselled from a lump of the solid metal....
+"A thief," I continued, "who strips the diamonds from crucifixes,...
+as this has been stripped,... and who sells a single stone to a Jew in
+Strasbourg, named Fishel Cohen,... now in prison to confront our
+friend Buckhurst."
+
+In the dead silence I heard Dr. Delmont's heavy breathing. Tavernier
+gave a dry sob and covered his face with his thin hands. The young
+Countess stood motionless, frightfully white, staring at Buckhurst,
+who had folded his arms.
+
+Sylvia Elven touched her, but the Countess shook her off and walked
+straight to Buckhurst.
+
+"Look at me," she said. "I have promised you my friendship, my faith
+and trust and support. And now I say to you, I believe in you. Tell
+them where that crucifix came from."
+
+Buckhurst looked at me, long enough to see that the end of his rope
+had come. Then he slowly turned his deadly eyes on the girl before
+him.
+
+Scarlet to the roots of her hair, she stood there, utterly stunned.
+The white edges of Buckhurst's teeth began to show again; for an
+instant I thought he meant to strike her. Then the sudden double beat
+of horses' hoofs broke out along the avenue below, and, through the
+red sunset I saw a dozen horsemen come scampering up the drive toward
+us.
+
+"They've sent me lancers instead of gendarmes for your escort," I
+remarked to Dr. Delmont; at the same moment I stepped out into the
+driveway to signal the riders, raising my hand.
+
+Instantly a pistol flashed--then another and another, and a dozen
+harsh voices shouted: "Hourra! Hourra! Preussen!"
+
+"Mille tonnerre!" roared Delmont; "the Prussians are here!"
+
+"Look out! Stand back there! Get the women back!" I cried, as an
+Uhlan wheeled his horse straight through a bed of geraniums and fired
+his horse-pistol at me.
+
+Delmont dragged the young Countess to the shelter of an elm; Sylvia
+Elven and Tavernier followed; Buckhurst ran to the carriage and leaped
+in.
+
+"No resistance!" bellowed Delmont, as Bazard snatched up the pistol I
+had taken from Buckhurst. But the invalid had already fired at a
+horseman, and had gone down under the merciless hoofs with a lance
+through his face.
+
+My first impulse was to shoot Buckhurst, and I started for him.
+
+Then, in front of me, a horse galloped into the table and fell with a
+crash, hurling his rider at my feet. I can see him yet sprawling there
+on the lawn, a lank, red-faced fellow, his helmet smashed in, and his
+spurred boots sticking fast in the sod.
+
+Helter-skelter through the trees came the rest of the Uhlans, shouting
+their hoarse "Hourra! Hourra! Preussen!"--white-and-black pennons
+streaming from their lance-heads, pistols flashing in the early dusk.
+
+I ran past Bazard's trampled body and fired at an Uhlan who had seized
+the horses which were attached to the carriage where Buckhurst sat.
+The Uhlan's horse reared and plunged, carrying him away at a frightful
+pace, and I do not know whether I hit him or not, but he dropped his
+pistol, and I picked it up and fired at another cavalryman who shouted
+and put his horse straight at me.
+
+Again I ran around the wagon, through a clump of syringa bushes, and
+up the stone steps to the terrace, and after me galloped one of those
+incomparable cossack riders--an Uhlan, lance in rest, setting his wiry
+little horse to the stone steps with a loud "Hourra!"
+
+It was too steep a grade for the gallant horse. I flung my pistol in
+the animal's face and the poor brute reared straight up and fell
+backward, rolling over and over with his unfortunate rider, and
+falling with a tremendous splash into the pool below.
+
+"In God's name stop that!" roared Delmont, from below. "Give up,
+Scarlett! They mean us no harm!"
+
+I could see the good doctor on the lawn, waving his handkerchief
+frantically at me; in a group behind stood the Countess and Sylvia;
+Tavernier was kneeling beside Bazard's body; two Uhlans were raising
+their stunned comrade from the wreck of the table; other Uhlans
+cantered toward the foot of the terrace above which I stood.
+
+"Come down, hussar!" called an officer. "We respect your uniform."
+
+"Will you parley?" I asked, listening intently for the gallop of my
+promised gendarmes. If I could only gain time and save Buckhurst. He
+was there in the carriage; I had seen him spring into it when the
+Germans burst in among the trees.
+
+"Foulez-fous fous rendre? Oui ou non?" shouted the officer, in his
+terrible French.
+
+"Eh bien,... non!" I cried, and ran for the chateau.
+
+I heard the Uhlans dismount and run clattering and jingling up the
+stone steps. As I gained the doorway they shot at me, but I only fled
+the faster, springing up the stairway. Here I stood, sabre in hand,
+ready to stop the first man.
+
+Up the stairs rushed three Uhlans, sabres shining in the dim light
+from the window behind me; I laid my forefinger flat on the blade of
+my sabre and shortened my arm for a thrust--then there came a blinding
+flash, a roar, and I was down, trying to rise, until a clinched fist
+struck me in the face and I fell flat on my back.
+
+Without any emotion whatever I saw an Uhlan raise his sabre to finish
+me; also I saw a yellow-and-black sleeve interposed between death and
+myself.
+
+"No butchery!" growled the big officer who had summoned me from the
+lawn. "Cursed pig, you'd sabre your own grandmother! Lift him, Sepp!
+You, there, Loisel!--lift him up. Is he gone?"
+
+"He is alive, Herr Rittmeister," said a soldier, "but his back is
+broken."
+
+"It isn't," I said.
+
+"Herr Je!" muttered the Rittmeister; "an eel, and a Frenchman, and
+nine long lives! Here, you hussar, what's the matter with you?"
+
+"One of them shot me; I thought it was to be sabres," said I,
+weakly.
+
+"And why the devil wasn't it sabres!" roared the officer, turning on
+his men. "One to three--and six more below! Sepp, you disgust me.
+Carry him out!"
+
+I groaned as they lifted me. "Easy there!" growled the officer,
+"don't pull him that way. Now, young hell-cat, set your teeth; you
+have eight more lives yet."
+
+They got me out to the terrace, and carried me to the lawn. One of the
+men brought a cup of water from the pool.
+
+"Herr Rittmeister," I said, faintly, "I had a prisoner here; he
+should be in the carriage. Is he?"
+
+The officer walked briskly over to the carriage. "Nobody here but two
+women and a scared peasant!" he called out.
+
+As I lay still staring up into the sky, I heard the Rittmeister
+addressing Dr. Delmont in angry tones. "By every law of civilized war
+I ought to hang you and your friend there! Civilians who fire on
+troops are treated that way. But I won't. Your foolish companion lies
+yonder with a lance through his mouth. He's dead; I say nothing. For
+you, I have no respect. But I have for that hell-cat who did his duty.
+You civilians--you go to the devil!"
+
+"Are not your prisoners sacred from insult?" asked the doctor,
+angrily.
+
+"Prisoners! _My_ prisoners! You compliment yourself! Loisel! Send
+those impudent civilians into the house! I won't look at them! They
+make me sick!"
+
+The astonished doctor attempted to take his stand by me, offering his
+services, but the troopers hustled him and poor Tavernier off up the
+terrace steps.
+
+"The two ladies in the carriage, Herr Rittmeister?" said a
+cavalryman, coming up at salute.
+
+"What? Ladies? Oh yes." Then he muttered in his mustache: "Always
+around--always everywhere. They can't stay there. I want that
+carriage. Sepp!"
+
+"At orders, Herr Rittmeister!"
+
+"Carry that gentleman to the carriage. Place Schwartz and Ruppert in
+the wagon yonder. Get straw--you, Brauer, bring straw--and toss in
+those boxes, if there is room. Where's Hofman?"
+
+"In the pool, Herr Rittmeister."
+
+"Take him out," said the officer, soberly. "Uhlans don't abandon
+their dead."
+
+Two soldiers lifted me again and bore me away in the darkness. I was
+perfectly conscious.
+
+And all the while I was listening for the gallop of my gendarmes, not
+that I cared very much, now that Buckhurst was gone.
+
+"Herr Rittmeister," I said, as they laid me in the carriage, "ask
+the Countess de Vassart if she will let me say good-bye to her."
+
+"With pleasure," said the officer, promptly. "Madame, here is a
+polite young gentleman who desires to make his adieux. Permit me,
+madame--he is here in the dark. Sepp! fall back! Loisel, advance ten
+paces! Halt!"
+
+"Is it you, Monsieur Scarlett?" came an unsteady voice, from the
+darkness.
+
+"Yes, madame. Can you forgive me?"
+
+"Forgive you? My poor friend, I have nothing to forgive. Are you
+badly hurt, Monsieur Scarlett?"
+
+"I don't know," I muttered.
+
+Suddenly the chapel bell of La Trappe rang out a startling peal; the
+Prussian captain shouted: "Stop that bell! Shoot every civilian in
+the house!" But the Uhlans, who rushed up the terrace, found the great
+doors bolted and the lower windows screened with steel shutters.
+
+On the battlements of the south wing a red radiance grew brighter;
+somebody had thrown wood into the iron basket of the ancient beacon,
+and set fire to it.
+
+"That teaches me a lesson!" bawled the enraged Rittmeister, shaking
+his fist up at the brightening alarm signal.
+
+He vaulted into his saddle, wheeled his horse and rode up to the
+peasant, Brauer, who, frightened to the verge of stupidity, sat on the
+carriage-box.
+
+"Do you know the wood-road that leads to Gunstett through the
+foot-hills?" he demanded, controlling his fury with a strong effort.
+
+The blank face of the peasant was answer enough; the Rittmeister
+glared around; his eyes fell on the Countess.
+
+"You know this country, madame?"
+
+"Yes, monsieur."
+
+"Will you set us on our way through the Gunstett hill-road?"
+
+"No."
+
+The chapel bell was clanging wildly; the beacon shot up in a whirling
+column of sparks and red smoke.
+
+"Put that woman into the carriage!" bellowed the officer. "I'm
+cursed if I leave her to set the whole country yapping at our heels!
+Loisel, put her in beside the prisoner! Madame, it is useless to
+resist. Hark! What's that sound of galloping?"
+
+I listened. I heard nothing save the clamor of the chapel bell.
+
+An Uhlan laid a heavy hand on the shoulder of the listening Countess;
+she tried to draw back, but he pushed her brutally into the carriage,
+and she stumbled and fell into the cushions beside me.
+
+"Uhlans, into your saddles!" cried the Rittmeister, sharply. "Two
+men to the wagon!--a man on the box there! Here you, Jacques Bonhomme,
+drive carefully or I'll hang you higher than the Strasbourg clock. Are
+the wounded in the straw? Sepp, take the riderless horses. Peloton,
+attention! Draw sabres! March! Trot!"
+
+Fever had already begun to turn my head; the jolting of the carriage
+brought me to my senses at times; at times, too, I could hear the two
+wounded Uhlans groaning in the wagon behind me, the tramping of the
+cavalry ahead, the dull rattle of lance butts in the leather
+stirrup-boots.
+
+If I could only have fainted, but I could not, and the agony grew so
+intense that I bit my lip through to choke the scream that strained my
+throat.
+
+Once the carriage stopped; in the darkness I heard somebody whisper:
+"There go the French riders!" And I fancied I heard a far echo of
+hoof-strokes along the road to La Trappe. It might have been the
+fancy of an intermittent delirium; it may have been my delayed
+gendarmes--I never knew. And the carriage presently moved on more
+smoothly, as though we were now on one of those even military
+high-roads which traverse France from Luxembourg to the sea.
+
+Which way we were going I did not know, I did not care. Absurdly
+mingled with sick fancies came flashes of reason, when I could see the
+sky frosted with silver, and little, bluish stars peeping down. At
+times I recognized the mounted men around me as Prussian Uhlans, and
+weakly wondered by what deviltry they had got into France, and what
+malignant spell they cast over the land that the very stones did not
+rise up and smite them from their yellow-and-black saddles.
+
+Once--it was, I think, very near daybreak--I came out of a dream in
+which I was swimming through oceans of water, drinking as I swam. The
+carriage had stopped; I could not see the lancers, but presently I
+heard them all talking in loud, angry voices. There appeared to be
+some houses near by; I heard a dog barking, a great outcry of pigs and
+feathered fowls, the noise of a scuffle, a trampling of heavy boots, a
+shot!
+
+Then the terrible voice of the Rittmeister: "Hang that man to his
+barn gate! Pig of an assassin, I'll teach you to murder German
+soldiers!"
+
+A woman began to scream without ceasing.
+
+"Burn that house!" bellowed the Rittmeister.
+
+Through the prolonged screaming I heard the crash of window-glass;
+presently a dull red light grew out of the gloom, brighter and
+brighter. The screaming never ceased.
+
+"Uhlans! Mount!" came the steady voice of the Rittmeister; the
+carriage started. Almost at the word the darkness turned to flame;
+against the raging furnace of a house on fire I saw the figure of a
+man, inky black, hanging from the high cross-bar of the cow-yard gate,
+and past him filed the shadowy horsemen, lances slanting backward from
+their stirrups.
+
+The last I remember was seeing the dead man's naked feet--for they
+hanged him in his night-shirt--and the last I heard was that awful
+screaming from the red shadows that flickered across the fields of
+uncut wheat.
+
+For presently my madness began again, and again I was bathed to the
+mouth in cold, sweet waters, and I drank as I swam lazily in the
+sunshine.
+
+My next lucid interval came from pain almost unendurable. We were
+fording a river in bright starlight; the carriage bumped across the
+stones, water washed and slopped over the carriage floor. To right and
+left, Prussian lancers were riding, and I saw the water boiling under
+their horses and their long lances aslant the stars.
+
+But there were more horsemen now, scores and scores of them, trampling
+through the shallow river. And beyond I could see a line of cannon,
+wallowing through the water, shadowy artillerymen clinging to forge
+and caisson, mounted men astride straining teams, tall officers on
+either flank, sitting their horses motionless in mid-stream.
+
+The carriage stopped.
+
+"Are you suffering?" came a low voice, close to my ear.
+
+"Madame, could I have a little of that water?" I muttered.
+
+Very gently she laid me back. I was entirely without power to move
+below my waist, or to support my body.
+
+She filled my cap with river water and held it while I drank. After I
+had my fill she bathed my face, passing her wet hands through my hair
+and over my eyes. The carriage moved on.
+
+[Illustration: "TO RIGHT AND LEFT, PRUSSIAN LANCERS WERE RIDING"]
+
+After a while she whispered.
+
+"Are you awake?"
+
+"Yes, madame."
+
+"See the dawn--how red it is on the hills! There are vineyards there
+on the heights,... and a castle,... and soldiers moving out across the
+river meadows."
+
+The rising sun was shining in my eyes as we came to a halt before
+a small stone bridge over which a column of cavalry was
+passing--Prussian hussars, by their crimson dolmans and little, flat
+busbies.
+
+Our Uhlan escort grouped themselves about us to watch the hussars
+defile at a trot, and I saw the Rittmeister rigidly saluting their
+standards as they bobbed past above a thicket of sabres.
+
+"What are these Uhlans doing?" broke in a nasal voice behind us; an
+officer, followed by two orderlies and a trumpeter, came galloping up
+through the mud.
+
+"Who's that--a dead Frenchman?" demanded the officer, leaning over
+the edge of the carriage to give me a near-sighted stare. Then he saw
+the Countess, stared at her, and touched the golden peak of his
+helmet.
+
+"At your service, madame," he said. "Is this officer dead?"
+
+"Dying, general," said the Rittmeister, at salute.
+
+"Then he will not require these men. Herr Rittmeister, I take your
+Uhlans for my escort. Madame, you have my sympathy; can I be of
+service?"
+
+He spoke perfect French. The Countess looked up at him in a bewildered
+way. "You cannot mean to abandon this dying man here?" she asked.
+
+There was a silence, broken brusquely by the Rittmeister. "That
+Frenchman did his duty!"
+
+"Did he?" said the general, staring at the Countess.
+
+"Very well; I want that carriage, but I won't take it. Give the
+driver a white flag, and have him drive into the French lines. Herr
+Rittmeister, give your orders! Madame, your most devoted!" And he
+wheeled his beautiful horse and trotted off down the road, while the
+Rittmeister hastily tied a handkerchief to a stick and tossed it up to
+the speechless peasant on the box.
+
+"Morsbronn is the nearest French post!" he said, in French. Then he
+bent from his horse and looked down at me.
+
+"You did your duty!" he snapped, and, barely saluting the Countess,
+touched spurs to his mount and disappeared, followed at a gallop by
+his mud-splashed Uhlans.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+THE IMMORTALS
+
+
+When I became conscious again I was lying on a table. Two men were
+leaning over me; a third came up, holding a basin. There was an odor
+of carbolic in the air.
+
+The man with the basin made a horrid grimace when he caught my eye;
+his face was a curious golden yellow, his eyes jet black, and at first
+I took him for a fever phantom.
+
+Then my bewildered eyes fastened on his scarlet fez, pulled down over
+his left ear, the sky-blue Zouave jacket, with its bright-yellow
+arabesques, the canvas breeches, leggings laced close over the thin
+shins and ankles of an Arab. And I knew him for a soldier of African
+riflemen, one of those brave children of the desert whom we called
+"Turcos," and whose faith in the greatness of France has never
+faltered since the first blue battalion of Africa was formed under the
+eagles of the First Empire.
+
+"Hallo, Mustapha!" I said, faintly; "what are they doing to me
+now?"
+
+The Turco's golden-bronze visage relaxed; he saluted me.
+
+"Macache sabir," he said; "they picked a bullet from your spine, my
+inspector."
+
+An officer in the uniform of a staff-surgeon came around the table
+where I was lying.
+
+"Bon!" he exclaimed, eying me sharply through his gold-rimmed
+glasses. "Can you feel your hind-legs now, young man?"
+
+I could feel them all too intensely, and I said so.
+
+The surgeon began to turn down his shirt-sleeves and button his cuffs,
+saying, "You're lucky to have a pain in your legs." Turning to the
+Turco, he added, "Lift him!" And the giant rifleman picked me up and
+laid me in a long chair by the window.
+
+"Your case is one of those amusing cases," continued the surgeon,
+buckling on his sword and revolver; "very amusing, I assure you. As
+for the bullet, I could have turned it out with a straw, only it
+rested there _exactly_ where it stopped the use of those long legs of
+yours!--a fine example of temporary reflex paralysis, and no
+hemorrhage to speak of--nothing to swear about, young man. By-the-way,
+you ought to go to bed for a few days."
+
+He clasped his short baldric over his smartly buttoned tunic. The room
+was shaking with the discharges of cannon.
+
+"A millimetre farther and that bullet would have cracked your spine.
+Remember that and keep off your feet. Ouf! The cannon are tuning up!"
+as a terrible discharge shattered the glass in the window-panes beside
+me.
+
+"Where am I, doctor?" I asked.
+
+"Parbleu, in Morsbronn! Can't you hear the orchestra, zim-bam-zim!
+The Prussians are playing their Wagner music for us. Here, swallow
+this. How do you feel now?"
+
+"Sleepy. Did you say a day or two, doctor?"
+
+"I said a week or two--perhaps longer. I'll look in this evening if
+I'm not up to my chin in amputations. Take these every hour if in
+pain. Go to sleep, my son."
+
+With a paternal tap on my head, he drew on his scarlet, gold-banded
+cap, tightened the check strap, and walked out of the room.
+Down-stairs I heard him cursing because his horse had been shot. I
+never saw him again.
+
+Dozing feverishly, hearing the cannon through troubled slumber, I
+awoke toward noon quite free from any considerable pain, but thirsty
+and restless, and numbed to the hips. Alarmed, I strove to move my
+feet, and succeeded. Then, freed from the haunting terror of
+paralysis, I fell to pinching my legs with satisfaction, my eyes
+roving about in search of water.
+
+The room where I lay was in disorder; it appeared to be completely
+furnished with well-made old pieces, long out of date, but not old
+enough to be desirable. Chairs, sofas, tables were all fashioned in
+that poor design which marked the early period of the Consulate; the
+mirror was a fine sheet of glass imbedded in Pompeian and Egyptian
+designs; the clock, which had stopped, was a meaningless lump of gilt
+and marble, supported on gilt sphinxes. Over the bed hung a tarnished
+canopy broidered with a coronet, which, from the strawberry leaves and
+the pearls raised above them, I took to be the coronet of a count of
+English origin.
+
+The room appeared to be very old, and I knew the house must have stood
+for centuries somewhere along the single street of Morsbronn, though I
+could not remember seeing any building in the village which, judging
+from the exterior, seemed likely to contain such a room as this.
+
+The nearer and heavier cannon-shots had ceased, but the window-sashes
+hummed with the steady thunder of a battle going on somewhere among
+the mountains. Knowing the Alsatian frontier fairly well, I understood
+that a battle among the mountains must mean that our First Corps had
+been attacked, and that we were on the defensive on French soil.
+
+The booming of the guns was unbroken, as steady and sustained as the
+eternal roar of a cataract. At moments I believed that I could
+distinguish the staccato crashes of platoon firing, but could not be
+certain in the swelling din.
+
+As I lay there on my long, cushioned chair, burning with that
+insatiable thirst which, to thoroughly appreciate, one must be
+wounded, the door opened and a Turco soldier came into the room and
+advanced toward me on tip-toe.
+
+He wore full uniform, was fully equipped, crimson chechia, snowy
+gaiters, and terrible sabre-bayonet.
+
+I beckoned him, and the tall, bronzed fellow came up, smiling, showing
+his snowy, pointed teeth under a crisp beard.
+
+"Water, Mustapha," I motioned with stiffened lips, and the good
+fellow unslung his blue water-bottle and set it to my burning mouth.
+
+"Merci, mon brave!" I said. "May you dwell in Paradise with Ali, the
+fourth Caliph, the Lion of God!"
+
+The Turco stared, muttered the Tekbir in a low voice, bent and kissed
+my hands.
+
+"Were you once an officer of our African battalions?" he asked, in
+the Arab tongue.
+
+"Sous-officier of spahi cavalry," I said, smiling. "And you are a
+Kabyle mountaineer from Constantine, I see."
+
+"It is true as I recite the fatha," cried the great fellow, beaming
+on me. "We Kabyles love our officers and bear witness to the unity of
+God, too. I am a marabout, my inspector, Third Turcos, and I am
+anxious to have a Prussian ask me who were my seven ancestors."
+
+The music of his long-forgotten tongue refreshed me; old scenes and
+memories of the camp at Oran, the never-to-be-forgotten cavalry with
+the scarlet cloaks, rushed on me thick and fast; incidents, trivial
+matters of the bazaars, faces of comrades dead, came to me in
+flashes. My eyes grew moist, my throat swelled, I whimpered:
+
+"It is all very well, mon enfant, but I'm here with a hole in me
+stuffed full of lint, and you have your two good arms and as many legs
+with which to explain to the Prussians who your seven ancestors may
+be. Give me a drink, in God's name!"
+
+Again he held up the blue water-bottle, saying, gravely: "We both
+worship the same God, my inspector, call Him what we will."
+
+After a moment I said: "Is it a battle or a bousculade? But I need
+not ask; the cannon tell me enough. Are they storming the heights,
+Mustapha?"
+
+"Macache comprendir," said the soldier, dropping into patois. "There
+is much noise, but we Turcos are here in Morsbronn, and we have seen
+nothing but sparrows."
+
+I listened for a moment; the sound of the cannonade appeared to be
+steadily receding westward.
+
+"It seems to me like retreat!" I said, sharply.
+
+"Ritrite? Quis qui ci, ritrite?"
+
+I looked at the simple fellow with tears in my eyes.
+
+"You would not understand if I told you," said I. "Are you detailed
+to look after me?"
+
+He said he was, and I informed him that I needed nobody; that it was
+much more important for everybody that he should rejoin his battalion
+in the street below, where even now I could hear the Algerian bugles
+blowing a silvery sonnerie--"Garde a vous!"
+
+"I am Salah Ben-Ahmed, a marabout of the Third Turcos," he said,
+proudly, "and I have yet to explain to these Prussians who my seven
+ancestors were. Have I my inspector's permission to go?"
+
+He was fairly trembling as the imperative clangor of the bugles rang
+through the street; his fine nostrils quivered, his eyes glittered
+like a cobra's.
+
+"Go, Salah Ben-Ahmed, the marabout," said I, laughing.
+
+The soldier stiffened to attention; his bronzed hand flew to his
+scarlet fez, and, "Salute! O my inspector!" he cried, sonorously, and
+was gone at a bound.
+
+That breathless unrest which always seizes me when men are at one
+another's throats set me wriggling and twitching, and peering from the
+window, through which I could not see because of the blinds. Command
+after command was ringing out in the street below. "Forward!" shouted
+a resonant voice, and "Forward! forward! forward!" echoed the voices
+of the captains, distant and more distant, then drowned in the rolling
+of kettle-drums and the silvery clang of Moorish cymbals.
+
+The band music of the Algerian infantry died away in the distant
+tumult of the guns; faintly, at moments, I could still hear the shrill
+whistle of their flutes, the tinkle of the silver chimes on their
+_toug_; then a blank, filled with the hollow roar of battle, then a
+clear note from their reeds, a tinkle, an echoing chime--and nothing,
+save the immense monotone of the cannonade.
+
+I had been lying there motionless for an hour, my head on my hand,
+snivelling, when there came a knock at the door, and I hastily
+buttoned my blood-stained shirt to the throat, threw a tunic over my
+shoulders, and cried, "Come in!"
+
+A trick of memory and perhaps of physical weakness had driven from my
+mind all recollection of the Countess de Vassart since I had come to
+my senses under the surgeon's probe. But at the touch of her fingers
+on the door outside, I knew her--I was certain that it could be nobody
+but my Countess, who had turned aside in her gentle pilgrimage to lift
+this Lazarus from the waysides of a hostile world.
+
+She entered noiselessly, bearing a bowl of broth and some bread; but
+when she saw me sitting there with eyes and nose all red and swollen
+from snivelling she set the bowl on a table and hurried to my side.
+
+"What is it? Is the pain so dreadful?" she whispered.
+
+"No--oh no. I'm only a fool, and quite hungry, madame."
+
+She brought the broth and bread and a glass of the most exquisite wine
+I ever tasted--a wine that seemed to brighten the whole room with its
+liquid sunshine.
+
+"Do you know where you are?" she asked, gravely.
+
+"Oh yes--in Morsbronn."
+
+"And in whose house, monsieur?"
+
+"I don't know--" I glanced instinctively at the tarnished coronet on
+the canopy above the bed. "Do you know, Madame la Comtesse?"
+
+"I ought to," she said, faintly amused. "I was born in this room. It
+was to this house that I desired to come before--my exile."
+
+Her eyes softened as they rested first on one familiar object, then on
+another.
+
+"The house has always been in our family," she said. "It was once
+one of those fortified farms in the times when every hamlet was a
+petty kingdom--like the King of Yvetot's domain. Doubtless the ancient
+Trecourts also wore cotton night-caps for their coronets."
+
+"I remember now," said I, "a stone turret wedged in between two
+houses. Is this it?"
+
+"Yes, it is all that is left of the farm. My ancestors built this
+crazy old row of houses for their tenants."
+
+After a silence I said, "I wish I could look out of the window."
+
+She hesitated. "I don't suppose it could harm you?"
+
+"It will harm me if I don't," said I.
+
+She went to the window and folded up the varnished blinds.
+
+"How dreadful the cannonade is growing," she said. "Wait! don't
+think of moving! I will push you close to the window, where you can
+see."
+
+The tower in which my room was built projected from the rambling row
+of houses, so that my narrow window commanded a view of almost the
+entire length of the street. This street comprised all there was of
+Morsbronn; it lay between a double rank of houses constructed of
+plaster and beams, and surmounted by high-pointed gables and slated or
+tiled roofs, so fantastic that they resembled steeples.
+
+Down the street I could see the house that I had left twenty-four
+hours before, never dreaming what my journey to La Trappe held in
+store for me. One or two dismounted soldiers of the Third Hussars sat
+in the doorway, listening to the cannon; but, except for these
+listless troopers, a few nervous sparrows, and here and there a
+skulking peasant, slinking off with a load of household furniture on
+his back, the street was deserted.
+
+Everywhere shutters had been put up, blinds closed, curtains drawn.
+Not a shred of smoke curled from the chimneys of these deserted
+houses; the heavy gables cast sinister shadows over closed doors and
+gates barred and locked, and it made me think of an unseaworthy ship,
+prepared for a storm, so bare and battened down was this long, dreary
+commune, lying there in the August sun.
+
+Beside the window, close to my face, was a small, square loop-hole,
+doubtless once used for arquebus fire. It tired me to lean on the
+window, so I contented myself with lying back and turning my head, and
+I could see quite as well through the loop-hole as from the window.
+
+Lying there, watching the slow shadows crawling out over the sidewalk,
+I had been for some minutes thinking of my friend Mr. Buckhurst, when
+I heard the young Countess stirring in the room behind me.
+
+"You are not going to be a cripple?" she said, as I turned my head.
+
+"Oh no, indeed!" said I.
+
+"Nor die?" she added, seriously.
+
+"How could a man die with an angel straight from heaven to guard him!
+Pardon, I am only grateful, not impertinent." I looked at her humbly,
+and she looked at me without the slightest expression. Oh, it was all
+very well for the Countess de Vassart to tuck up her skirts and rake
+hay, and live with a lot of half-crazy apostles, and throw her fortune
+to the proletariat and her reputation to the dogs. She could do it;
+she was Eline Cyprienne de Trecourt, Countess de Vassart; and if her
+relatives didn't like her views, that was their affair; and if the
+Faubourg Saint-Germain emitted moans, that concerned the noble
+faubourg and not James Scarlett, a policeman attached to a division of
+paid mercenaries.
+
+Oh yes, it was all very well for the Countess de Vassart to play at
+democracy with her unbalanced friends, but it was also well for
+Americans to remember that she was French, and that this was France,
+and that in France a countess was a countess until she was buried in
+the family vault, whether she had chosen to live as a countess or as
+Doll Dairymaid.
+
+The young girl looked at me curiously, studying me with those
+exquisite gray eyes of hers. Pensive, distraite, she sat there, the
+delicate contour of her head outlined against the sunny window, which
+quivered with the slow boom! boom! of the cannonade.
+
+"Are you English, Monsieur Scarlett?" she asked, quietly.
+
+"American, madame."
+
+"And yet you take service under an emperor."
+
+"I have taken harder service than that."
+
+"Of necessity?"
+
+"Yes, madame."
+
+She was silent.
+
+"Would it amuse you to hear what I have been?" I said, smiling.
+
+"That is not the word," she said, quietly. "To hear of hardship
+helps one to understand the world."
+
+The cannonade had been growing so loud again that it was with
+difficulty that we could make ourselves audible to each other. The jar
+of the discharges began to dislodge bits of glass and little
+triangular pieces of plaster, and the solid walls of the tower shook
+till even the mirror began to sway and the tarnished gilt sconces to
+quiver in their sockets.
+
+"I wish you were not in Morsbronn," I said.
+
+"I feel safer here in my own house than I should at La Trappe," she
+replied.
+
+She was probably thinking of the dead Uhlan and of poor Bazard;
+perhaps of the wretched exposure of Buckhurst--the man she had trusted
+and who had proved to be a swindler, and a murderous one at that.
+
+Suddenly a shell fell into the court-yard opposite, bursting
+immediately in a cloud of gravel which rained against our turret like
+hail.
+
+Stunned for an instant, the Countess stood there motionless, her face
+turned towards the window. I struggled to sit upright.
+
+She looked calmly at me; the color came back into her face, and in
+spite of my remonstrance she walked to the window, closed the heavy
+outside shutters and the blinds. As she was fastening them I heard the
+whizzing quaver of another shell, the racket of its explosion, the
+crash of plaster.
+
+[Illustration: "A COMPANY OF TURCOS CAME UP"]
+
+"Where is the safest place for us to stay?" she asked. Her voice was
+perfectly steady.
+
+"In the cellar. I beg you to go at once."
+
+Bang! a shell blew up in a shower of slates and knocked a chimney into
+a heap of bricks.
+
+"Do you insist on staying by that loop-hole?" she asked, without a
+quiver in her voice.
+
+"Yes, I do," said I. "Will you go to the cellar?"
+
+"No," she said, shortly.
+
+I saw her walk toward the rear of the room, hesitate, sink down by the
+edge of the bed and lay her face in the pillow.
+
+Two shells burst with deafening reports in the street; the young
+Countess covered her face with both hands. Shell after shell came
+howling, whistling, whizzing into the village; the two hussars had
+disappeared, but a company of Turcos came up on a run and began to dig
+a trench across the street a hundred yards west of our turret.
+
+How they made the picks and shovels fly! Shells tore through the air
+over them, bursting on impact with roof and chimney; the Turcos tucked
+up their blue sleeves, spat on their hands, and dug away like
+terriers, while their officers, smoking the eternal cigarette, coolly
+examined the distant landscape through their field-glasses.
+
+Shells rained fast on Morsbronn; nearer and nearer bellowed the guns;
+the plaster ceiling above my head cracked and fell in thin flakes,
+filling the room with an acrid, smarting dust. Again and again metal
+fragments from shells rang out on the heavy walls of our turret; a
+roof opposite sank in; flames flickered up through clouds of dust; a
+heavy yellow smoke, swarming with sparks, rolled past my window.
+
+Down the street a dull sound grew into a steady roar; the Turcos
+dropped pick and shovel and seized their rifles.
+
+"Garde! Garde a vous!" rang their startled bugles; the tumult
+increased to a swelling uproar, shouting, cheering, the crash of
+shutters and of glass, and--
+
+"The Prussians!" bellowed the captain. "Turcos--charge!"
+
+His voice was lost; a yelling mass of soldiery burst into view; spiked
+helmets and bayonets glittering through the smoke, the Turcos were
+whirled about like brilliant butterflies in a tornado; the fusillade
+swelled to a stupefying din, exploding in one terrible crash; and,
+wrapped in lightning, the Prussian onset passed.
+
+From the stairs below came the sound of a voiceless struggle, the
+trample and panting and clicking of steel, till of a sudden a voice
+burst out into a dreadful screaming. A shot followed--silence--another
+shot--then the stairs outside shook under the rush of mounting men.
+
+As the door burst open I felt a touch on my arm; the Countess de
+Vassart stood erect and pale, one slender, protecting hand resting
+lightly on my shoulder; a lieutenant of Prussian infantry confronted
+us; straight, heavy sword drawn, rigid, uncompromising, in his
+faultless gray-and-black uniform, with its tight, silver waist-sash.
+
+"I do not have you thrown into the street," he said to me, in
+excellent French, "because there has been no firing from the windows
+in this village. Otherwise--other measures. Be at ease, madame, I
+shall not harm your invalid."
+
+He glanced at me out of his near-sighted eyes, dropped the point of
+his sword to the stone floor, and slowly caressed his small, blond
+mustache.
+
+"How many troops passed through here yesterday morning?" he asked.
+
+I was silent.
+
+"There was artillery, was there not?"
+
+I only looked at him.
+
+"Do you hear?" he repeated, sharply. "You are a prisoner, and I am
+questioning you."
+
+"You have that useless privilege," I observed.
+
+"If you are insolent I will have you shot!" he retorted, staring
+haughtily at me.
+
+I glanced out of the window.
+
+There was a pause; the hand of the Countess de Vassart trembled on my
+shoulder.
+
+Under the window strident Prussian bugles were blowing a harsh
+summons; the young officer stepped to the loop-hole and looked out,
+then hastily removed his helmet and thrust his blond head through the
+smoky aperture. "March those prisoners in below!" he shouted down.
+
+Then he withdrew his head, put on his polished helmet of black
+leather, faced with the glittering Prussian eagle, and tightened the
+gold-scaled cheek-guard.
+
+A moment later came a trample of feet on the landing outside, the door
+was flung open, and three prisoners were brutally pushed into the
+room.
+
+I tried to turn and look at them; they stood in the dusk near the bed,
+but I could only make out that one was a Turco, his jacket in rags,
+his canvas breeches covered with mud.
+
+Again the lieutenant came to the loop-hole and glanced out, then shook
+his head, motioning the soldiers back.
+
+"It is too high and the arc of fire too limited," he said, shortly.
+"Detail four men to hold the stairs, ten men and a sergeant in the
+room below, and you'd better take your prisoners down there. Bayonet
+that Turco tiger if he shows his teeth again. March!"
+
+As the prisoners filed out I turned once more and thought I recognized
+Salah Ben-Ahmed in the dishevelled Turco, but could not be certain,
+so disfigured and tattered the soldier appeared.
+
+"Here, you hussar prisoner!" cried the lieutenant, pointing at me
+with his white-gloved finger, "turn your head and busy yourself with
+what concerns you. And you, madame," he added, pompously, "see that
+you give us no trouble and stay in this room until you have permission
+to leave."
+
+"Are--are you speaking to me, monsieur?" asked the Countess, amazed.
+Then she rose, exasperated.
+
+"Your insolence disgraces your uniform," she said. "Go to your
+French prisoners and learn the rudiments of courtesy!"
+
+The officer reddened to his colorless eyebrows; his little,
+near-sighted eyes became stupid and fixed; he smoothed the blond down
+on his upper lip with hesitating fingers.
+
+Suddenly he turned and marched out, slamming the door violently behind
+him.
+
+At this impudence the eyes of the Countess began to sparkle, and an
+angry flush mounted to her cheeks.
+
+"Madame," said I, "he is only a German boy, unbalanced by his own
+importance and his first battle. But he will never forget this lesson;
+let him digest it in his own manner."
+
+And he did, for presently there came a polite knock at the door, and
+the lieutenant reappeared, bowing rigidly, one hand on his sword-hilt,
+the other holding his helmet by the gilt spike.
+
+"Lieutenant von Eberbach present to apologize," he said, jerkily, red
+as a beet. "Begs permission to take a half-dozen of wine; men very
+thirsty."
+
+"Lieutenant von Eberbach may take the wine," said the Countess,
+calmly.
+
+"Rudeness without excuse!" muttered the boy; "beg the graciously
+well-born lady not to judge my regiment or my country by it. Can
+Lieutenant von Eberbach make amends?"
+
+"The Lieutenant has made them," said the Countess. "The merciful
+treatment of French prisoners will prove his sincerity."
+
+The lad made another rigid bow and got himself out of the door with
+more or less dignity, and the Countess drew a chair beside my
+sofa-chair and sat down, eyes still bright with the cinders of a wrath
+I had never suspected in her.
+
+Together we looked down into the street.
+
+Under the window the flat, high-pitched drums began to rattle; deep
+voices shouted; the whole street undulated with masses of
+gray-and-black uniforms, moving forward through the smoke. A superb
+regimental band began to play; the troops broke out into heavy
+cheering.
+
+"Vorwaerts! Vorwaerts!" came the steady commands. The band passed with
+a dull flash of instruments; a thousand brass helmet-spikes pricked
+the smoke; the tread of the Prussian infantry shook the earth.
+
+"The invasion has begun," I said.
+
+Her face was expressionless, save for the brightness of her eyes.
+
+And now another band sounded, playing "I Had a Comrade!" and the
+whole street began to ring with the noble marching-song of the coming
+regiment.
+
+"Bavarian infantry," I whispered, as the light-blue columns wheeled
+around the curve and came swinging up the street; for I could see the
+yellow crown on the collars of their tunics, and the heavy leather
+helmets, surmounted by chenille rolls.
+
+Behind them trotted a squadron of Uhlans on their dainty horses, under
+a canopy of little black-and-white flags fluttering from the points of
+their lances.
+
+"Uhlans," I murmured. I heard the faint click of her teeth closing
+tightly.
+
+Hussars in crimson tunics, armed with curious weapons, half carbine,
+half pistol, followed the Uhlans, filling the smoky street with a
+flood of gorgeous color.
+
+Suddenly a company of Saxon pioneers arrived on the double-quick,
+halted, fell out, and began to break down the locked doors of the
+houses on either side of the street. At the same time Prussian
+infantry came hurrying past, dragging behind them dozens of vehicles,
+long hay-wagons, gardeners' carts, heavy wheelbarrows, even a dingy
+private carriage, with tarnished lamps, rocking crazily on rusty
+springs.
+
+The soldiers wheeled these wagons into a double line, forming a
+complete chain across the street, where the Turcos had commenced to
+dig their ditch and breastworks--a barricade high enough to check a
+charge, and cunningly arranged, too, for the wooden abatis could not
+be seen from the eastern end of the street, where a charge of French
+infantry or cavalry must enter Morsbronn if it entered at all.
+
+We watched the building of the barricade, fascinated. Soldiers entered
+the houses on either side of the street, only to reappear at the
+windows and thrust out helmeted heads. More soldiers came, running
+heavily--the road swarmed with them; some threw themselves flat under
+the wagons, some knelt, thrusting their needle-guns through the
+wheel-spokes; others remained standing, rifles resting over the rails
+of the long, skeleton hay-wagons.
+
+"Something is going to happen," I said, as a group of smartly
+uniformed officers appeared on the roof of the opposite house and
+hastily scrambled to the ridge-pole.
+
+Something was surely going to happen; the officers were using their
+field-glasses and pointing excitedly across the roof-tops; the windows
+of every house as far as I could see were black with helmets; a
+regiment in column came up on the double, halted, disintegrated,
+melting away behind walls, into yards, doorways, gardens.
+
+A colonel of infantry, splendidly mounted, drew bridle under our
+loop-hole and looked up at the officers on the roof across the way.
+
+"Attention, you up there!" he shouted. "Is it infantry?"
+
+"No!" bawled an officer, hollowed hand to his cheek. "It's their
+brigade of heavy cavalry coming like an earthquake!"
+
+"The cuirassiers!" I cried, electrified. "It's Michel's cuirassiers,
+madame! And--oh, the barricade!" I groaned, twisting my fingers in
+helpless rage. "They'll be caught in a trap; they'll die like flies
+in that street."
+
+"This is horrible!" muttered the girl. "Don't they know the street
+is blocked? Can't they find out before they ride into this ravine
+below us? Will they all be killed here under our windows?"
+
+She sprang to her feet, stood a moment, then stepped swiftly forward
+into the angle of the tower.
+
+"Look there!" she cried, in terror.
+
+"Push my chair--quick!" I said. She dragged it forward.
+
+An old house across the street, which had been on fire, had collapsed
+into a mere mound of slate, charred beams, and plaster. Through the
+brown heat which quivered above the ruins I could see out into the
+country. And what I saw was a line of hills, crowned with smoke, a
+rolling stretch of meadow below, set here and there with shot-torn
+trees and hop-poles; and over this uneven ground two regiments of
+French cuirassiers and two squadrons of lancers moving slowly forward
+as though on parade.
+
+Above them, around them, clouds of smoke puffed up suddenly and
+floated away--the shells from Prussian batteries on the heights. Long,
+rippling crashes broke out, belting the fields with smoky breastworks,
+where a Prussian infantry regiment, knee-deep in smoke, was firing on
+the advancing cavalry.
+
+The cuirassiers moved on slowly, the sun a blinding sheet of fire on
+their armor; now and then a horse tossed his beautiful head, now and
+then a steel helmet turned, flashing.
+
+Grief-stricken, I groaned aloud: "Madame, there rides the finest
+cavalry in the world!--to annihilation."
+
+How could I know that they were coming deliberately to sacrifice
+themselves?--that they rode with death heavy on their souls, knowing
+well there was no hope, understanding that they were to die to save
+the fragments of a beaten army?
+
+Yet something of this I suspected, for already I saw the long, dark
+Prussian lines overlapping the French flank; I heard the French
+mitrailleuses rattling through the cannon's thunder, and I saw an
+entire French division, which I did not then know to be Lartigue's,
+falling back across the hills.
+
+And straight into the entire Prussian army rode the "grosse
+cavallerie" and the lancers.
+
+"They are doomed, like their fathers," I muttered--"sons of the
+cuirassiers of Waterloo. See what men can do for France!"
+
+The young Countess started and stood up very straight.
+
+"Look, madame!" I said, harshly--"look on the men of France! You say
+you do not understand the narrow love of country! Look!"
+
+"It is too pitiful, too horrible," she said, hoarsely. "How the
+horses fall in that meadow!"
+
+"They will fall thicker than that in this street!"
+
+"See!" she cried; "they have begun to gallop! They are coming! Oh, I
+cannot look!--I--I cannot!"
+
+Far away, a thin cry sounded above the cannon din; the doomed
+cuirassiers were cheering. It was the first charge they had ever made;
+nobody had ever seen cavalry of their arm on any battle-field of
+Europe since Waterloo.
+
+Suddenly their long, straight blades shot into the air, the
+cuirassiers broke into a furious gallop, and that mass of steel-clad
+men burst straight down the first slope of the plateau, through the
+Prussian infantry, then wheeled and descended like a torrent on
+Morsbronn.
+
+In the first ranks galloped the giants of the Eighth Cuirassiers,
+Colonel Guiot de la Rochere at their head; the Ninth Cuirassiers
+thundered behind them; then came the lancers under a torrent of
+red-and-white pennons. Nothing stopped them, neither hedges nor
+ditches nor fallen trees.
+
+Their huge horses bounded forward, manes in the wind, tails streaming,
+iron hoofs battering the shaking earth; the steel-clad riders, sabres
+pointed to the front, leaned forward in their saddles.
+
+Now among the thicket of hop-vines long lines of black arose; there
+was a flash, a belt of smoke, another flash--then the metallic rattle
+of bullets on steel breastplates. Entire ranks of cuirassiers went
+down in the smoke of the Prussian rifles, the sinister clash and crash
+of falling armor filled the air. Sheets of lead poured into them; the
+rattle of empty scabbards on stirrups, the metallic ringing of bullets
+on helmet and cuirass, the rifle-shots, the roar of the shells
+exploding swelled into a very hell of sound. And, above the infernal
+fracas rose the heavy cheering of the doomed riders.
+
+Into the deep, narrow street wheeled the horsemen, choking road and
+sidewalk with their galloping squadrons, a solid cataract of impetuous
+horses, a flashing torrent of armored men--and then! Crash! the first
+squadron dashed headlong against the barricade of wagons and went
+down.
+
+Into them tore the squadron behind, unable to stop their maddened
+horses, and into these thundered squadron after squadron, unconscious
+of the dead wall ahead.
+
+In the terrible tumult and confusion, screaming horses and shrieking
+men were piled in heaps, a human whirlpool formed at the barricade,
+hurling bodily from its centre horses and riders. Men galloped
+headlong into each other, riders struggled knee to knee, pushing,
+shouting, colliding.
+
+Posted behind the upper and lower windows of the houses, the Prussians
+shot into them, so close that the flames from the rifles set the
+jackets of the cuirassiers on fire: a German captain opened the
+shutters of a window and fired his pistol at a cuirassier, who replied
+with a sabre thrust through the window, transfixing the German's
+throat.
+
+Then a horrible butchery of men and horses began; the fusillade became
+so violent and the scene so sickening that a Prussian lieutenant went
+crazy in the house opposite, and flung himself from the window into
+the mass of writhing horsemen. Tall cuirassiers, in impotent fury,
+began slashing at the walls of the houses, breaking their heavy sabres
+to splinters against the stones; their powerful horses, white with
+foam, reared, fell back, crushing their riders beneath them.
+
+In front of the barricade a huge fellow reined in his horse and
+turned, white-gloved hand raised, red epaulets tossing.
+
+[Illustration: "'HALT! HALT!' HE SHOUTED"]
+
+"Halt! Halt!" he shouted. "Stop the lancers!" And a trumpeter,
+disengaging himself from the frantic chaos, set his long, silver
+trumpet to his lips and blew the "Halt!"
+
+A bullet rolled the trumpeter under his horse's feet; a volley riddled
+the other's horse, and the agonized animal reared and cleared the
+bristling abatis with a single bound, his rider dropping dead among
+the hay-wagons.
+
+Then into this awful struggle galloped the two squadrons of the lancers.
+For a moment the street swam under their fluttering red-and-white
+lance-pennons, then a volley swept them--another--another--and down
+they went.
+
+Herds of riderless horses tore through the street; the road undulated
+with crushed, quivering creatures crawling about. Against the doorway
+of a house opposite a noble horse in agony leaned with shaking knees,
+head raised, lips shrinking back over his teeth.
+
+Bewildered, stupefied, exhausted, the cuirassiers sat in their
+saddles, staring up at the windows where the Prussians stood and
+fired. Now and then one would start as from a nightmare, turn his
+jaded horse, and go limping away down the street. The road was filled
+with horsemen, wandering helplessly about under the rain of bullets.
+One, a mere boy, rode up to a door, leaned from his horse and began to
+knock for admittance; another dismounted and sat down on a doorstep,
+head buried in his hands, regardless of the bullets which tore the
+woodwork around him.
+
+The street was still crowded with entrapped cuirassiers, huddled in
+groups or riding up and down the walls mechanically seeking shelter. A
+few of these, dismounted, were wearily attempting to drag a heavy cart
+away from the barricade; the Prussians shot them, one at a time, but
+others came to help, and a few lancers aided them, and at length they
+managed to drag a hay-wagon aside, giving a narrow passage to the open
+country beyond. Instantly the Prussian infantry swarmed out of the
+houses and into the street, shouting, "Prisoners!" pushing, striking,
+and dragging the exhausted cuirassiers from their saddles. But contact
+with the enemy, hand to hand, seemed to revive the fury of the armored
+riders. The debris of the regiments closed up, long, straight sabres
+glittered, trembling horses plunged forward, broke into a stiff
+gallop, and passed through the infantry, through the rent in the
+barricade, and staggered away across the fields, buried in the smoke
+of a thousand rifles.
+
+So rode the "Cuirassiers of Morsbronn," the flower of an empire's
+chivalry, the elect of France. So rode the gentlemen of the Sixth
+Lancers to shiver their slender spears against stone walls--for the
+honor of France.
+
+Death led them. Death rode with them knee to knee. Death alone halted
+them. But their shining souls galloped on into that vast Valhalla
+where their ancestors of Waterloo stood waiting, and the celestial
+trumpets pealed a last "Dismount!"
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+THE GAME BEGINS
+
+
+The room in the turret was now swimming in smoke and lime dust; I
+could scarcely see the gray figure of the Countess through the
+powder-mist which drifted in through shutters and loop-hole, dimming
+the fading daylight.
+
+In the street a dense pall of pungent vapor hung over roof and
+pavement, motionless in the calm August air; two houses were burning
+slowly, smothered in smoke; through a ruddy fog I saw the dead lying
+in mounds, the wounded moving feebly, the Prussian soldiery tossing
+straw into the hay-carts that had served their deadly purpose.
+
+But oh, the dreadful murmur that filled the heavy air, the tremulous,
+ceaseless plaint which comes from strong, muscular creatures,
+tenacious of life, who are dying and who die hard.
+
+Helmeted figures swarmed through the smoke; wagon after wagon, loaded
+deep with dead cavalrymen, was drawn away by heavy teams of horses now
+arriving from the regimental transport train, which had come up and
+halted just at the entrance to the village.
+
+And now wagon-loads of French wounded began to pass, jolting over
+crushed helmets, rifles, cuirasses, and the carcasses of dead horses.
+
+A covey of Uhlans entered the shambles, picking their way across the
+wreckage of the battle, a slim, wiry, fastidious company, dainty as
+spurred gamecocks, with their helmet-cords swinging like wattles and
+their schapskas tilted rakishly.
+
+Then the sad cortege of prisoners formed in the smoke, the wounded
+leaning on their silent comrades, bandaged heads hanging, the others
+erect, defiant, supporting the crippled or standing with arms folded
+and helmeted heads held high.
+
+And at last they started, between two files of mounted Uhlans--Turcos,
+line infantrymen, gendarmes, lancers, and, towering head and shoulders
+above the others, the superb cuirassiers.
+
+A German general and his smartly uniformed staff came clattering up
+the slippery street and halted to watch the prisoners defile. And, as
+the first of the captive cuirassiers came abreast of the staff, the
+general stiffened in his saddle and raised his hand to his helmet,
+saying to his officers, loud enough for me to hear:
+
+"Salute the brave, gentlemen!"
+
+And the silent, calm-eyed cuirassiers passed on, heads erect, uniforms
+in shreds, their battered armor foul with smoke and mud, spurs broken,
+scabbards empty.
+
+Troops of captured horses, conducted by Uhlans, followed the
+prisoners, then wagons piled high with rifles, sabres, and saddles,
+then a company of Uhlans cantering away with the shot-torn guidons of
+the cuirassiers.
+
+Last of all came the wounded in their straw-wadded wagons, escorted by
+infantry; I heard them coming before I saw them, and, sickened, I
+closed my ears with my hands; yet even then the deep, monotonous
+groaning seemed to fill the room and vibrate through the falling
+shadows long after the last cart had creaked out of sight and hearing
+into the gathering haze of evening.
+
+The deadened booming of cannon still came steadily from the west, and
+it needed no messenger to tell me that the First Corps had been hurled
+back into Alsace, and that MacMahon's army was in full retreat; that
+now the Rhine was open and the passage of the Vosges was clear, and
+Strasbourg must stand siege and Belfort and Toul must man their
+battlements for a struggle that meant victory, or an Alsace doomed and
+a Lorraine lost to France forever.
+
+The room had grown very dark, the loop-hole admitting but little of
+the smoky evening sunset. Some soldiers in the hallway outside finally
+lighted torches; red reflections danced over the torn ceiling and
+plaster-covered floor, illuminating a corner where the Countess was
+sitting by the bedside, her head lying on the covers. How long she had
+been there I did not know, but when I spoke she raised her head and
+answered quietly.
+
+In the torch-light her face was ghastly, her eyes red and dim as she
+came over to me and looked out into the darkness.
+
+The woman was shaken terribly, shaken to the very soul. She had not
+seen all that I had seen; she had flinched before the spectacle of a
+butchery too awful to look upon, but she had seen enough, and she had
+heard enough to support or to confound theories formed through a young
+girl's brief, passionless, eventless life.
+
+Under the window soldiers began shooting the crippled horses; the
+heavy flash and bang of rifles set her trembling again.
+
+Until the firing ceased she stood as though stupefied, scarcely
+breathing, her splendid hair glistening like molten copper in the red
+torches' glare.
+
+A soldier came into the room and dragged the bedclothes from the bed,
+trailing them across the floor behind him as he departed. An officer
+holding a lantern peered through the door, his eye-glasses shining,
+his boots in his hand.
+
+He evidently had intended to get into the bed, but when his gaze fell
+upon us he withdrew in his stockinged feet.
+
+On the stairs soldiers were eating hunches of stale bread and knocking
+the necks from wine bottles with their bayonets. One lumpish fellow
+came to the door and offered me part of a sausage which he was
+devouring, a kindly act that touched me, and I wondered whether the
+other prisoners might find among their Uhlan guards the same humanity
+that moved this half-famished yokel to offer me the food he was
+gnawing.
+
+Soldiers began to come and go in the room; some carried off chairs for
+officers below some took the pillows from the bed, one bore away a
+desk on his broad shoulders.
+
+The Countess never moved or spoke.
+
+The evening had grown chilly; I was cold to my knees.
+
+A soldier offered to build me a fire in the great stone fireplace
+behind me, and when I assented he calmly smashed a chair to
+kindling-wood, wrenched off the heavy posts of the bed, and started a
+fire which lit up the wrecked room with its crimson glare.
+
+The Countess rose and looked around. The soldier pushed my long chair
+to the blaze, tore down the canopy over the bed and flung it over me,
+stolidly ignoring my protests. Then he clumped out with his muddy
+boots and shut the door behind him.
+
+For a long while I lay there, full in the heat of the fire, half
+dozing, then sleeping, then suddenly alert, only to look about me to
+see the Countess with eyes closed, motionless in her arm-chair, only
+to hear the muffled thunder of the guns in the dark.
+
+Once again, having slept, I roused, listening. The crackle of the
+flames was all I heard; the cannon were silent. A few moments later a
+clock in the hallway struck nine times. At the same instant a deadened
+cannon-shot echoed the clamor of the clock. It was the last shot of
+the battle. And when the dull reverberations had died away Alsace was
+a lost province, MacMahon's army was in full retreat, leaving on the
+three battle-fields of Woerth, Reichshoffen, and Froeschweiler sixteen
+thousand dead, wounded, and missing soldiers of France.
+
+All night long I heard cavalry traversing Morsbronn in an unbroken
+column, the steady trample of their horses never ceasing for an
+instant. At moments, from the outskirts of the village, the sinister
+sound of cheering came from the vanguard of the German Sixth Corps,
+just arriving to learn of the awful disaster to France. Too late to
+take any part in the battle, these tired soldiers stood cheering by
+regiments as the cavalry rode past in pursuit of the shattered army,
+and their cheering swelled to a terrific roar toward morning, when the
+Prince Royal of Prussia appeared with his staff, and the soldiers in
+Morsbronn rushed out into the street bellowing, "Hoch soll er leben!
+Er soll leben--Hoch!"
+
+About seven o'clock that morning a gaunt, leather-faced Prussian
+officer, immaculate in his sombre uniform, entered the room without
+knocking. The young Countess turned in the depths of her chair; he
+bowed to her slightly, unfolded a printed sheet of paper which bore
+the arms of Prussia, hesitated, then said, looking directly at me:
+
+"Morsbronn is now German territory and will continue to be governed
+by military law, proclaimed under the state of siege, until the
+country is properly pacified.
+
+"Honest inhabitants will not be disturbed. Citizens are invited to
+return to their homes and peacefully continue their legitimate
+avocations, subject to and under the guarantee of the Prussian
+military government.
+
+"Monsieur, I have the honor to hand you a copy of regulations. I am
+the provost marshal; all complaints should be brought to me."
+
+I took the printed sheet and looked at the Prussian coat of arms.
+
+"A list of the inhabitants of Morsbronn will be made to-day. You will
+have the goodness to declare yourself--and you also, madame. There
+being other buildings better fitted, no soldiers will be quartered in
+this house."
+
+The officer evidently mistook me for the owner of the house and not a
+prisoner. A blanket hid my hussar trousers and boots; he could only
+see my ragged shirt.
+
+"And now, madame," he continued, "as monsieur appears to need the
+services of a physician, I shall send him a French doctor, brought in
+this morning from the Chateau de la Trappe. I wish him to get well; I
+wish the inhabitants of my district to return to their homes and
+resume the interrupted regimes which have made this province of Alsace
+so valuable to France. I wish Morsbronn to prosper; I wish it well.
+This is the German policy.
+
+"But, monsieur, let me speak plainly. I tolerate no treachery. The
+law is iron and will be applied with rigor. An inhabitant of my
+district who deceives me, or who commits an offence against the troops
+under my command, or who in any manner holds, or attempts to hold,
+communication with the enemy, will be shot without court-martial."
+
+He turned his grim, inflexible face to the Countess and bowed, then he
+bowed to me, swung squarely on his heel, and walked to the door.
+
+"Admit the French doctor," he said to the soldier on guard, and
+marched out, his curved sabre banging behind his spurred heels.
+
+"It must be Dr. Delmont!" I said, looking at the Countess as there
+came a low knock at the door.
+
+"I am very thankful!" she said, her voice almost breaking. She rose
+unsteadily from her chair; somebody entered the room behind me and I
+turned, calling out, "Welcome, doctor!"
+
+"Thank you," replied the calm voice of John Buckhurst at my elbow.
+
+The Countess shrank aside as Buckhurst coolly passed before her,
+turned his slim back to the embers of the fire, and fixed his eyes on
+me--those pale, slow eyes, passionless as death.
+
+Here was a type of criminal I had never until recently known. Small of
+hand and foot--too small even for such a slender man--clean shaven,
+colorless in hair, skin, lips, he challenged instant attention by the
+very monotony of his bloodless symmetry. There was nothing of positive
+evil in his face, nothing of impulse, good or bad, nothing even
+superficially human. His spotless linen, his neat sack-coat and
+trousers of gray seemed part of him--like a loose outer skin. There
+was in his ensemble nothing to disturb the negative harmony, save
+perhaps an abnormal flatness of the instep and hands.
+
+"My friend," he observed, in English, "do you think you will know me
+again when you have finished your scrutiny?"
+
+The Countess, face averted, passed behind my chair.
+
+"Wait," said Buckhurst; and turning directly to me, he added: "You
+were mistaken for a hussar at La Trappe; you were mistaken here for a
+hussar as long as the squad holding this house remained in Morsbronn.
+A few moments ago the provost mistook you for a civilian." He looked
+across at the Countess, who already stood with her hand on the
+door-knob.
+
+"If you disturb me," he said, "I have only to tell the provost the
+truth. Members of the Imperial Police caught without proper uniform
+inside German lines are shot, seance tenante."
+
+The Countess stood perfectly still a moment, then came straight to
+me.
+
+"Is that true?" she asked.
+
+"Yes," I said.
+
+She still leaned forward, looking down into my face. Then she turned
+to Buckhurst.
+
+"Do you want money?" she asked.
+
+"I want a chair--and your attention for the present," he replied, and
+seated himself.
+
+The printed copy of the rules handed me by the provost marshal lay on
+the floor. Buckhurst picked up the sheet, glanced at the Prussian
+eagle, and thoughtfully began rolling the paper into a grotesque
+shape.
+
+"Sit down, madame," he said, without raising his eyes from the bit of
+paper which he had now fashioned into a cocked hat.
+
+After a moment's silent hesitation the Countess drew a small gilt
+chair beside my sofa-chair and sat down, and again that brave,
+unconscious gesture of protection left her steady hand lying lightly
+on my arm.
+
+Buckhurst noted the gesture. And all at once I divined that whatever
+plan he had come to execute had been suddenly changed. He looked down
+at the paper in his hands, gave it a thoughtful twist, and, drawing
+the ends out, produced a miniature paper boat.
+
+"We are all in one like that," he observed, holding it up without
+apparent interest. He glanced at the young Countess; her face was
+expressionless.
+
+"Madame," said Buckhurst, in his peculiarly soft and persuasive
+voice, "I am not here to betray this gentleman; I am not here even to
+justify myself. I came here to make reparation, to ask your
+forgiveness, madame, for the wrong I have done you, and to deliver
+myself, if necessary, into the hands of the proper French authorities
+in expiation of my misguided zeal."
+
+The Countess was looking at him now; he fumbled with the paper boat,
+gave it an unconscious twist, and produced a tiny paper box.
+
+"The cause," he said, gently, "to which I have devoted my life must
+not suffer through the mistake of a fanatic; for in the cause of
+universal brotherhood I am, perhaps, a fanatic, and to aid that cause
+I have gravely compromised myself. I came here to expiate that folly
+and to throw myself upon your mercy, madame."
+
+"I do not exactly understand," said I, "how you can expiate a crime
+here."
+
+"I can at least make restitution," he said, turning the paper box
+over and over between his flat fingers.
+
+"Have you brought me the diamonds which belong to the state?" I
+inquired, amused.
+
+"Yes," he said, and to my astonishment he drew a small leather pouch
+from his pocket and laid it on my blanket-covered knees. "How many
+diamonds were there?" he asked.
+
+"One hundred and three," I replied, incredulously, and opened the
+leather pouch. Inside was a bag of chamois-skin. This I stretched wide
+and emptied.
+
+Scores of little balls of tissue-paper rolled out on the blanket over
+my knees; I opened one; it contained a diamond; I opened another,
+another, and another; diamonds lay blazing on my blanket, a whole
+handful, glittering in undimmed splendor.
+
+"Count them," murmured Buckhurst, fashioning the paper box into a
+fly-trap with a lid.
+
+With a quick movement I swept them into my hands, then one by one
+dropped the stones while I counted aloud one hundred and two diamonds.
+The one hundred and third jewel was, of course, safely in Paris.
+
+When I had a second time finished the enumeration I leaned back in my
+chair, utterly at a loss to account for this man or for what he had
+done. As far as I could see there was no logic in it, nothing
+demonstrated, nothing proven. To me--and I am not either suspicious or
+obstinate by nature--Buckhurst was still an unrepentant thief and a
+dangerous one.
+
+I could see in him absolutely nothing of the fanatic, of the generous,
+feather-headed devotee, nothing of the hasty disciple or the impulsive
+martyr. In my eyes he continued to be the passionless master-criminal,
+the cold, slow-eyed source of hidden evil, the designer of an
+intricate and viewless intrigue against the state.
+
+His head remained bent over the paper toy in his hands. Was his hair
+gray with age or excesses, or was it only colorless like the rest of
+his exterior?
+
+"Restitution is not expiation," he said, sadly, without looking up.
+"I loved the cause; I love it still; I practised deception, and I am
+here to ask this gentle lady to forgive me for an unworthy yet
+unselfish use of her money and her hospitality. If she can pardon me I
+welcome whatever punishment may be meted out."
+
+The Countess dropped her elbow on the arm of my chair and rested her
+face in her hand.
+
+"Swept away by my passion for the cause of universal brotherhood,"
+said Buckhurst, in his low, caressing voice, "I ventured to spend
+this generous lady's money to carry the propaganda into the more
+violent centres of socialism--into the clubs in Montmartre and
+Belleville. There I urged non-resistance; I pleaded moderation and
+patience. What I said helped a little, I think--"
+
+He hesitated, twisting his fly-box into a paper creature with four
+legs.
+
+"I was eager; people listened. I thought that if I had a little more
+money I might carry on this work.... I could not come to you,
+madame--"
+
+"Why not?" said the Countess, looking at him quickly. "I have never
+refused you money!"
+
+"No," he said, "you never refused me. But I knew that La Trappe was
+mortgaged, that even this house in Morsbronn was loaded with debt. I
+knew, madame, that in all the world you had left but one small roof to
+cover you--the house in Morbihan, on Point Paradise. I knew that if I
+asked for money you would sell Paradise,... and I could not ask so
+much,... I could not bring myself to ask that sacrifice."
+
+"And so you stole the crucifix of Louis XI.," I suggested,
+pleasantly.
+
+He did not look at me, but the Countess did.
+
+"Bon," I thought, watching Buckhurst's deft fingers; "he means to be
+taken back into grace. I wonder exactly why? And ... is it worth this
+fortune in diamonds to him to be pardoned by a penniless girl whom he
+and his gang have already stripped?"
+
+"Could you forgive me, madame?" murmured Buckhurst.
+
+"Would you explain that stick of dynamite first?" I interposed.
+
+The Countess turned and looked directly at Buckhurst. He sat with
+humble head bowed, nimbly constructing a paper bird.
+
+"That was not dynamite; it was concentrated phosphorus," he said,
+without resentment. "Naturally it burned when you lighted it, but if
+you had not burned it I could easily have shown Madame la Comtesse
+what it really was."
+
+"I also," said I, "if I had thrown it at your feet, Mr. Buckhurst."
+
+"Do you not believe me?" he asked, meekly, looking up at the
+Countess.
+
+"Mr. Buckhurst," said the young Countess, turning to me, "has aided
+me for a long time in experiments. We hoped to find some cheap method
+of restoring nitrogen and phosphorus to the worn-out soil which our
+poor peasants till. Why should you doubt that he speaks the truth? At
+least he is guiltless of any connection with the party which advocated
+violence."
+
+I looked at Buckhurst. He was engaged in constructing a multi-pointed
+paper star. What else was he busy with? Perhaps I might learn if I
+ceased to manifest distrust.
+
+"Does concentrated phosphorus burn like dynamite?" I asked, as if
+with newly aroused interest.
+
+"Did you not know it?" he said, warily.
+
+But was he deceived by my manner? Was that the way for me to learn
+anything?
+
+There was perhaps another way. Clearly this extraordinary man depended
+upon his persuasive eloquence for his living, for the very shoes on
+his little, flat feet, as do all such chevaliers of industry. If he
+would only begin to argue, if I could only induce him to try his
+eloquence on me, and if I could convince him that I myself was but an
+ignorant, self-centred, bullet-headed gendarme, doing my duty only
+because of perspective advancement, ready perhaps to take
+bribes--perhaps even weakly, covetously, credulous--well, perhaps I
+might possibly learn why he desired to cling to this poor young lady,
+whose life had evidently gone dreadfully to smash, to land her among
+such a coterie of thieves and lunatics.
+
+"Mr. Buckhurst," I said, pompously, "in bringing these diamonds to
+me you have certainly done all in your power to repair an injury which
+concerned all France.
+
+"As I am situated, of course I cannot now ask you to accompany me to
+Paris, where doubtless the proper authorities would gladly admit
+extenuating circumstances, and credit you with a sincere repentance.
+But I put you on your honor to surrender at the first opportunity."
+
+It was as stupidly trite a speech as I could think of.
+
+Buckhurst glanced up at me. Was he taking my measure anew, judging me
+from my bray?
+
+"I could easily aid you to leave Morsbronn," he said, stealthily.
+
+"O-ho," thought I, "so you're a German agent, too, as I suspected."
+But I said, aloud, simulating astonishment: "Do you mean to say, Mr.
+Buckhurst, that you would deliberately risk death to aid a police
+officer to bring you before a military tribunal in Paris?"
+
+"I do not desire to pose as a hero or a martyr," he said, quietly,
+"but I regret what I have done, and I will do what an honest man can
+do to make the fullest reparation--even if it means my death."
+
+I gazed at him in admiration--real admiration--because the gross
+bathos he had just uttered betrayed a weakness--vanity. Now I began to
+understand him; vanity must also lead him to undervalue men. True,
+with the faintest approach to eloquence he could no doubt hold the
+"Clubs" of Belleville spellbound; with self-effacing adroitness to
+cover stealthy persuasion, he had probably found little difficulty in
+dominating this inexperienced girl, who, touched to the soul with
+pity for human woe, had flung herself and her fortune to the howling
+proletariat.
+
+But that he should so serenely undervalue me at my first bray was more
+than I hoped for. So I brayed again, the good, old, sentimental bray,
+for which all Gallic lungs are so marvellously fashioned:
+
+"Monsieur, such sentiments honor you. I am only a rough soldier of
+the Imperial Police, but I am profoundly moved to find among the
+leaders of the proletariat such delicate and chivalrous emotions--" I
+hesitated. Was I buttering the sop too thickly?
+
+Buckhurst, eyes bent on the floor, began picking to pieces his paper
+toy. Presently he looked up, not at me, but at the Countess, who sat
+with hands clasped earnestly watching him.
+
+"If--if the state pardons me, can ... you?" he murmured.
+
+She looked at him with intense earnestness. I saw he was sailing on
+the wrong tack.
+
+"I have nothing to pardon," she said, gravely. "But I must tell
+you the truth, Mr. Buckhurst, I cannot forget what you have done. It
+was something--the one thing that I cannot understand--that I can
+never understand--something so absolutely alien to me that
+it--somehow--leaves me stunned. Don't ask me to forget it.... I
+cannot. I do not mean to be harsh and cruel, or to condemn you.
+Even if you had taken the jewels from me, and had asked my
+forgiveness, I would have given it freely. But I could not be as I
+was, a comrade to you."
+
+There was a silence. The Countess, looking perfectly miserable, still
+gazed at Buckhurst. He dropped his gray, symmetrical head, yet I felt
+that he was listening to every minute sound in the room.
+
+"You must not care what I say," she said. "I am only an unhappy
+woman, unused to the liberty I have given myself, not yet habituated
+to the charity of those blameless hearts which forgive everything! I
+am a novice, groping my way into a new and vast world, a limitless,
+generous, forgiving commune, where love alone dominates.... And if I
+had lived among my brothers long enough to be purged of those
+traditions which I have drawn from generations, I might now be noble
+enough and wise enough to say I do forgive and forget that you--"
+
+"That you were once a thief," I ended, with the genial officiousness
+of the hopelessly fat-minded.
+
+In the stillness I heard Buckhurst draw in his breath--once. Some day
+he would try to kill me for that; in the mean time my crass stupidity
+was no longer a question in his mind. I had hurt the Countess, too,
+with what she must have believed a fool's needless brutality. But it
+had to be so if I played at Jaques Bonhomme.
+
+So I put the finishing whine to it--"Our Lord died between two
+thieves"--and relapsed into virtuous contemplation of my finger-tips.
+
+"Madame," said Buckhurst, in a low voice, "your contempt of me is
+part of my penalty. I must endure it. I shall not complain. But I
+shall try to live a life that will at least show you my deep
+sincerity."
+
+"I do not doubt it," said the Countess, earnestly. "Don't think that
+I mean to turn away from you or to push you away. There is nothing of
+the Pharisee in me. I would gladly trust you with what I have. I will
+consult you and advise with you, Mr. Buckhurst--"
+
+"And ... despise me."
+
+The unhappy Countess looked at me. It goes hard with a woman when her
+guide and mentor falls.
+
+"If you return to Paradise, in Morbihan,... as we had planned, may I
+go," he asked, humbly, "only as an obscure worker in the cause? I
+beg, madame, that you will not cast me off."
+
+So he wanted to go to Morbihan--to the village of Paradise? Why?
+
+The Countess said: "I welcome all who care for the cause. You will
+never hear an unkind word from me if you desire to resume the work in
+Paradise. Dr. Delmont will be there; Monsieur Tavernier also, I hope;
+and they are older and wiser than I, and they have reached that lofty
+serenity which is far above my troubled mind. Ask them what you have
+asked of me; they are equipped to answer you."
+
+It was time for another discord from me, so I said: "Madame, you have
+seen a thousand men lay down their lives for France. Has it not shaken
+your allegiance to that ghost of patriotism which you call the
+'Internationale'?"
+
+Here was food for thought, or rather fodder for asses--the Police
+Oracle turned missionary under the nose of the most cunning criminal
+in France and the vainest. Of course Buckhurst's contempt for me at
+once passed all bounds, and, secure in that contempt, he felt it
+scarcely worth while to use his favorite weapon--persuasion. Still, if
+the occasion should require it, he was quite ready, I knew, to loose
+his eloquence on the Countess, and on me too.
+
+The Countess turned her troubled eyes to me.
+
+"What I have seen, what I have thought since yesterday has distressed
+me dreadfully," she said. "I have tried to include all the world in a
+broader pity, a broader, higher, and less selfish love than the
+jealous, single-minded love for one country--"
+
+"The mother-land," I said, and Buckhurst looked up, adding, "The
+world is the true mother-land."
+
+Whereupon I appeared profoundly impressed at such a novel and
+epigrammatic view.
+
+"There is much to be argued on both sides," said the young Countess,
+"but I am utterly unfitted to struggle with this new code of ethics.
+If it had been different--if I had been born among the poor, in
+misery!--But you see I come a pilgrim among the proletariat, clothed
+in conservatism, cloaked with tradition, and if at heart I burn with
+sorrow for the miserable, and if I gladly give what I have to help, I
+cannot with a single gesture throw off those inherited garments,
+though they tortured my body like the garment of Nessus."
+
+I did not smile or respect her less for the stilted phrases, the
+pathetic poverty of metaphor. Profoundly troubled, struggling with a
+reserve the borders of which she strove so bravely to cross, her
+distress touched me the more because I knew it aroused the uneasy
+contempt of Buckhurst. Yet I could not spare her.
+
+"You saw the cuirassiers die in the street below," I repeated, with
+the obstinacy of a limited intellect.
+
+"Yes--and my heart went out to them," she replied, with an emphasis
+that pleased me and startled Buckhurst.
+
+Buckhurst began to speak, but I cut him short.
+
+"Then, madame, if your heart went out to the soldiers of France, it
+went out to France, too!"
+
+"Yes--to France," she repeated, and I saw her lip begin to quiver.
+
+"Wherein does love for France conflict with our creed, madame?" asked
+Buckhurst, gently. "It is only hate that we abjure."
+
+She turned her gray eyes on him. "I will tell you: in that dreadful
+moment when the cavalry of France cheered Death in his own awful
+presence, I loved them and their country--_my_ country!--as I had
+never loved in all my life.... And I hated, too! I hated the men who
+butchered them--more!--I hated the country where the men came from; I
+hated race and country and the blows they dealt, and the evil they
+wrought on France--_my France_! That is the truth; and I realize it!"
+
+There was a silence; Buckhurst slowly unrolled the wrinkled paper he
+had been fingering.
+
+"And now?" he asked, simply.
+
+"Now?" she repeated. "I don't know--truly, I do not know." She
+turned to me sorrowfully. "I had long since thought that my heart was
+clean of hate, and now I don't know." And, to Buckhurst, again: "Our
+creed teaches us that war is vile--a savage betrayal of humanity by a
+few dominant minds; a dishonorable ingratitude to God and country. But
+from that window I saw men die for honor of France with God's name on
+their lips. I saw one superb cuirassier, trapped down there in the
+street, sit still on his horse, while they shot at him from every
+window, and I heard him call up to a Prussian officer who had just
+fired at him: 'My friend, you waste powder; the heart of France is
+cuirassed by a million more like me!'" A rich flush touched her face;
+her gray eyes grew brighter.
+
+"Is there a Frenchwoman alive whose blood would not stir at such a
+scene?" she said. "They shot him through his armor, his breastplate
+was riddled, he clung to his horse, always looking up at the riflemen,
+and I heard the bullets drumming on his helmet and his cuirass like
+hailstones on a tin roof, and I could not look away. And all the while
+he was saying, quietly: 'It is quite useless, friends; France lives!
+You waste your powder!' and I could not look away or close my eyes--"
+
+She bent her head, shivering, and her interlocked fingers whitened.
+
+"I only know this," she said: "I will give all I have--I will give
+my poor self to help the advent of that world-wide brotherhood which
+must efface national frontiers and end all war in this sad world. But
+if you ask me, in the presence of war, to look on with impartiality,
+to watch my own country battling for breath, to stop my ears when a
+wounded mother-land is calling, to answer the supreme cry of France
+with a passionless cry, 'Repent!' I cannot do it--I will not! I was
+not born to!"
+
+Deeply moved, she had risen, confronting Buckhurst, whose stone-cold
+eyes were fixed on her.
+
+"You say I hold you unworthy," she said. "Others may hold me, too,
+unworthy because I have not reached that impartial equipoise whence,
+impassive, I can balance my native land against its sins and watch
+blind justice deal with it all unconcerned.
+
+"In theory I have done it--oh, it is simple to teach one's soul in
+theory! But when my eyes saw my own land blacken and shrivel like a
+green leaf in the fire, and when with my own eyes I saw the best, the
+noblest, the crown of my country's chivalry fall rolling in the mud of
+Morsbronn under the feet of Prussia, every drop of blood in my body
+was French--hot and red and French! And it is now; and it will always
+be--as it has always been, though I did not understand."
+
+After a silence Buckhurst said: "All that may be, madame, yet not
+impair your creed."
+
+"What!" she said, "does not hatred of the stranger impair my
+creed?"
+
+"It will die out and give place to reason."
+
+"When? When I attain the lofty, dispassionate level I have never
+attained? That will not be while this war endures."
+
+"Who knows?" said Buckhurst, gently.
+
+"I know!" replied the Countess, the pale flames in her cheeks
+deepening again.
+
+"And yet," observed Buckhurst, patiently, "you are going to Paradise
+to work for the Internationale."
+
+"I shall try to do my work and love France," she said, steadily. "I
+cannot believe that one renders the other impossible."
+
+"Yet," said I, "if you teach the nation non-resistance, what would
+become of the armies of France?"
+
+"I shall not teach non-resistance until we are at peace," she
+said--"until there is not a German soldier left in France. After that
+I shall teach acquiescence and personal liberty."
+
+I looked at her very seriously; logic had no dwelling-place within her
+tender and unhappy heart.
+
+And what a hunting-ground was that heart for men like Buckhurst! I
+could begin to read that mouse-colored gentleman now, to follow, after
+a fashion, the intricate policy which his insolent mind was
+shaping--shaping in stealthy contempt for me and for this young girl.
+Thus far I could divine the thoughts of Mr. Buckhurst, but there were
+other matters to account for. Why did he choose to spare my life when
+a word would have sent me before the peloton of execution? Why had he
+brought to me the fortune in diamonds which he had stolen? Why did he
+eat humble-pie before a young girl from whom he and his companions had
+wrung the last penny? Why did he desire to go to Morbihan and be
+received among the elect in the Breton village of Paradise?
+
+I said, abruptly: "So you are not going to denounce me to the
+Prussian provost?"
+
+He lifted his well-shaped head and gazed at the Countess with an
+admirable pathos which seemed a mute appeal for protection from
+brutality.
+
+"That question is a needless one," said the Countess, quietly. "It
+was a cruel one, also, Monsieur Scarlett."
+
+"I did not mean it as an offensive question," said I. "I was merely
+reciting a fact, most creditable to Mr. Buckhurst. Mon Dieu, madame, I
+am an officer of Imperial Police, and I have lived to hear blunt
+questions and blunter answers. And if it be true that Monsieur
+Buckhurst desires to atone for--for what has happened, then it is
+perfectly proper for me, even as a prisoner myself, to speak
+plainly."
+
+I meant this time to thoroughly convince Buckhurst of my ability to
+gabble platitude. My desire that he should view me as a typical
+gendarme was intense.
+
+So I coughed solemnly behind my hand, knit my eyebrows, and laid one
+finger alongside of my nose.
+
+"Is it not my duty, as a guardian of national interests, to point out
+to Mr. Buckhurst his honest errors? Certainly it is, madame, and this
+is the proper time."
+
+Turning pompously to Buckhurst, I fancied I could almost detect a
+sneer on that inexpressive mask he wore--at least I hoped I could, and
+I said, heavily:
+
+"Monsieur, for a number of years there has passed under our eyes here
+in France certain strange phenomena. Thousands of Frenchmen have, so
+to speak, separated themselves from the rest of the nation.
+
+"All the sentiments that the nation honors itself by professing these
+other Frenchmen rebuke--the love of country, public spirit, accord
+between citizens, social repose, and respect for communal law and
+order--these other Frenchmen regard as the hallucinations of a nation
+of dupes.
+
+"Separated by such unfortunate ideas from the nation within whose
+boundaries they live, they continue to abuse, even to threaten, the
+society and the country which gives them shelter.
+
+"France is only a name to them; they were born there, they live
+there, they derive their nourishment from her without gratitude.
+But France is nothing to them; _their mother-land is the
+Internationale_!"
+
+I was certain now that the shadow of a sneer had settled in the
+corners of Buckhurst's thin lips.
+
+"I do not speak of anarchists or of terrorists," I continued, nodding
+as though profoundly impressed by my own sagacity. "I speak of
+socialists--that dangerous society to which the cry of Karl Marx was
+addressed with the warning, 'Socialists! Unite!'
+
+"The government has reason to fear socialism, not anarchy, for it
+will never happen in France, where the passion for individual property
+is so general, that a doctrine of brutal destruction could have the
+slightest chance of success.
+
+"But wait, here is the point, Monsieur Buckhurst. Formerly the name
+of 'terrorist' was a shock to the entire civilized world; it evoked
+the spectres of a year that the world can never forget. And so our
+modern reformers, modestly desiring to evade the inconveniences of
+such memories among the people, call themselves the 'Internationale.'
+Listen to them; they are adroit, they blame and rebuke violence, they
+condemn anarchy, they would not lay their hands on public or
+individual property--no, indeed!
+
+"Ah, madame, but you should hear them in their own clubs, where the
+ladies and gentlemen of the gutters, the barriers, and the abattoirs
+discuss 'individual property,' 'the tyranny of capital,' and similar
+subjects which no doubt they are peculiarly fitted to discuss.
+
+"Believe me, madame, the little coterie which you represent is
+already the dupe and victim of this terrible Internationale. Their
+leaders work their will through you; a vast conspiracy against all
+social peace is spread through your honest works of mercy. The time
+is coming when the whole world will rise to combat this
+Internationale; and when the mask is dragged from its benignant
+visage, there, grinning behind, will appear the same old 'Spectre
+Rouge,' torch in one hand, gun in the other, squatting behind a
+barricade of paving-blocks."
+
+I wagged my head dolefully.
+
+"I could not have rested had I not warned Mr. Buckhurst of this," I
+said, sentimentally.
+
+Which was fairly well done, considering that I was figuratively
+lamenting over the innocence of the most accomplished scoundrel that
+ever sat in the supreme council of the Internationale.
+
+Buckhurst looked thoughtfully at the floor.
+
+"If I thought," he murmured--"if I believed for one instant--"
+
+"Believe me, my dear sir," I said, "that you are playing into the
+hands of the wickedest villains on earth!"
+
+"Your earnestness almost converts me," he said, lifting his stealthy
+eyes.
+
+The Countess appeared weary and perplexed.
+
+"At all events," she said, "we must do nothing to embarrass France
+now; we must do nothing until this frightful war is ended."
+
+After a silence Buckhurst said, "But you will go to Paradise,
+madame?"
+
+"Yes," replied the Countess, listlessly.
+
+Now, what in Heaven's name attracted that rogue to Paradise?
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+A STRUGGLE FORESHADOWED
+
+
+I took my breakfast by the window, watching the German soldiery
+cleaning up Morsbronn. For that wonderful Teutonic administrative
+mania was already manifesting itself while ruined houses still smoked;
+method replaced chaos, order marched on the heels of the Prussian
+rear-guard, which enveloped Morsbronn in a whirlwind of Uhlans, and
+left it a silent, blackened landmark in the August sunshine.
+
+Soldiers in canvas fatigue-dress, wearing soft, round, visorless caps,
+were removing the debris of the fatal barricade; soldiers with shovel
+and hoe filled in the trenches and raked the long, winding street
+clean of all litter; soldiers with trowel and mortar were perched on
+shot-torn houses, mending chimneys and slated roofs so that their
+officers might enjoy immunity from rain and wind and defective flues.
+
+In the court-yards and stables I could see cavalrymen in
+stable-jackets, whitewashing walls and out-buildings and ill-smelling
+stalls, while others dug shovelfuls of slaked lime from wheelbarrows
+and spread it through stable-yards and dirty alleys. Everywhere quiet,
+method, order, prompt precision reigned; I even noticed a big,
+red-fisted artilleryman tying up tall, blue larkspurs, dahlias, and
+phlox in a trampled garden, and he touched the ragged masses of bloom
+with a tenderness peculiar to a flower-loving and sentimental people,
+whose ultimate ambition is a quart of beer, a radish, and a green leaf
+overhead.
+
+At the corners of the walls and blind alleys, placards in French and
+German were posted, embodying regulations governing the village under
+Prussian military rule. The few inhabitants of Morsbronn who had
+remained in cellars during the bombardment shuffled up to read these
+notices, or to loiter stupidly, gaping at the Prussian eagles
+surmounting the posters.
+
+A soldier came in and started the fire in my fireplace. When he went
+out I drew my code-book from my breeches-pocket and tossed it into the
+fire. After it followed my commission, my memoranda, and every scrap
+of writing. The diamonds I placed in the bosom of my flannel shirt.
+
+Toward one o'clock I heard the shrill piping of a goat-herd, and I saw
+him, a pallid boy, clumping along in his wooden shoes behind his two
+nanny-goats, while the German soldiers, peasants themselves, looked
+after him with curious sympathy.
+
+A little later a small herd of cattle passed, driven to pasture by a
+stolid Alsatian, who replied to the soldiers' questions in German
+patois and shrugged his heavy shoulders like a Frenchman.
+
+A cock crowed occasionally from some near dunghill; once I saw a cat
+serenely following the course of a stucco wall, calm, perfectly
+self-composed, ignoring the blandishments of the German soldiers, who
+called, "Komm mitz! mitz!" and held out bits of sausage and black
+bread.
+
+A German ambulance surgeon arrived to see me in the afternoon. The
+Countess was busy somewhere with Buckhurst, who had come with news for
+her, and the German surgeon's sharp double rap at the door did not
+bring her, so I called out, "Entrez donc!" and he stalked in,
+removing his fatigue-cap, which action distinguished him from his
+brother officers.
+
+He was a tall, well-built man, perfectly uniformed in his
+double-breasted frocked tunic, blue-eyed, blond-bearded, and
+immaculate of hand and face, a fine type of man and a credit to any
+army.
+
+After a brief examination he sat down and resumed a very bad cigar,
+which had been smouldering between his carefully kept fingers.
+
+"Do you know," he said, admiringly, "that I have never before seen
+just such a wound. The spinal column is not even grazed, and if, as I
+understand from you, you suffered temporarily from complete paralysis
+of the body below your waist, the case is not only interesting but
+even remarkable."
+
+"Is the superficial lesion at all serious?" I asked.
+
+"Not at all. As far as I can see the blow from the bullet temporarily
+paralyzed the spinal cord. There is no fracture, no depression. I do
+not see why you should not walk if you desire to."
+
+"When? Now?"
+
+"Try it," he said, briefly.
+
+I tried. Apart from a certain muscular weakness and a great fatigue, I
+found it quite possible to stand, even to move a few steps. Then I sat
+down again, and was glad to do so.
+
+The doctor was looking at my legs rather grimly, and it suddenly
+flashed on me that I had dropped my blanket and he had noticed my
+hussar's trousers.
+
+"So," he said, "you are a military prisoner? I understood from the
+provost marshal that you were a civilian."
+
+As he spoke Buckhurst appeared at the door, and then sauntered in,
+quietly greeting the surgeon, who looked around at the sound of his
+footsteps on the stone floor. There was no longer a vestige of doubt
+in my mind that Buckhurst was a German agent, or at least that the
+Germans _believed_ him to be in their pay. And doubtless he was in
+their pay, but to whom he was faithful nobody could know with any
+certainty.
+
+"How is our patient, doctor?" he asked.
+
+"Convalescent," replied the doctor, shortly, as though not exactly
+relishing the easy familiarity of this pale-eyed gentleman in gray.
+
+"Can he travel to-day?" inquired Buckhurst, without apparent
+interest.
+
+"Before he travels," said the officer, "it might be well to find out
+why he wears part of a hussar uniform."
+
+"I've explained that to the provost," observed Buckhurst, examining
+his well-kept finger-nails. "And I have a pass for him also--if he is
+in a fit condition to travel."
+
+The officer gave him a glance full of frank dislike, adjusted his
+sabre, pulled on his white gloves, and, bowing very slightly to me,
+marched straight out of the room and down the stairs without taking
+any notice of Buckhurst. The latter looked after the officer, then his
+indifferent eyes returned to me. Presently he sat down and produced a
+small slip of paper, which he very carefully twisted into a cocked
+hat.
+
+"I suppose you doubt my loyalty to France," he said, intent on his
+bit of paper.
+
+Then, logically continuing my role of the morning, I began to upbraid
+him for a traitor and swear that I would not owe my salvation to him,
+and all the while he was calmly transforming his paper from one toy
+into another between deft, flat fingers.
+
+"You are unjust and a trifle stupid," he said. "I am paid by Prussia
+for information which I never give. But I have the entre of their
+lines. I do it for the sake of the Internationale. The Internationale
+has a few people in its service ... _And it pays them well_."
+
+He looked squarely at me as he said this. I almost trembled with
+delight: the man undervalued me, he had taken me at my own figure, and
+now, holding me in absolute contempt, he was going to begin on me.
+
+"Scarlett," he said, "what does the government pay you?"
+
+I began to protest in a torrent of patriotism and sentimentality. He
+watched me impassively while I called Heaven to witness and proclaimed
+my loyalty to France, ending through sheer breathlessness in a
+maundering, tearful apotheosis where mixed metaphors jostled each
+other--the government, the Emperor, and the French flag, consecrated
+in blood--and finally, calling his attention to the fact that twenty
+centuries had once looked down on this same banner, I collapsed in my
+chair and gave him his chance.
+
+He took it. With subtle flattery he recognized in me a powerful arm of
+a corrupt Empire, which Empire he likened to the old man who rode
+Sindbad the Sailor. He admitted my noble loyalty to France, pointing
+out, however, that devotion to the Empire was not devotion to France,
+but the contrary. Skilfully he pictured the unprepared armies of the
+Empire, huddled along the frontier, seized and rent to fragments, one
+by one; adroitly he painted the inevitable ending, the armies that
+remained cut off and beaten in detail.
+
+And as I listened I freely admitted to myself that I had undervalued
+him; that he was no crude Belleville orator, no sentimental
+bathos-peddling reformer, no sansculotte with brains ablaze, squalling
+for indiscriminate slaughter and pillage; he was a cool student in
+crime, taking no chances that he was not forced to take, a calm,
+adroit, methodical observer, who had established a theory and was
+carefully engaged in proving it.
+
+"Scarlett," he said, in English, "let us come to the point. I am a
+mercenary American; you are an American mercenary, paid by the French
+government. You care nothing for that government or for the country;
+you would drop both to-day if your pay ceased. You and I are
+outsiders; we are in the world to watch our chances. And our chance is
+here."
+
+He unfolded the creased bit of paper and spread it out on his knees,
+smoothing it thoughtfully.
+
+"What do I care for the Internationale?" he asked, blandly. "I am
+high in its councils; Karl Marx knows less about the Internationale
+than do I. As for Prussia and France--bah!--it's a dog-fight to me,
+and I lack even the interest to bet on the German bull-dog.
+
+"You will know me better some day, and when you do you will know that
+I am a man who has determined to get rich if I have to set half of
+France against the other half and sack every bank in the Empire.
+
+"And now the time is coming when the richest city in Europe will be
+put to the sack. You don't believe it? Yet you shall live to see Paris
+besieged, and you shall live to see Paris surrender, and you shall
+live to see the Internationale rise up from nowhere, seize the
+government by the throat, and choke it to death under the red flag of
+universal--ahem!... license"--the faintest sneer came into his pallid
+face--"and every city of France shall be a commune, and we shall pass
+from city to city, leisurely, under the law--_our_ laws, which we will
+make--and I pity the man among us who cannot place his millions in the
+banks of England and America!"
+
+He began to worry the creased bit of paper again, stealthy eyes on the
+floor.
+
+"The revolt is as certain as death itself," he said. "The Society of
+the Internationale honeycombs Europe--your police archives show you
+that--and I tell you that, of the two hundred thousand soldiers of
+the national guard in Paris to-day, ninety per cent. are
+ours--_ours_, soul and body. You don't believe it? Wait!
+
+"Yet, for a moment, suppose I am right? Where are the government
+forces? Who can stop us from working our will? Not the fragments of
+beaten and exhausted armies! Not the thousands of prisoners which you
+will see sent into captivity across the Rhine! What has the government
+to lean on--a government discredited, impotent, beaten! What in the
+world can prevent a change, an uprising, a revolution? Why, even if
+there were no such thing as the Internationale and its secret Central
+Committee--to which I have the honor to belong"--and here his sneer
+was frightful--"I tell you that before a conquering German army had
+recrossed the Rhine this land of chattering apes would be tearing one
+another for very want of a universal scape-goat.
+
+"But that is exactly where we come into the affair. We find the
+popular scape-goat and point him out--the government, my friend. And
+all we have to do is to let the mob loose, stand back, and count
+profits."
+
+He leaned forward in his chair, idly twisting his crumpled bit of
+paper in one hand.
+
+"I am not fool enough to believe that our reign will last," he said.
+"It may last a month, two months, perhaps three. Then we leaders will
+be at one another's throats--and the game is up! It's always so--mob
+rule can't last--it never has lasted and never will. But the prudent
+man will make hay before the brief sunshine is ended; I expect to
+economize a little, and set aside enough--well, enough to make it pay,
+you see."
+
+He looked up at me quietly.
+
+"I am perfectly willing to tell you this, even if you used your
+approaching liberty to alarm the entire country, from the Emperor to
+the most obscure scullion in the Tuileries. Nothing can stop us now,
+nothing in the world can prevent our brief reign. Because these
+things are certain, the armies of France will be beaten--they are
+already beaten. Paris will hold out; Paris will fall; and with Paris
+down goes France! And as sure as the sun shall rise on a conquered
+people, so sure shall rise that red spectre we call the
+Internationale."
+
+The man astonished me. He put into words a prophecy which had haunted
+me from the day that war was declared--a prophetic fear which had
+haunted men higher up in the service of the Empire--thinking men who
+knew what war meant to a country whose government was as rotten as its
+army was unprepared, whose political chiefs were as vain, incompetent,
+ignorant, and weak as were the chiefs of its brave army--an army
+riddled with politics, weakened by intrigue and neglect--an army used
+ignobly, perverted, cheated, lied to, betrayed, abandoned.
+
+That, for once, Buckhurst spoke the truth as he foresaw it, I did not
+question. That he was right in his infernal calculations, I was
+fearsomely persuaded. And now the game had advanced, and I must
+display what cards I had, or pretended to have.
+
+"Are you trying to bribe me?" I blurted out, weakly.
+
+"Bribe you," he repeated, in contempt. "No. If the prospect does not
+please you, I have only to say a word to the provost marshal."
+
+"Wouldn't that injure your prospects with the Countess?" I said, with
+fat-brained cunning. "You cannot betray me and hope for her
+friendship."
+
+He glanced up at me, measured my mental capacity, then nodded.
+
+"I can't force you that way," he admitted.
+
+"He's bound to get to Paradise. Why?" I wondered, and said, aloud:
+
+"What do you want of me?"
+
+"I want immunity from the secret police, Mr. Scarlett."
+
+"Where?"
+
+"Wherever I may be."
+
+"In Morbihan?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"In Paradise?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+I was silent for a moment, then, looking him in the eye, "What do I
+gain?"
+
+Ah, the cat was out now. Buckhurst did not move, but I saw the muscles
+of his face relax, and he drew a deep, noiseless breath.
+
+"Well," he said, coolly, "you may keep those diamonds, for one
+thing."
+
+Presently I said, "And for the next thing?"
+
+"You are high-priced, Mr. Scarlett," he observed.
+
+"Oh, very," I said, with that offensive, swaggering menace in my
+voice which is peculiar to the weak criminal the world over.
+
+So I asserted myself and scowled at him and told him I was no fool and
+taunted him with my importance to his schemes and said I was not born
+yesterday, and that if Paris was to be divided I knew what part I
+wanted and meant to stand no nonsense from him or anybody.
+
+All of which justified the opinion he had already formed of me, and
+justified something else, too--his faith in his own eloquence, logic,
+and powers of persuasion. Not that I meant to make his mistake and
+undervalue him; he was an intelligent, capable, remarkable
+criminal--with the one failing--an overconfident contempt of _all_
+men.
+
+"There is one thing I want to ask you," said I. "Why do you desire
+to go to Paradise?"
+
+He did not answer me at once, and I studied his passionless profile as
+he gazed out of the window.
+
+"Well," he said, slowly, "I shall not tell you."
+
+"Why not?" I demanded.
+
+"--But I'll say this," he continued. "I want you to come to Paradise
+with me and that fool of a woman. I want you to report to your
+government that you are watching the house in Paradise, and that you
+are hoping to catch me there."
+
+"How can I do that?" I asked. "As soon as the government catches the
+Countess de Vassart she will be sent across the frontier."
+
+"Not if you inform your government that you desire to use her and the
+others as a bait to draw me to Paradise."
+
+"Oh, that's it, is it?" I asked, thoughtfully.
+
+"Yes," said Buckhurst, "that's it."
+
+"And you do not desire to inform me why you are going to stay in
+Paradise?"
+
+"Don't you think you'll be clever enough to find out?" he asked, with
+a sneer.
+
+I did think so; more than that, I let him see that I thought so, and
+he was contented with my conceit.
+
+"One thing more," I said, blustering a little, "I want to know
+whether you mean any harm to that innocent girl?"
+
+"Who? The Countess? What do you mean? Harm her? Do you think I waste
+my thoughts on that little fool? She is not a factor in
+anything--except that just now I'm using her and mean to use her house
+in Paradise."
+
+"Haven't you stripped her of every cent she has?" I asked. "What do
+you want of her now?" And I added something about respect due to
+women.
+
+"Oh yes, of course," he said, with a vague glance at the street
+below. "You need not worry; nobody's going to hurt her--" He suddenly
+shifted his eyes to me. "You haven't taken a fancy to her, have
+you?" he asked, in faint disgust.
+
+I saw that he thought me weak enough for any sentiment, even a noble
+one.
+
+"If you think it pays," he muttered, "marry her and beat her, for
+all I care; but don't play loose with me, my friend; as a plain matter
+of business it won't pay you."
+
+"Is that a threat?" I asked, in the bullying tone of a born coward.
+
+"No, not a threat, a plain matter of profit and loss, a simple
+business proposition. For, suppose you betray me--and, by a miracle,
+live to boast of it? What is your reward? A colonelcy in the Military
+Police with a few thousand francs salary, and, in your old age, a
+pension which might permit you to eat meat twice a week. Against that,
+balance what I offer--free play in a helpless city, and no one to
+hinder you from salting away as many millions as you can carry off!"
+
+Presently I said, weakly, "And what, once more, is the service you
+ask of me?"
+
+"I ask you to notify the government that you are watching Paradise,
+that you do not arrest the Countess and Dr. Delmont because you desire
+to use them as a bait to catch me."
+
+"Is that all?"
+
+"That is all. We will start for Paris together; I shall leave you
+before we get there. But I'll see you later in Paradise."
+
+"You refuse to tell me why you wish to stay at the house in
+Paradise?"
+
+"Yes,... I refuse. And, by-the-way, the Countess is to think that I
+have presented myself in Paris and that the government has pardoned
+me."
+
+"You are willing to believe that I will not have you arrested?"
+
+"I don't ask you to promise. If you are fool enough to try it--try
+it! But I'm not going to give you the chance in Paris--only in
+Paradise."
+
+"You don't require my word of honor?"
+
+"Word of--what? Well--no;... it's a form I can dispense with."
+
+"But how can you protect yourself?"
+
+"If all the protection I had was a 'word of honor,' I'd be in a
+different business, my friend."
+
+"And you are willing to risk me, and you are perfectly capable of
+taking care of yourself?"
+
+"I think so," he said, quietly.
+
+"Trusting to my common-sense as a business man not to be fool enough
+to cut my own throat by cutting yours?" I persisted.
+
+"Exactly, and trusting to a few other circumstances, the details of
+which I beg permission to keep to myself," he said, with a faint
+sneer.
+
+He rose and walked to the window; at the same moment I heard the sound
+of wheels below.
+
+"I believe that is our carriage," he said. "Are you ready to start,
+Mr. Scarlett?"
+
+"Now?" I exclaimed.
+
+"Why not? I'm not in the habit of dawdling over anything. Come, sir,
+there is nothing very serious the matter with you, is there?"
+
+I said nothing; he knew, of course, the exact state of the wound I had
+received, that the superficial injury was of no account, that the
+shock had left me sound as a silver franc though a trifle weak in the
+hips and knees.
+
+"Is the Countess de Vassart to go with us?" I asked, trying to find a
+reason for these events which were succeeding one another too quickly
+to suit me.
+
+He gave me an absent-minded nod; a moment later the Countess entered.
+She had mended her black crepe gown where I tore it when I hung in
+the shadow of death under the battlements of La Trappe. She wore black
+gloves, a trifle shabby, and carried a worn satchel in her hands.
+
+Buckhurst aided me to rise, the Countess threw my hussar jacket over
+my shoulders and buttoned it; I felt the touch of her cool, little
+fingers on my hot, unshaved throat.
+
+"I congratulate you on your convalescence," she said, in a low voice.
+"Lean on me, monsieur."
+
+My head swam; hips and knees were without strength; she aided me down
+the stairway and out into the pale sunshine, where stood the same
+mud-splashed, rusty vehicle which had brought us hither from La
+Trappe.
+
+The Countess had only a satchel and a valise; Buckhurst's luggage
+comprised a long, flat, steel-bound box, a satchel, and a parcel. I
+had nothing. My baggage, which I had left in Morsbronn, had without
+doubt been confiscated long since; my field-glasses, sabre, and
+revolver were gone; I had only what clothes I was wearing--a dirty,
+ragged, gray-blue flannel shirt, my muddy jacket, scarlet
+riding-breeches, and officer's boots. But in one of the hip-pockets of
+my breeches I carried a fortune in diamonds.
+
+As I stood beside the carriage, wondering how I was going to get in, I
+felt an arm slip under my neck and another slide gently under my
+knees, and Buckhurst lifted me. Beneath the loose, gray coat-sleeves
+his bent arms were rigid as steel; his supple frame straightened; he
+moved a step forward and laid me on the shabby cushions.
+
+The Countess looked at me, turned and glanced up at her
+smoke-blackened house, where a dozen Prussian soldiers leaned from the
+lower windows smoking their long porcelain pipes and the provost
+marshal stood in the doorway, helmeted, spurred, immaculate from
+golden cheek-guard to the glittering tip of his silver scabbard. An
+Uhlan, dismounted, stood on guard below the steps, his lance at a
+"present," the black-and-white swallow-tailed pennon drooping from
+the steel point.
+
+The Countess bent her pretty head under its small black hat; the
+provost's white-gloved hand flew to his helmet peak.
+
+"Fear nothing, madame," he said, pompously. "Your house and its
+contents are safe until you return. This village is now German soil."
+
+The Countess looked at him steadily, gravely.
+
+"I thank you, monsieur, but frontiers are not changed in a day."
+
+But she was mistaken. Alsace henceforth must be written Elsass, and
+the devastated province called Lothringen was never again to be
+written Lorraine.
+
+The Countess stepped into the carriage and took her place beside me;
+Buckhurst followed, seating himself opposite us, and the Alsatian
+driver mounted to the box.
+
+"Your safe-conduct carries you to the French outposts at Saverne,"
+said the provost, dryly. "If there are no longer French outposts at
+Saverne, you may demand a vise for your pass and continue south to
+Strasbourg."
+
+Buckhurst half turned towards the driver. "Allez," he said, quietly,
+and the two gaunt horses moved on.
+
+There was a chill in the white sunshine--the first touch of autumn.
+Not a trace of the summer's balm remained in the air; every tree on
+the mountain outlines stood out sharp-cut in the crystalline light;
+the swift little streams that followed the road ran clear above
+autumn-brown pebbles and golden sands.
+
+Distant beachwoods were turning yellow; yellow gorse lay like patches
+of sunshine on the foot-hills; oceans of yellow grain belted the
+terraced vineyards. Here and there long, velvety, black strips cut the
+green and gold, the trail of fire which had scarred the grain belts;
+here and there pillars of smoke floated, dominating blue woodlands,
+where the flames of exploding shells had set the forest afire.
+
+Already from the plateau I could see a streak of silver reflecting the
+intense blue sky--the Rhine, upon whose westward cliffs France had
+mounted guard but yesterday.
+
+And now the Rhine was lost, and the vast granite bastions of the
+Vosges looked out upon a sea of German forests. Above the Col du
+Pigeonnier the semaphore still glistened, but its signals now
+travelled eastward, and strange flags fluttered on its invisible
+halliards. And every bridge was guarded by helmeted men who halted us,
+and every tunnel was barred by mounted Uhlans who crossed their lances
+to the ominous shout: "Wer da? On ne basse bas!" The Vosges were
+literally crawling with armed men!
+
+Driving slowly along the base of the hills, I had glimpses of rocky
+defiles which pierced the mountain wall; and through every defile
+poured infantry and artillery in unbroken columns, and over every
+mountain pass streamed endless files of horsemen. Railroad tunnels
+were choked with slowly moving trains piled high with artillery;
+viaducts glistened with helmets all moving westward; every hillock,
+every crag, every height had its group of tiny dark dots or its
+solitary Uhlan.
+
+Very far away I heard cannon--so far away that the hum of the
+cannonade was no louder than the panting of our horses on the white
+hill-road, and I could hear it only when the carriage stopped at
+intervals.
+
+"Do we take the railroad at Saverne?" I asked at last. "Is there a
+railroad there?"
+
+[Illustration: "EVERY BRIDGE WAS GUARDED"]
+
+Buckhurst looked up at me. "It is rather strange that a French
+officer should not know the railroads in his own country," he said.
+
+I was silent. I was not the only officer whose shame was his
+ignorance of the country he had sworn to defend. Long before the
+war broke out, every German regimental officer, commissioned and
+non-commissioned, carried a better map of France than could be
+found in France itself. And the French government had issued to us
+a few wretched charts of Germany, badly printed, full of gross
+errors, one or two maps to a regiment, and a few scattered about
+among the corps headquarters--among officers who did not even know the
+general topography of their own side of the Rhine.
+
+"Is there a railroad at Saverne?" I repeated, sullenly.
+
+"You will take a train at Strasbourg," replied Buckhurst.
+
+"And then?"
+
+"And then you go to Avricourt," he said. "I suppose at least you
+know where that is?"
+
+"It is on the route to Paris," said I, keeping my temper. "Are we
+going direct to Paris?"
+
+"Madame de Vassart desires to go there," he said, glancing at her
+with a sort of sneaking deference which he now assumed in her
+presence.
+
+"It is true," said the Countess, turning to me. "I wish to rest for
+a little while before I go to Point Paradise. I am curiously tired of
+poverty, Monsieur Scarlett," she added, and held out her shabby gloves
+with a gesture of despair; "I am reduced to very little--I have
+scarcely anything left,... and I am weak enough to long for the scent
+of the winter violets on the boulevards."
+
+With a faint smile she touched the bright hair above her brow, where
+the wind had flung a gleaming tendril over her black veil.
+
+As I looked at her, I marvelled that she had found it possible to
+forsake all that was fair and lovely in life, to dare ignore caste, to
+deliberately face ridicule and insult and the scornful anger of her
+own kind, for the sake of the filthy scum festering in the sinkholes
+of the world.
+
+There are brave priests who go among lepers, there are brave
+missionaries who dispute with the devil over the souls of half-apes in
+the Dark Continent. Under the Cross they do the duty they were bred
+to.
+
+But she was bred to other things. Her lungs were never made to breathe
+the polluted atmosphere of the proletariat, yelping and slavering in
+their kennels; her strait young soul was never born for communion with
+the crooked souls of social pariahs, with the stunted and warped
+intelligence of fanatics, with the crippled but fierce minds which
+dominated the Internationale.
+
+Not that such contact could ever taint her; but it might break her
+heart one day.
+
+"You will think me very weak and cowardly to seek shelter and comfort
+at such a time," she said, raising her gray eyes to me. "But I feel
+as though all my strength had slipped away from me. I mean to go back
+to my work; I only need a few days of quiet among familiar
+scenes--pleasant scenes that I knew when I was young. I think that if
+I could only see a single care-free face--only one among all those
+who--who once seemed to love me--"
+
+She turned her head quickly and stared out at the tall pines which
+fringed the dusty road.
+
+Buckhurst blinked at her.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was late in the afternoon when the last Prussian outpost hailed us.
+I had been asleep for hours, but was awakened by the clatter of
+horses, and I opened my eyes to see a dozen Uhlans come cantering up
+and surround our carriage.
+
+After a long discussion with Buckhurst and a rigid scrutiny of our
+permit to pass the lines, the slim officer in command vised the order.
+One of the troopers tied a white handkerchief to his lance-tip,
+wheeled his wiry horse, and, followed by a trumpeter, trotted off
+ahead of us. Our carriage creaked after them, slowly moving to the
+summit of a hill over which the road rose.
+
+Presently, very far away on the gray-green hill-side, I saw a bit of
+white move. The Uhlan flourished his lance from which the handkerchief
+fluttered; the trumpeter set his trumpet to his lips and blew the
+parley.
+
+One minute, two, three, ten passed. Then, distant galloping sounded
+along the road, nearer, nearer; three horsemen suddenly wheeled into
+view ahead--French dragoons, advancing at a solid gallop. The Uhlan
+with the flag spurred forward to meet them, saluted, wheeled his
+horse, and came back.
+
+Paid mercenary that I was, my heart began to beat very fast at sight
+of those French troopers with their steel helmets bound with
+leopard-hide and their horsehair plumes whipping the breeze, and their
+sun-bronzed, alert faces and pleasant eyes. I had had enough of the
+supercilious, near-sighted eyes of the Teuton.
+
+As for the young Countess, she sat there smiling, while the clumsy
+dragoons came rattling up, beaming at my red riding-breeches, and all
+saluting the Countess with a cheerful yet respectful swagger that
+touched me deeply as I noted the lines of hunger in their lean jaws.
+
+And now the brief ceremony was over and our rusty vehicle moved off
+down the hill, while the Uhlans turned bridle and clattered off,
+scattering showers of muddy gravel in the rising wind.
+
+The remains of our luncheon lay in a basket under our seat--plenty of
+bread and beef, and nearly a quart of red wine.
+
+"Call the escort--they are starving," I said to Buckhurst.
+
+"I think not," he said, coolly. "I may eat again."
+
+"Call the escort!" I repeated, sharply.
+
+Buckhurst looked up at me in silence, then glanced warily at the
+Countess.
+
+A few moments later the gaunt dragoons were munching dry bread as they
+rode, passing the bottle from saddle to saddle.
+
+We were ascending another hill; the Countess, anxious to stretch her
+limbs, had descended to the road, and now walked ahead, one hand
+holding her hat, which the ever-freshening wind threatened.
+
+Buckhurst bent towards me and said: "My friend, your suggestion that
+we deprive ourselves to feed those cavalrymen was a trifle peremptory
+in tone. I am wondering how much your tone will change when we reach
+Paris."
+
+"You will see," said I.
+
+"Oh, of course I'll see," he said,... "and so will you."
+
+"I thought you had means to protect yourself," I observed.
+
+"I have. Besides, I think you would rather keep those diamonds than
+give them up for the pleasure of playing me false."
+
+I laughed in a mean manner, which reassured him. "Look here," said I,
+"if I were to make trouble for you in Paris I'd be the most besotted
+fool in France, and you know it."
+
+He nodded.
+
+And so I should have been. For there was something vastly more
+important to do than to arrest John Buckhurst for theft; and before I
+suffered a hair of his sleek, gray head to come to harm I'd have hung
+myself for a hopeless idiot. Oh no; my friend John Buckhurst had such
+colossal irons in the fire that I knew it would take many more men as
+strong as he to lift them out again. And I meant to know what those
+irons were for, and who were the gentlemen to aid him lift them. So
+not only must Buckhurst remain free as a lively black cricket in a
+bog, but he must not be frightened if I could help it.
+
+And to that end I leered at him knowingly, and presently bestowed a
+fatuous wink upon him.
+
+It was unpleasant for me to do this, for it implied that I was his
+creature; and, in spite of the remorseless requirements of my
+profession, I have an inborn hatred of falsehood in any shape. To lie
+in the line of duty is one of the disagreeable necessities of certain
+professions; and mine is not the only one nor the least respectable.
+The art of war is to deceive; strategy is the art of demonstrating
+falsehood plausibly; there is nothing respectable in the military
+profession except the manual--which is now losing importance in the
+eyes of advanced theorists. All men are liars--a few are unselfish
+ones.
+
+"You have given me your word of honor," said Buckhurst.
+
+"Have I?" I had not, and he knew it. I hoped I might not be forced
+to.
+
+"Haven't you?" asked Buckhurst.
+
+"You sneered at my word of honor," I said, with all the spite of a
+coward; "now you don't get it."
+
+He no longer wanted it, but all he said was: "Don't take unnecessary
+offence; you're smart enough to know when you're well off."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I dozed towards sunset, waking when the Countess stepped back into the
+carriage and seated herself by my side. Then, after a little, I slept
+again. And it was nearly dark when I was awakened by the startling
+whistle of a locomotive. The carriage appeared to be moving slowly
+between tall rows of poplars and telegraph-poles; a battery of
+artillery was clanking along just ahead. In the dark southern sky a
+luminous haze hung.
+
+"The lights of Strasbourg," whispered the Countess, as I sat up,
+rubbing my hot eyes.
+
+I looked for Buckhurst; his place was empty.
+
+"Mr. Buckhurst left us at the railroad crossing," she said.
+
+"Left us!"
+
+"Yes! He boarded a train loaded with wounded.... He had business to
+transact in Colmar before he presented himself to the authorities in
+Paris.... And we are to go by way of Avricourt."
+
+So Buckhurst had already begun to execute his programme. But the
+abrupt, infernal precision of the man jarred me unpleasantly.
+
+In the dark I felt cautiously for my diamonds; they were safe in my
+left hip-pocket.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The wind had died out, and a fine rain began to filter down through a
+mist which lay over the flat plain as we entered the suburbs of
+Strasbourg.
+
+Again and again we were halted by sentinels, then permitted to proceed
+in the darkness, along deserted avenues lighted by gas-jets burning in
+tall bronze lamp-posts through a halo of iridescent fog.
+
+We passed deserted suburban villas, blank stretches of stucco walls
+enclosing gardens, patches of cabbages, thickets of hop-poles to which
+the drenched vines clung fantastically, and scores of abandoned
+houses, shutters locked, blinds drawn.
+
+High to the east the ramparts of the city loomed, set at regular
+distances with electric lights; from the invisible citadel rockets
+were rising, spraying the fog with jewelled flakes, crumbling to
+golden powder in the starless void above.
+
+Presently our carriage stopped before a tremendous mass of masonry
+pierced by an iron, arched gate, through which double files of
+farm-wagons were rolling, escorted by customs guards and marines.
+
+"No room! no room!" shouted the soldiers. "This is the Porte de
+Pierre. Go to the Porte de Saverne!"
+
+So we passed on beneath the bastions, skirting the ramparts to the
+Porte de Saverne, where, after a harangue, the gate guards admitted
+us, and we entered Strasbourg in the midst of a crush of vehicles. At
+the railroad station hundreds of cars choked the tracks; loaded
+freight trains stalled in the confusion, trains piled with ammunition
+and provisions, trains crowded with horses and cattle and sheep,
+filling the air with melancholy plaints; locomotives backing and
+whistling, locomotives blowing off deafening blasts of steam; gongs
+sounding, bells ringing, station-masters' trumpets blowing; and, above
+all, the immense clamor of human voices.
+
+The Countess and our Alsatian driver helped me to the platform, I
+looked around with dread at the throng, being too weak to battle for a
+foothold; but the brave Alsatian elbowed a path for me, and the
+Countess warded off the plunging human cattle, and at length I found
+myself beside the cars where line-soldiers stood guard at every ten
+paces and gendarmes stalked about, shoving the frantic people into
+double files.
+
+"Last train for Paris!" bawled an official in gilt and blue; and to
+the anxious question of the Countess he shook his head, saying,
+"There is no room, madame; it is utterly impossible--pardon, I cannot
+discuss anything now; the Prussians are signalled at Ostwald, and
+their shells may fall here at any moment."
+
+"If that is so," I said, "this lady cannot stay here!"
+
+"I can't help that!" he shouted, starting off down the platform.
+
+I caught the sleeve of a captain of gendarmerie who was running to
+enter a first-class compartment.
+
+"Eh--what do you want, monsieur?" he snapped, in surprise. Then, as I
+made him a sign, he regarded me with amazement. I had given the
+distress signal of the secret police.
+
+"Try to make room for this lady in your compartment," I said.
+
+"Willingly, monsieur. Hasten, madame; the train is already moving!"
+and he tore open the compartment door and swung the Countess to the
+car platform.
+
+I suppose she thought I was to follow, for when the officer slammed
+the compartment door she stepped to the window and tried to open it.
+
+"Quick!" she cried to the guard, who had just locked the door; "help
+that officer in! He is wounded--can't you see he is wounded?"
+
+The train was gliding along the asphalt platform; I hobbled beside the
+locked compartment, where she stood at the window.
+
+"Will you unlock that door?" said the Countess to the guard. "I wish
+to leave the train!"
+
+The cars were rolling a little faster than I could move along.
+
+The Countess leaned from the open window; through the driving rain her
+face in the lamp-light was pitifully white. I made a last effort and
+caught up with her car.
+
+"A safe journey, madame," I stammered, catching at the hand she held
+out and brushing the shabby-gloved fingers with my lips.
+
+[Illustration: "SISTERS OF CHARITY WERE GIVING FIRST AID"]
+
+"I shall never forgive this wanton self-sacrifice," she said,
+unsteadily. Then the car rolled silently past me, swifter, swifter,
+and her white face faded from my sight. Yet still I stood there,
+bareheaded, in the rain, while the twin red lamps on the rear car grew
+smaller and smaller, until they, too, were shut out in the closing
+curtains of the fog.
+
+As I turned away into the lighted station a hospital train from the
+north glided into the yard and stopped. Soldiers immediately started
+carrying out the wounded and placing them in rows on mattresses ranged
+along the walls of the passenger depot; sisters of charity, hovering
+over the mutilated creatures, were already giving first aid to the
+injured; policemen kept the crowd from trampling the dead and dying;
+gendarmes began to clear the platforms, calling out sharply, "No more
+trains to-night! Move on! This platform is for government officials
+only!"
+
+Through the scrambling mob a file of wounded tottered, escorted by
+police; women were forced back and pushed out into the street, only to
+be again menaced by galloping military ambulances arriving,
+accompanied by hussars. The confusion grew into a tumult; men
+struggled and elbowed for a passage to the platforms, women sobbed and
+cried; through the uproar the treble wail of terrified children broke
+out.
+
+Jostled, shoved, pulled this way and that, I felt that I was destined
+to go down under the people's feet, and I don't know what would have
+become of me had not a violent push sent me against the door of the
+telegraph office. The door gave way, and I fell on my knees, staggered
+to my feet, and crept out once more to the platform.
+
+The station-master passed, a haggard gentleman in rumpled uniform and
+gilt cap; and as he left the office by the outer door the heavy
+explosion of a rampart cannon shook the station.
+
+"Can you get me to Paris?" I asked.
+
+"Quick, then," he muttered; "this way--lean on me, monsieur! I am
+trying to send another train out--but Heaven alone knows! Quick, this
+way!"
+
+The glare of a locomotive's headlight dazzled me; I made towards it,
+clinging to the arm of the station-master; the ground under my feet
+rocked with the shock of the siege-guns. Suddenly a shell fell and
+burst in the yard outside; there was a cry, a rush of trainmen, a
+gendarme shouting; then the piercing alarm notes of locomotives,
+squealing like terrified leviathans.
+
+The train drawn up along the platform gave a jerk and immediately
+moved out towards the open country, compartment doors swinging wide,
+trainmen and guards running alongside, followed by a mob of frenzied
+passengers, who leaped into empty compartments, flinging satchels and
+rugs to the four winds. Crash! A shell fell through the sloping roof
+of the platform and blew up. Through the white cloud and brilliant
+glare I saw a porter, wheeling boxes and trunks, fall, buried under an
+avalanche of baggage, and a sister of charity throw up her arms as
+though to shield her face from the fragments.
+
+A car, doors swinging wide, glided past me; I caught the rail and fell
+forward into a compartment. The cushions of the seats were afire, and
+a policeman was hammering out the sparks with naked fists.
+
+I was too weak to aid him. Presently he hurled the last burning
+cushion from the open door and leaped out into the train-yard, where
+red and green lamps glowed and the brilliant flare of bursting shells
+lighted the fog. By this time the train was moving swiftly; the car
+windows shook with the thunder from the ramparts under which we were
+passing; then came inky darkness--a tunnel--then a rush of mist and
+wind from the open door as we swept out into the country.
+
+Passengers clinging to the platforms now made their way into the
+compartment where I lay almost senseless, and soon the little place
+was crowded, and somebody slammed the door.
+
+Then the flying locomotive, far ahead, shrieked, and the train leaped,
+rushing forward into the unknown. Blackness, stupefying blackness,
+outside; inside, unseen, the huddled passengers, breathing heavily
+with sudden stifled sobs, or the choked, indrawn breath of terror; but
+not a word, not a quaver of human voices; peril strangled speech as
+our black train flew onward through the night.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+A MAN TO LET
+
+
+The train which bore me out of the arc of the Prussian fire at
+Strasbourg passed in between the fortifications of Paris the next
+morning about eleven o'clock. Ten minutes later I was in a closed cab
+on my way to the headquarters of the Imperial Military Police,
+temporarily housed in the Luxembourg Palace.
+
+The day was magnificent; sunshine flooded the boulevards, and a few
+chestnut-trees in the squares had already begun to blossom for the
+second time in the season; there seemed to be no prophecy of autumn in
+sky or sunlight.
+
+The city, as I saw it from the open window of my cab, appeared to be
+in a perfectly normal condition. There were, perhaps, a few more
+national-guard soldiers on the streets, a few more brightly colored
+posters, notices, and placards on the dead walls, but the life of the
+city itself had not changed at all; the usual crowds filled the
+boulevards, the usual street cries sounded, the same middle-aged
+gentlemen sat in front of the cafes reading the same daily papers, the
+same waiters served them the same drinks; rows of cabs were drawn up
+where cabs are always to be found, and the same policemen dawdled in
+gossip with the same flower-girls. I caught the scent of early winter
+violets in the fresh Parisian breeze.
+
+Was this the city that Buckhurst looked upon as already doomed?
+
+On the marble bridge gardeners were closing up the morning
+flower-market; blue-bloused men with jointed hose sprinkled the
+asphalt in front of the Palais de Justice; students strolled under the
+trees from the School of Medicine to the Sorbonne; the Luxembourg
+fountain tossed its sparkling sheets of spray among the lotus.
+
+All this I saw, yet a sinister foreboding oppressed me, and I could
+not shake it off even in this bright city where September was
+promising only a new lease of summer and the white spikes of chestnut
+blossoms hummed with eager bees.
+
+Physically I felt well enough; the cramped sleep in the dark
+compartment, far from exhausting me, had not only rested me, but had
+also brought me an appetite which I meant to satisfy as soon as might
+be. As for my back, it was simply uncomfortable, but all effects of
+the shock had disappeared--unless this heavy mental depression was due
+to it.
+
+My cab was now entering the Palace of the Luxembourg by the great arch
+facing the Rue de Tournon; the line sentinels halted us; I left the
+cab, crossed the parade in front of the guard-house, turned to the
+right, and climbed the stairs straight to my own quarters, which were
+in the west wing of the palace, and consisted of a bedroom, a working
+cabinet, and a dressing-room.
+
+But I did not enter my door or even glance at it; I continued straight
+on, down the corridor to a door, on the ground-glass panes of which
+was printed in red lettering:
+
+ HEADQUARTERS
+ IMPERIAL MILITARY POLICE
+ SAFE DEPOSIT
+
+The sentinel interrogated me for form's sake, although he knew me; I
+entered, passed rapidly along the face of the steel cage behind which
+some officers sat on high stools, writing, and presented myself at the
+guichet marked, "Foreign Division."
+
+There was no military clerk in attendance there, and, to my surprise,
+the guichet was closed.
+
+However, a very elegant officer strolled up to the guichet as I laid
+my bag of diamonds on the glass shelf, languidly unlocked the steel
+window-gate, and picked up the bag of jewels.
+
+The officer was Mornac, the Emperor's alter ego, or ame damnee, who
+had taken over the entire department the very day I left Paris for the
+frontier. Officially, I could not recognize him until I presented
+myself to Colonel Jarras with my report; so I saluted his uniform,
+standing at attention in my filthy clothes, awaiting the usual
+question and receipt.
+
+"Name and number?" inquired Mornac, indolently.
+
+I gave both.
+
+"You desire to declare?"
+
+I enumerated the diamonds, and designated them as those lately stolen
+from the crucifix of Louis XI.
+
+Mornac handed me a printed certificate of deposit, opened a
+compartment in the safe, and tossed in the bag without sealing it.
+And, as I stood waiting, he lighted a scented cigarette, glanced over
+at me, puffed once or twice, and finally dismissed me with a
+discourteous nod.
+
+I went, because he was Mornac; I thought that I was entitled to a
+bureau receipt, but could scarcely demand one from the chief of the
+entire department who had taken over the bureau solely in order to
+reform it, root and branch. Doubtless his curt dismissal of me without
+the customary receipt and his failure to seal the bag were two of his
+reforms.
+
+I limped off past the glittering steel cage, thankful that the jewels
+were safe, turned into the corridor, and hastened back to my own
+rooms.
+
+To tear off my rags, bathe, shave, and dress in a light suit of
+civilian clothes took me longer than usual, for I was a trifle lame.
+
+Bath and clean clothes ought to have cheered me; but the contrary was
+the case, and I sat down to a breakfast brought by a palace servant,
+and ate it gloomily, thinking of Buckhurst, and the Countess, and of
+Morsbronn, and of the muddy dead lying under the rifle smoke below my
+turret window.
+
+I thought, too, of that astonishing conspiracy which had formed under
+the very shadow of the imperial throne, and through which already the
+crucifix and diamonds of Louis XI. had been so nearly lost to France.
+
+Who besides Buckhurst was involved? How far had Colonel Jarras gone in
+the investigation during my absence? How close to the imperial throne
+had the conspiracy burrowed?
+
+Pondering, I slowly retraced my steps through the bedroom and
+dressing-room, and out into the tiled hallway, where, at the end of
+the dim corridor, the door of Colonel Jarras's bureau stood partly
+open.
+
+Jarras was sitting at his desk as I entered, and he gave me a
+leaden-eyed stare as I closed the door behind me and stood at
+attention.
+
+For a moment he said nothing, but presently he partly turned his
+ponderous body towards me and motioned me to a chair.
+
+As I sat down I glanced around and saw my old comrade, Speed, sitting
+in a dark corner, chewing a cigarette and watching me in alert
+silence.
+
+"You are present to report?" suggested Colonel Jarras, heavily.
+
+I bowed, glancing across at Speed, who shrugged his shoulders and
+looked at the floor with an ominous smile.
+
+Mystified, I began my report, but was immediately stopped by Jarras
+with a peevish gesture: "All right, all right; keep all that for the
+Chief of Department. Your report doesn't concern me."
+
+"Doesn't concern you!" I repeated; "are you not chief of this
+bureau, Colonel Jarras?"
+
+"No," snapped Jarras; "and there's no bureau now--at least no bureau
+for the Foreign Division."
+
+Speed leaned forward and said: "Scarlett, my friend, the Foreign
+Division of the Imperial Military Police is not in favor just now. It
+appears the Foreign Division is suspected."
+
+"Suspected? Of what?"
+
+"Treason, I suppose," said Speed, serenely.
+
+I felt my face begin to burn, but the astonishing news left me
+speechless.
+
+"I said," observed Speed, "that the Foreign Division is suspected;
+that is not exactly the case; it is not suspected, simply because it
+has been abolished."
+
+"Who the devil did that?" I asked, savagely.
+
+"Mornac."
+
+Mornac! The Emperor's shadow! Then truly enough it was all up with the
+Foreign Division. But the shame of it!--the disgrace of as faithful a
+body of police, mercenaries though they were, as ever worked for any
+cause, good or bad.
+
+"So it's the old whine of treason again, is it?" I said, while the
+blood beat in my temples. "Oh, very well, doubtless Monsieur Mornac
+knows his business. Are we transferred, Speed, or just kicked out into
+the street?"
+
+"Kicked out," replied Speed, rubbing his slim, bony hands together.
+
+"And you, sir?" I asked, turning to Jarras, who sat with his fat,
+round head buried in his shoulders, staring at the discolored blotter
+on his desk.
+
+The old Corsican straightened as though stung: "Since when, monsieur,
+have subordinates assumed the right to question their superiors?"
+
+I asked his pardon in a low voice, although I was no longer his
+subordinate. He had been a good and loyal chief to us all; the least I
+could do now was to show him respect in his bitter humiliation.
+
+I think he felt our attitude and that it comforted him, but all he
+said was: "It is a heavy blow. The Emperor knows best."
+
+As we sat there in silence, a soldier came to summon Colonel Jarras,
+and he went away, leaning on his ivory-headed cane, head bowed over
+the string of medals on his breast.
+
+When he had gone, Speed came over and shut the door, then shook hands
+with me.
+
+"He's gone to see Mornac; it will be our turn next. Look out for
+Mornac, or he'll catch you tripping in your report. Did you find
+Buckhurst?"
+
+"Look here," I said, angrily, "how can Mornac catch me tripping? I'm
+not under his orders."
+
+"You are until you're discharged. You see, they've taken it into
+their heads, since the crucifix robbery, to suspect everybody and
+anybody short of the Emperor. Mornac came smelling around here the day
+you left. He's at the bottom of all this--a nice business to cast
+suspicion on our division because we're foreigners. Gad, he looks like
+a pickpocket himself--he's got the oblique trick of the eyes and the
+restless finger movement."
+
+"Perhaps he is," I said.
+
+Speed looked at me sharply.
+
+"If I were in the service now I'd arrest Mornac--if I dared."
+
+"You might as well arrest the Emperor," I said, wearily.
+
+"That's it," observed Speed, throwing away his chewed cigarette.
+"Nobody dare touch Mornac; nobody dare even watch him. But if there's
+a leak somewhere, it's far more probable that Mornac did the dirty
+work than that there's a traitor in our division."
+
+Presently he added: "Did you catch Buckhurst?"
+
+"I don't want to talk about it," I said, disgusted.
+
+"--Because," continued Speed, "if you've got him, it may save us.
+Have you?"
+
+How I wished that I had Buckhurst safely handcuffed beside me!
+
+"If you've got him," persisted Speed, "we'll shake him like a rat
+until he squeals. And if he names Mornac--"
+
+"Do you think that Mornac would give him or us the chance?" I said.
+"Rubbish! He'd do the shaking _in camera_; and it would only be a
+hand-shaking if Buckhurst is really his creature. And he's rid himself
+of our division, anyhow. Wait!" I added, sharply; "perhaps that is
+the excuse! Perhaps that is the very reason that he's abolished the
+foreign division! We may have been getting too close to the root of
+this matter; I had already caught Buckhurst--"
+
+"You had?" cried Speed, eagerly.
+
+"But I'm not going to talk about it now," I added, sullenly. "My
+troubles are coming; I've a story to tell that won't please Mornac,
+and I have an idea that he means mischief to me."
+
+Speed looked curiously at me, and I went on:
+
+"I used my own judgment--supposing that Jarras was my chief. I knew
+he'd let me take my own way--but I don't know what Mornac will say."
+
+However, I was soon to know what Mornac had to say, for a soldier
+appeared to summon us both, and we followed to the temporary bureau
+which looked out to the east over the lovely Luxembourg gardens.
+
+Jarras passed us as we entered; his heavy head was bent, and I do not
+suppose that he saw either us or our salutes, for he shuffled off down
+the dark passage, tapping his slow way like a blind man; and Speed and
+I entered, saluting Mornac.
+
+The personage whom we saluted was a symmetrical, highly colored
+gentleman, with black mustache and Oriental eyes. His skin was too
+smooth--there was not a line or a wrinkle visible on hand or face,
+nothing but plump flesh pressing the golden collar of his light-blue
+tunic and the half-dozen gold rings on his carefully kept, restless
+fingers. His light, curved sabre hung by its silver chain from a nail
+on a wall behind him; beside it, suspended by the neck cord, was his
+astrakhan-trimmed dolman of palest turquoise-blue, and over that hung
+his scarlet cap.
+
+As he raised his heavy-lidded, insolent eyes to me, I thought I had
+never before appreciated the utter falseness of his visage as I did at
+that moment. Instantly I decided that he meant evil to me; and I
+instinctively glanced at Speed, standing beside me at attention, his
+clear blue eyes alert, his lank limbs and lean head fairly tremulous
+with comprehension.
+
+At a careless nod from Mornac I muttered the formal "I have to
+report, sir--" and began mumbling a perfunctory account of my
+movements since leaving Paris. He listened, idly contemplating a
+silver penknife which he alternately snapped open and closed, the
+click of the spring punctuating my remarks.
+
+I told the truth as far as I went, which brought me to my capture by
+Uhlans and the natural escape of my prisoner, Buckhurst. I merely
+added that I had secured the diamonds and had managed to reach Paris
+via Strasbourg.
+
+"Is that all?" inquired Mornac, listlessly.
+
+"All I have to report, sir."
+
+"Permit me to be the judge of how much you have to report," said
+Mornac. "Continue."
+
+I was silent.
+
+"Do you prefer that I draw out information by questions?" asked
+Mornac, looking up at me.
+
+I was already in his net; I ought not to have placed myself in the
+position of concealing anything, yet I distrusted him and wished to
+avoid giving him a chance to misunderstand me. But now it was too
+late; if the error could be wiped out at all, the only way to erase it
+was by telling him everything and giving him his chance to
+misinterpret me if he desired it.
+
+He listened very quietly while I told of my encounter with Buckhurst
+in Morsbronn, of our journey to Saverne, to Strasbourg, and finally my
+own arrival in Paris.
+
+"Where is Buckhurst?" he asked.
+
+"I do not know," I replied, doggedly.
+
+"That is to say that you had him in your power within the French
+lines yet did not secure him?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Your orders were to arrest him?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And shoot him if he resisted?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"But you let him go?"
+
+"There was something more important to do than to arrest Buckhurst. I
+meant to find out what he had on hand in Paradise."
+
+"So you disobeyed orders?"
+
+"If you care to so interpret my action."
+
+"Why did you not arrest the Countess de Vassart?"
+
+"I did; the Uhlans made me prisoner as I reported to you."
+
+"I mean, why did you not arrest her after you left Morsbronn?"
+
+"That would have prevented Buckhurst from going to Paradise."
+
+"Your orders were to arrest the Countess?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Did you obey those orders?"
+
+"No," I said, between my teeth.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"I had every reason to believe that an important conspiracy was being
+ripened somewhere near Paradise. I had every reason to believe that
+the robbery of the crown jewels might furnish funds for the plotters.
+
+"The arrest of one man could not break up the conspiracy; I desired
+to trap the leaders; and to that end I deliberately liberated this man
+Buckhurst as a stool-pigeon. If my judgment has been at fault, I
+accept the blame."
+
+Mornac's silver penknife closed. Presently he opened the blade again
+and tested the edge on his plump forefinger.
+
+"I beg to call your attention to the fact," I continued, "that a
+word from Buckhurst to the provost at Morsbronn would have sent me
+before the squad of execution. In a way, I bought my freedom. But," I
+added, slowly, "I should never have bought it if the bargain by which
+I saved my own skin had been a betrayal of France. Nobody wants to
+die; but in my profession we discount that. No man in my division is a
+physical coward. I purchased my freedom not only without detriment to
+France, but, on the contrary, to the advantage of France."
+
+"At the expense of your honor," observed Mornac.
+
+My ears were burning; I advanced a pace and looked Mornac straight
+between the eyes; but his eyes did not meet mine--they were fixed on
+his silver penknife.
+
+"I did the best I could do in the line of duty," I said. "You ask me
+why I did not break my word and arrest Buckhurst after we left the
+German lines. And I answer you that I had given my word not to arrest
+him, in pursuance of my plan to use him further."
+
+Mornac examined his carefully kept finger-tips in detail.
+
+"You say he bribed you?"
+
+"I said that he attempted to do so," I replied, sharply.
+
+"With the diamonds?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"You have them?"
+
+"I deposited them as usual."
+
+"Bring them."
+
+Angry as I was, I saluted, wheeled, and hastened off to the safe
+deposit. The jewel-bag was delivered when I presented my printed slip;
+I picked it up and marched back, savagely biting my mustache and
+striving to control my increasing exasperation. Never before had I
+endured insolence from a superior officer.
+
+Mornac was questioning Speed as I entered, and that young man, who has
+much self-control to learn, was already beginning to answer with
+disrespectful impatience, but my advent suspended matters, and Mornac
+took the bag of jewels from my hands and examined it. He seemed to be
+in no hurry to empty it; he lolled in his chair with an absent-minded
+expression like the expression of a cat who pretends to forget the
+mouse between her paws. Danger was written all over him; I squared my
+shoulders and studied him, braced for a shock.
+
+The shock came almost immediately, for, without a word, he suddenly
+emptied the jewel-bag on the desk before him. The bag contained
+little pebbles wrapped in tissue-paper.
+
+I heard Speed catch his breath sharply; I stared stupidly at the
+pebbles. Mornac made a careless, sweeping gesture, spreading the
+pebbles out before us with his restless, ringed fingers.
+
+"Suppose you explain this farce?" he suggested, unmoved.
+
+"Suppose _you_ explain it!" I stammered.
+
+He raised his delicately arched eyebrows. "What do you mean?"
+
+"I mean that an hour ago that bag contained the diamonds from the
+crucifix of Louis XI! I mean that I handed them over to you on my
+arrival at this bureau!"
+
+"Doubtless you can prove what you say," he observed, and his silver
+penknife snapped shut like the click of a trap, and he lay back in his
+padded chair and slipped the knife into his pocket.
+
+I looked at Speed; his sandy hair fairly bristled, but his face was
+drawn and tense. I looked at Mornac; his heavy, black eyes met mine
+steadily.
+
+"It seems to me," he said, "that it was high time we abolished the
+Foreign Division, Imperial Military Police."
+
+"I refuse to be discharged!" I said, hoarsely. "It is your word
+against mine; I demand an investigation!"
+
+"Certainly," he replied, almost wearily, and touched a bell. "Bring
+that witness," he added to the soldier who appeared in answer to the
+silvery summons.
+
+"I mean an official inquiry," I said--"a court-martial. It is my
+right where my honor is questioned."
+
+"It is my right, when you question my honor, to throw you into Mont
+Valerien, neck and heels," he said, showing his teeth under his silky,
+black mustache.
+
+Almost stunned by his change of tone, I stood like a stone. Somebody
+entered the room behind me, passed me; there was an odor of violets in
+the air, a faint rustle of silk, and I saw Mornac rise and bow to his
+guest and conduct her to a chair.
+
+His guest was the young Countess de Vassart.
+
+She looked up at me brightly, gave me a pretty nod of recognition,
+then turned expectantly to Mornac, who was still standing at her
+elbow, saying, "Then it is no longer a question of my exile,
+monsieur?"
+
+"No, madame; there has been a mistake. The government has no reason
+to suspect your loyalty." He turned directly on me. "Madame, do you
+know this officer?"
+
+"Yes," said the Countess, smiling.
+
+"Did you see him receive a small sack of diamonds in Morsbronn?"
+
+The Countess gave me a quick glance of surprise. "Yes," she said,
+wonderingly.
+
+"Thank you, madame; that is sufficient," he replied; and before I
+could understand what he was about he had conducted the Countess to
+the next room and had closed the door behind him.
+
+"Quick!" muttered Speed at my elbow; "let's back out of this trap.
+There's no use; he's one of them, and he means to ruin you."
+
+"I won't go!" I said, in a cold fury; "I'll choke the truth out of
+him, I tell you."
+
+"Man! Man! He's the Emperor's shadow! You're done for; come on while
+there's time. I tell you there's no hope for you here."
+
+"Hope! What do I care?" I said, harshly. "Why, Speed, that man is a
+common thief."
+
+"What of it?" whispered Speed. "Doesn't everybody know that the
+conspiracy runs close to the throne? What do you care? Come on, I tell
+you; I've had enough of this rotten government. So have you. And
+we've both seen enough to ruin us. Come on!"
+
+"But he's got those diamonds! Do you think I can stand that?"
+
+"I think you've got to," muttered Speed, savagely. "Do you want to
+rot in Cayenne? If you do, stay here and bawl for a court-martial!"
+
+"But the government--"
+
+"Let the government go to the devil! It's going fast enough, anyhow.
+Come, don't let Mornac find us here when he returns. He may be coming
+now--quick, Scarlett! We've got to cut for it!"
+
+"Speed," I said, unsteadily, "it's enough to make an honest man
+strike hands with Buckhurst in earnest."
+
+Speed took my arm with a cautious glance at the door of the next room,
+and urged me toward the corridor.
+
+"The government has kicked us out into the street," he muttered; "be
+satisfied that the government didn't kick us into Biribi. And it will
+yet if you don't come."
+
+"Come? Where? I haven't any money, and now they've got my honor--"
+
+"Rubbish!" he whispered, fairly dragging me into the hallway. "Here!
+No--don't go to your rooms. Leave everything--get clear of this
+rat-pit, I tell you."
+
+He half pushed, half dragged me to the parade; then, dropping my arm,
+he struck a jaunty pace through the archway, not even glancing at the
+sentinels. I kept pace with him, scarcely knowing what I did.
+
+In the Rue de Seine I halted suddenly, crying out that I must go back,
+but he seized me with a growl of "Idiot! come on!" and fairly shoved
+me through the colonnades of the Institute, along the quay, down the
+river-wall, to a dock where presently a swift river-boat swung in for
+passengers. And when the bateau mouche shot out again into mid-stream,
+Speed and I stood silently on deck, watching the silver-gray facades
+of Paris fly past above us under the blue sky.
+
+We sat far forward, quite alone, and separated from the few passengers
+by the pilot-house and jointed funnel. And there, carelessly lounging,
+with one of his lank legs crossed over the other and a cigar between
+his teeth, my comrade coolly recounted to me the infamous history of
+the past week:
+
+"Jarras put his honest, old, square-toed foot in it by accident; I
+don't know how he managed to do it, but this is certain: he suddenly
+found himself on a perfectly plain trail which could only end at
+Mornac's threshold.
+
+"Then he did a stupid thing--he called Mornac in and asked him, in
+perfect faith, to clear up the affair, never for a moment suspecting
+that Mornac was the man.
+
+"That occurred the day you started to catch Buckhurst. And on that
+day, too, I had found out something; and like a fool I told Jarras."
+
+Speed chewed his cigar and laughed.
+
+"In twenty-four hours Jarras was relieved of his command; I was
+requested not to leave the Luxembourg--in other words, I was under
+arrest, and Mornac took over the entire department and abolished the
+Foreign Division 'for the good of the service,' as the _Official_ had
+it next day.
+
+"Then somebody--Mornac probably--let loose a swarm of those shadowy
+lies called rumors--you know how that is done!--and people began to
+mutter, and the cafes began to talk of treason among the foreign
+police. Of course Rochefort took it up; of course the _Official_
+printed a half-hearted denial which was far worse than an avowal. Then
+the division was abolished, and the illustrated papers made filthy
+caricatures of us, and drew pictures of Mornac, sabre in hand,
+decapitating a nest full of American rattlesnakes and British cobras,
+and Rochefort printed a terrible elaboration of the fable of the
+farmer and the frozen serpent."
+
+"Oh, that's enough," I said, sick with rage and disgust. "Let them
+look out for their own country now. I pity the Empress; I pity the
+Emperor. I don't know what Mornac means to do, but I know that the
+Internationale boa-constrictor is big enough to swallow government,
+dynasty, and Empire, and it is going to try."
+
+"I am certain of one thing," said Speed, staring out over the sun-lit
+water with narrowing eyes. "I know that Mornac is using Buckhurst."
+
+"Perhaps it is Buckhurst who is using Mornac," I suggested.
+
+"I think both those gentlemen have the same view in end--to feather
+their respective nests under cover of a general smash," said Speed.
+"It would not do for Mornac to desert the Empire under any
+circumstances. But he can employ Buckhurst to squeeze it dry and then
+strike an attitude as its faithful defender in adversity."
+
+"But why does Buckhurst desire to go to Paradise?" I asked.
+
+The boat swung into a dock near the Point du Jour; a few passengers
+left, a few came aboard; the boat darted on again under the high
+viaduct of masonry, past bastions on which long siege cannon glistened
+in the sunshine, past lines of fresh earthworks, past grassy
+embankments on which soldiers moved to the rumble of drums.
+
+"I know something about Paradise," said Speed, in a low voice.
+
+I waited; Speed chewed his cigar grimly.
+
+"Look here, Scarlett," he said. "Do you know what has become of the
+crown jewels of France?"
+
+"No," I said.
+
+"Well, I'll tell you. You know, of course, that the government is
+anxious; you know that Paris is preparing to stand siege if the
+Prussians double up Bazaine and the army of Chalons in the north. But
+you don't know what a pitiable fright the authorities are in. Why,
+Scarlett, they are scared almost to the verge of idiocy."
+
+"They've passed that verge," I observed.
+
+"Yes, they have. They have had a terrible panic over the safety of
+the crown jewels--they were nervous enough before the robbery. And
+this is what they've done in secret:
+
+"The crown jewels, the bars of gold of the reserve, the great
+pictures from the Louvre, the antiques of value, including the Venus
+of Milo, have been packed in cases and loaded on trains under heavy
+guard.
+
+"Twelve of these trains have already left Paris for the war-port of
+Lorient. The others are to follow, one every twenty-four hours at
+midnight.
+
+"Whether these treasures are to be locked up in Lorient, or whether
+they are to be buried in the sand-dunes along the coast, I don't know.
+But I know this: a swift cruiser--the _Fer-de-Lance_--is lying off
+Paradise, between the light-house and the Ile de Groix, with steam up
+night and day, ready to receive the treasures of the government at the
+first alarm and run for the French possessions in Cochin-China.
+
+"And now, perhaps, you may guess why Buckhurst is so anxious to hang
+around Paradise."
+
+Of course I was startled. Speed's muttered information gave me the
+keys to many doors. And behind each door were millions and millions
+and millions of francs' worth of plunder.
+
+Our eyes met in mute interrogation; Speed smiled.
+
+"Of course," said I, with dry lips, "Buckhurst is devil enough to
+attempt anything."
+
+"Especially if backed by Mornac," said Speed.
+
+Suddenly the professional aspect of the case burst on me like a shower
+of glorious sunshine.
+
+"Oh, for the chance!" I said, brokenly. "Speed! Think of it! Think
+how completely we have the thing in hand!"
+
+"Yes," he said, with a shrug, "only we have just been kicked out of
+the service in disgrace, and we are now going to be fully occupied in
+running away from the police."
+
+That was true enough; I had scarcely had time to realize our position
+as escaped suspects of the department. And with the recognition of my
+plight came a rush of hopeless rage, of bitter regret, and
+soul-sickening disappointment.
+
+So this was the end of my career--a fugitive, disgraced, probably
+already hunted. This was my reward for faithful service--penniless,
+almost friendless, liable to arrest and imprisonment with no hope of
+justice from Emperor or court-martial--a banned, ruined, proscribed
+outcast, in blind flight.
+
+"I've thought of the possibility of this," observed Speed, quietly.
+"We've got to make a living somehow. In fact, I'm to let--and so are
+you."
+
+I looked at him, too miserable to speak.
+
+"I had an inkling of it," he said. A shrewd twinkle came into his
+clear, Yankee eyes; he chewed his wrecked cigar and folded his lank
+arms.
+
+"So," he continued, tranquilly, blinking at the sparkling river, "I
+drew out all my money--and yours, too."
+
+"Mine!" I stammered. "How could you?"
+
+"Forged an order," he admitted. "Can you forgive me, Scarlett?"
+
+"Forgive you! Bless your generous heart!" I muttered, as he handed me
+a sealed packet.
+
+"Not at all," he said, laughing; "a crime in time saves nine--eh,
+Scarlett? Pocket it; it's all there. Now listen. I have made
+arrangements of another kind. Do you remember an application for
+license from the manager of a travelling American show--a Yankee
+circus?"
+
+"Byram's Imperial American Circus?" I said.
+
+"That's it. They went through Normandy last summer. Well, Byram's
+agent is going to meet us at Saint-Cloud. We're engaged; I'm to do
+ballooning--you know I worked one of the military balloons before
+Petersburg. You are to do sensational riding. You were riding-master
+in the Spahis--were you not?"
+
+I looked at him, almost laughing. Suddenly the instinct of my vagabond
+days returned like a sweet wind from the wilds, smiting me full in the
+face.
+
+"I tamed three lions for my regiment at Constantine," I said.
+
+"Good lad! Then you can play with Byram's lions, too. Oh, what the
+devil!" he cried, recklessly; "it's all in a lifetime. Quand meme,
+and who cares? We've life before us and an honest living in view, and
+Byram has packed two of his men back to England and I've tinkered up
+their passports to suit us. So we're reasonably secure."
+
+"Will you tell me, Speed, why you were wise enough to do all this
+while I was gone?" I asked, in astonishment.
+
+"Because," said Speed, deliberately, "I distrusted Mornac from the
+hour he entered the department."
+
+A splendid officer of police was spoiled when Mornac entered the
+department.
+
+Presently the deck guard began to shout: "Saint-Cloud! Saint-Cloud!"
+and the little boat glided up alongside the floating pier. Speed rose;
+I followed him across the gang-plank; and, side by side, we climbed
+the embankment.
+
+"Do you mean to say that Byram is going travelling about with his
+circus in spite of the war?" I whispered.
+
+"Yes, indeed. We start south from Chartres to-morrow."
+
+Presently I said: "Do you suppose we will go to Lorient
+or--Paradise?"
+
+"We will if I have anything to say about it," replied Speed, throwing
+away his ragged cigar.
+
+And I walked silently beside him, thinking of the young Countess and
+of Buckhurst.
+
+
+
+
+PART SECOND
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+THE ROAD TO PARADISE
+
+
+On the 3d of November Byram's American Circus, travelling slowly
+overland toward the Spanish frontier, drew up for an hour's rest at
+Quimperle. I, however, as usual, prepared to ride forward to select a
+proper place for our night encampment, and to procure the necessary
+license.
+
+The dusty procession halted in the town square, which was crowded, and
+as I turned in my saddle I saw Byram stand up on the red-and-gold
+band-wagon and toss an armful of circulars and bills into the throng.
+
+The white bits of paper fluttered wide and disappeared in the sea of
+white Breton head-dresses; there was a rhythmic clatter of wooden
+shoes, an undulation of snowy coiffes, then a low murmur as the people
+slowly read the circulars aloud, their musical monotone accompanying
+the strident nasal voice of Byram, who stood on the tarnished
+band-wagon shouting his crowd around him.
+
+"Mossoors et madams! Ecooty see voo play! J'ai l'honnoor de vous
+presenter le ploo magnifique cirque--" And the invariable reclame
+continued to the stereotyped finis; the clown bobbed up behind Byram
+and made his usual grimaces, and the band played "The Cork Leg."
+
+The Bretons looked on in solemn astonishment: my comrade, Speed,
+languidly stood up on the elephant and informed the people that our
+circus was travelling to Lorient to fill a pressing engagement, and if
+we disappointed the good people of Lorient a riot would doubtless
+result, therefore it was not possible to give any performance before
+we reached Lorient--and the admission was only ten sous.
+
+Our clown then picked up the tatters of his threadbare comic speech.
+Speed, munching a stale sandwich, came strolling over to where I stood
+sponging out my horse's mouth with cool water.
+
+"We'll ride into Paradise in full regalia, I suppose," he observed,
+munching away reflectively; "it's the cheapest reclame."
+
+I dashed a bucket of water over my horse's legs. "You'd better look
+out for your elephant; those drunken Bretons are irritating him," I
+said. "Mahouts are born, not made."
+
+Speed turned; the elephant was squealing and thrusting out a
+prehensile trunk among the people. There would be trouble if any fool
+gave him tobacco.
+
+"Hi!" cried Speed, "tobah! Let the mem-log alone! Ai! he's snatched
+a coiffe! Drop it, Djebe! C'hast buhan! Don't be afraid, mesdames; the
+elephant is not ugly! Chomit oll en ho trankilite!"
+
+The elephant appeared to understand the mixture of Hindu, French, and
+Breton--or perhaps it was the sight of the steel ankus that Speed
+flourished in his quality of mahout. The crowd pressed forward again,
+reassured by the "Chomit oll en ho trankilite!"
+
+Speed swallowed the last crumb of his sandwich, wiped his hands on his
+handkerchief, and shoved them into his shabby pockets; the ankus
+dangled from his wrist.
+
+We were in seedy circumstances; an endless chain of bad luck had
+followed us from Chartres--bad weather, torrents of rain, flooded
+roads, damaging delays on railways already overcrowded with troops
+and war material, and, above all, we encountered everywhere that
+ominous apathy which burdened the whole land, even those provinces
+most remote from the seat of war. The blockade of Paris had paralyzed
+France.
+
+The fortune that Byram had made in the previous year was already gone;
+we no longer travelled by rail; we no longer slept at inns; we could
+barely pay for the food for our animals.
+
+As for the employes, the list had been cut down below the margin of
+safety, yet for a month no salaries had been paid.
+
+As I stood there in the public square of Quimperle, passing the
+cooling sponge over my horse's nose, old Byram came out of the hotel
+on the corner, edged his way through the stolid crowd that surrounded
+us gaunt mountebanks, and shuffled up to me.
+
+"I guess we ain't goin' to push through to-night, Scarlett," he
+observed, wiping his sweating forehead on the sleeve of his linen
+duster.
+
+"No, governor, it's too far," I said.
+
+"We'll be all right, anyway," added Speed; "there's a change in the
+moon and this warm weather ought to hold, governor."
+
+"I dunno," said Byram, with an abstracted glance at the crowd around
+the elephant.
+
+"Cheer up, governor," I said, "we ought at least to pay expenses to
+the Spanish frontier. Once out of France we'll find your luck again
+for you."
+
+"Mebbe," he said, almost wearily.
+
+I glanced at Speed. This was the closest approach to a whine that we
+had heard from Byram. But the man had changed within a few days; his
+thin hair, brushed across his large, alert ears, was dusty and
+unkempt; hollows had formed under his shrewd eyes; his black
+broadcloth suit was as soiled as his linen, his boots shabby, his
+silk hat suitable only for the stage property of our clown.
+
+"Don't ride too far," said Byram, as I set foot to stirrup, "them
+band-wagon teams is most done up, an' that there camuel gits meaner
+every minute."
+
+I wheeled my horse out into the road to Paradise, cursing the
+"camuel," the bane of our wearied caravan.
+
+"Got enough cash for the license?" asked Byram, uneasily.
+
+"Plenty, governor; don't worry. Speed, don't let him mope. We'll be
+in Lorient this time to-morrow," I called back, with a swagger of
+assumed cheerfulness.
+
+Speed stepped swiftly across the square and laid his hand on my
+stirrup.
+
+"What are you going to do if you see Buckhurst?"
+
+"Nothing."
+
+"Or the Countess?"
+
+"I don't know."
+
+"I suppose you will go out of your way to find her if she's in
+Paradise?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And tell her the truth about Buckhurst?"
+
+"I expect to."
+
+After a moment's silence he said: "Don't do anything until I see you
+to-night, will you?"
+
+"All right," I replied, and set my horse at a gallop over the old
+stone bridge.
+
+The highway to the sea which winds down through acres of yellow gorse
+and waving broom to the cliffs of Paradise is a breezy road, swept by
+the sweet winds that blow across Brittany from the Cote d'Or to the
+Pyrenees.
+
+It is a land of sea-winds; and when in the still noontide of midsummer
+the winds are at play far out at sea, their traces remain in the
+furrowed wheat, in the incline of solitary trees, in the breezy trend
+of the cliff-clover and the blackthorn and the league-wide sweep of
+the moorlands.
+
+And through this land whose inland perfume always savored the unseen
+sea I rode down to Paradise.
+
+It was not until I had galloped through the golden forest of Kerselec
+that I came in sight of the ocean, although among the sunbeams and the
+dropping showers of yellow beech-leaves I fancied I could hear the
+sound of the surf.
+
+And now I rode slowly, in full sight of the sea where it lay, an
+immense gray band across the world, touching a looming horizon, and in
+throat and nostril the salt stung sweetly, and the whole world seemed
+younger for the breath of the sea.
+
+From the purple mystery of the horizon to the landward cliffs the
+ocean appeared motionless; it was only when I had advanced almost to
+the cliffs that I saw the movement of waves--that I perceived the
+contrast between inland inertia and the restless repose of the sea,
+stirring ceaselessly since creation.
+
+The same little sparkling river I had crossed in Quimperle I now saw
+again, spreading out a wide, flat current which broke into waves where
+it tumbled seaward across the bar; I heard the white-winged gulls
+mewing, the thunderous monotone of the surf, and a bell in some unseen
+chapel ringing sweetly.
+
+I passed a stone house, another; then the white road curved under the
+trees and I rode straight into the heart of Paradise, my horse's hoofs
+awaking echoes in the silent, stone-paved square.
+
+Never had I so suddenly entered a place so peaceful, so quiet in the
+afternoon sun--yet the silence was not absolute, it was thrilling with
+exquisite sound, lost echoes of the river running along its quay of
+stone, half-heard harmonies of the ocean where white surf seethed over
+the sands beyond the headland.
+
+There was a fountain, too, dripping melodiously under the trees; I
+heard the breathless humming of a spinning-wheel from one of the low
+houses of gray stone which enclosed the square, and a young girl
+singing, and the drone of bees in a bed of resida.
+
+So this was Paradise! Truly the name did not seem amiss here, under
+the still vault of blue above; Paradise means peace to so many of
+us--surcease of care and sound and the brazen trample of nations--not
+the quiet of palace corridors or the tremendous silence of a
+cathedral, but the noiselessness of pleasant sounds, moving shadows of
+trees, wordless quietude, simplicity.
+
+A young girl with a face like the Madonna stole across the square in
+her felt shoes.
+
+"Can you tell me where the mayor lives?" I asked, looking down at her
+from my horse.
+
+She raised her white-coiffed head with an innocent smile: "Eman' barz
+ar sal o leina."
+
+"Don't you speak French?" I asked, appalled.
+
+"Ho! ia; oui, monsieur, s'il faut bien. The mayor is at breakfast in
+his kitchen yonder."
+
+"Thank you, my child."
+
+I turned my horse across the shady square to a stone house banked up
+with bed on bed of scarlet geraniums. The windows were open; a fat man
+with very small eyes sat inside eating an omelet.
+
+He watched me dismount without apparent curiosity, and when I had tied
+my horse and walked in at the open door he looked at me over the rim
+of a glass of cider, and slowly finished his draught without blinking.
+Then he said, "Bonjour."
+
+I told him that I wanted a license for the circus to camp for one
+night; that I also desired permission to pitch camp somewhere in the
+vicinity. He made out the license, stamped it, handed it to me, and I
+paid him the usual fee.
+
+"I've heard of circuses," he said; "they're like those shows at
+country fairs, I suppose."
+
+"Yes--in a way. We have animals."
+
+"What kind?"
+
+"Lions, tigers--"
+
+"I've seen them."
+
+"--a camel, an elephant--"
+
+"Alive?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+"Ma doue!" he said, with slow emotion, "have you a live elephant?"
+
+I admitted that fact.
+
+Presently I said, "I hope the people of Paradise will come to the
+circus when we get to Lorient."
+
+"Eh? Not they," said the mayor, wagging his head. "Do you think we
+have any money here in Paradise? And then," he added, cunningly, "we
+can all see your elephant when your company arrives. Why should we pay
+to see him again? War does not make millionaires out of the poor."
+
+I looked miserably around. It was quite true that people like these
+had no money to spend on strolling players. But we had to live
+somehow, and our animals could not exist on air, even well-salted
+air.
+
+"How much will it cost to have your town-crier announce the coming of
+the circus?" I inquired.
+
+"That will cost ten sous if he drums and reads the announcement from
+here to the chateau."
+
+I gave the mayor ten copper pennies.
+
+"What chateau?" I asked.
+
+"Dame, the chateau, monsieur."
+
+"Oh," said I, "where the Countess lives?"
+
+"The Countess? Yes, of course. Who else?"
+
+"Is the Countess there?"
+
+"Oui, dame, and others not to my taste."
+
+I asked no more questions, but the mayor did, and when he found it
+might take some time to pump me, he invited me to share his omelet and
+cider and afterwards to sit in the sun among his geraniums and satisfy
+his curiosity concerning the life of a strolling player.
+
+I was glad of something to eat. After I had unsaddled my horse and led
+him to the mayor's stable and had paid for hay and grain, I returned
+to sit in the mayor's garden and sniff longingly at his tobacco smoke
+and answer his impertinent questions as good-naturedly as they were
+intended.
+
+But even the mayor of Paradise grew tired of asking questions in time;
+the bees droned among the flowers, the low murmur of the sea stole in
+on our ears, the river softly lapped the quay. The mayor slept.
+
+He was fat, very fat; his short, velvet jacket hung heavy with six
+rows of enormous silver buttons, his little, round hat was tilted over
+his nose. A silver buckle decorated it in front; behind, two little
+velvet ribbons fluttered in futile conflict with the rising
+sea-breeze.
+
+Men in embroidered knee-breeches, with bare feet thrust into
+straw-filled sabots, sat sunning on the quay under the purple
+fig-trees; one ragged fellow in soiled velvet bolero and embossed
+leggings lay in the sun, chin on fists, wooden shoes crossed behind
+him, watching the water with the eyes of a poacher.
+
+This mild, balmy November weather, this afterglow of summer which in
+my own country we call Indian summer, had started new blossoms among
+the climbing tea-roses, lovely orange-tinted blossoms, and some of a
+clear lemon color, and their fragrance filled the air. Nowhere do
+roses blow as they blow near the sea, nowhere have I breathed such
+perfume as I breathed that drowsy afternoon in Paradise, where in
+every door-yard thickets of clove-scented pinks carpeted the ground
+and tall spikes of snowy phlox glimmered silver-white in the
+demi-light.
+
+Where on earth could a more peaceful scene be found than in this
+sea-lulled land, here in the subdued light under aged, spreading oaks,
+where moss crept over the pavements and covered the little fountain as
+though it had been the stony brink of a limpid forest spring?
+
+The mayor woke up toward five o'clock and stared at me with owlish
+gravity as though daring me to say that he had been asleep.
+
+"Um--ah--ma fois oui!" he muttered, blowing his nose loudly in a
+purple silk bandanna. Then he shrugged his shoulders and added:
+"C'est la vie, monsieur. Que voulez-vous?"
+
+And it was one kind of life after all--a blessed release from the
+fever of that fierce farandole which we of the outer world call
+"life."
+
+The mayor scratched his ear, yawned, stretched one leg, then the
+other, and glanced at me.
+
+"Paris still holds out?" he asked, with another yawn.
+
+"Oh yes," I replied.
+
+"And the war--is it still going badly for us?"
+
+"There is always hope," I answered.
+
+"Hope," he grumbled; "oh yes, we know what hope is--we of the coast
+live on it when there's no bread; but hope never yet filled my belly
+for me."
+
+"Has the war touched you here in Paradise?" I asked.
+
+"Touched us? Ho! Say it has crushed us and I'll strike palms with
+you. Why, not a keel has passed out of the port since August. Where is
+the fishing-fleet? Where are the sardine sloops that ought to have
+sailed from Algiers? Where are the Icelanders?"
+
+"Well, where are they?" I suggested.
+
+"Where? Ask the semaphore yonder. Where are our salt schooners for
+the Welsh coast? I don't know. They have not sailed, that's all I
+know. You do well to come with your circus and your elephant! You can
+peddle diamonds in the poor-house, too, if it suits your taste."
+
+"Have the German cruisers frightened all your craft from the sea?" I
+asked, astonished.
+
+"Yes, partly. Then there's an ugly French cruiser lying off Groix,
+yonder, and her black stacks are dribbling smoke all day and all
+night. We have orders to keep off and use Lorient when we want a
+port."
+
+"Do you know why the cruiser warns your fishing-boats from this
+coast?" I inquired.
+
+"No," he said, shortly.
+
+"Do you know the name of the cruiser?"
+
+"She's a new one, the _Fer-de-Lance_. And if I were not a patriot and
+a Breton I'd say: 'May Sainte-Anne rot her where she lies; she's
+brought a curse on the coast from Lorient to the Saint-Julien
+Light!--and the ghosts of the Icelanders will work her evil yet.'"
+
+The mayor's round, hairless face was red; he thumped the arm of his
+chair with pudgy fists and wagged his head.
+
+"We have not seen the end of this," he said--"oh no! There's a curse
+coming on Paradise--the cruiser brought it, and it's coming. He! did a
+Bannalec man not hear the were-wolf in Kerselec forest a week since?
+Pst! Not a word, monsieur. But old Kloark, of Roscoff, heard it
+too--oui dame!--and he knows the howl of the Loup-Garou! Besides, did
+I not with my own eyes see a black cormorant fly inland from the sea?
+And, by Sainte-Eline of Paradise! the gulls squeal when there's no
+storm brewing and the lancons prick the dark with flames along the
+coast till you'd swear the witches of Ker-Is were lighting
+death-candles from Paradise to Pont-Aven."
+
+"Do you believe in witches, monsieur the mayor?" I asked, gravely.
+
+He gave me a shrewd glance. "Not at all--not even in bed and the
+light out," he said, with a fat swagger. "_I_ believe in magic? Ho!
+foi non! But many do. Oui dame! Many do."
+
+"Here in Paradise?"
+
+"Parbleu! Men of parts, too, monsieur. Now there's Terrec, who has
+the evil eye--not that I believe it, but, damn him, he'd better not
+try any tricks on me!
+
+"Others stick twigs of aubepine in their pastures; the apothecary is
+a man of science, yet every year he makes a bonfire of dried gorse and
+drives his cattle through the smoke. It may keep off witches and
+lightning--or it may not. I myself do not do such things."
+
+"Still you believe the cruiser out at sea yonder is going to bring
+you evil?"
+
+"She has brought it. But it's all the same to me. I am mayor, and
+exempt, and I have cider and tobacco and boudin for a few months
+yet."
+
+He caressed his little, selfish chin, which hung between his mottled
+jowls, peered cunningly at me, and opened his mouth to say something,
+but at that moment we both caught sight of a peasant running and
+waving a packet of blue papers in the air. "Monsieur the mayor!
+Monsieur the mayor!" he called, while still far away.
+
+"Cre cochon de malheur!" muttered the mayor, turning pale. "He's got
+a telegram!"
+
+The man came clattering across the square in his wooden shoes.
+
+"A telegram," repeated the mayor, wiping the sudden sweat from his
+forehead. "I never get telegrams. I don't want telegrams!"
+
+He turned to me, almost bursting with suppressed prophecy.
+
+"It has come--the evil that the black cruiser brings us! You laughed!
+Tenez, monsieur; there's your bad luck in these blue morsels of
+paper!"
+
+And he snatched the telegram from the breathless messenger, reading it
+with dilating eyes.
+
+For a long while he sat there studying the telegram, his fat
+forefinger following the scrawl, a crease deepening above his
+eyebrows, and all the while his lips moved in noiseless repetition of
+the words he spelled with difficulty and his labored breathing grew
+louder.
+
+When at length the magistrate had mastered the contents of his
+telegram, he looked up with a stupid stare.
+
+"I want my drummer. Where's the town-crier?" he demanded, as though
+dazed.
+
+"He has gone to Lorient, m'sieu the mayor," ventured the messenger.
+
+"To get drunk. I remember. Imbecile! Why did he go to-day? Are there
+not six other days in this cursed week? Who is there to drum? Nobody.
+Nobody knows how in Paradise. Seigneur, Dieu! the ignorance of this
+town!"
+
+"M'sieu the mayor," ventured the messenger, "there's Jacqueline."
+
+"Ho! Vrai. The Lizard's young one! She can drum, they say. She stole
+my drum once. Why did she steal it but to drum upon it?"
+
+"The little witch can drum them awake in Ker-Is," muttered the
+messenger.
+
+The mayor rose, looked around the square, frowned. Then he raised his
+voice in a bellow: "Jacqueline! Jacqueline! _Thou_ Jacqueline!"
+
+A far voice answered, faintly breaking across the square from the
+bridge: "She is on the rocks with her sea-rake!"
+
+The mayor thrust the blue telegram into his pocket and waddled out of
+his garden, across the square, and up the path to the cliffs.
+
+Uninvited, I went with him.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+THE TOWN-CRIER
+
+
+The bell in the unseen chapel ceased ringing as we came out on the
+cliffs of Paradise, where, on the horizon, the sun hung low, belted
+with a single ribbon of violet cloud.
+
+Over acres of foaming shoals the crimson light flickered and spread,
+painting the eastern cliffs with sombre fire. The ebb-tide, red as
+blood, tumbled seaward across the bar, leaving every ledge a glowing
+cinder under the widening conflagration in the west.
+
+The mayor carried his silver-buttoned jacket over his arm; the air had
+grown sultry. As we walked our gigantic shadows strode away before us
+across the kindling stubble, seeming to lengthen at every stride.
+
+Below the cliffs, on a crescent of flat sand, from which sluggish,
+rosy rivulets crawled seaward, a man stood looking out across the
+water. And the mayor stopped and called down to him: "Ohe, the
+Lizard! What do you see on the ocean--you below?"
+
+"I see six war-ships speeding fast in column," replied the man,
+without looking up.
+
+The mayor hastily shaded his eyes with one fat hand, muttering: "All
+poachers have eyes like sea-hawks. There is a smudge of smoke to the
+north. Holy Virgin, what eyes the rascal has!"
+
+As for me, strain my eyes as I would, I saw nothing save the faintest
+stain of smoke on the horizon.
+
+"He, Lizard! Are they German, your six war-ships?" bawled the mayor.
+His voice had suddenly become tremulous.
+
+"They are French," replied the poacher, tranquilly.
+
+"Then Sainte-Eline keep them from the rocks!" sang out the mayor.
+"Ohe, Lizard, I want somebody to drum and read a proclamation.
+Where's Jacqueline?"
+
+At that instant a young girl, a mere child, appeared on the beach,
+dragging a sea-rake over the ground behind her. She was a lithe
+creature, bare-limbed and ragged, with the sea-tan on throat and knee.
+The blue tatters of her skirt hung heavy with brine; the creamy skin
+on her arms glittered with wet spray, and her hair was wet, too,
+clustering across her cheeks in damp elf-locks.
+
+The mayor glanced at her with that stolid contempt which Finistere
+Bretons cherish toward those women who show their hair--an immodesty
+unpardonable in the eyes of most Bretons.
+
+The girl caught sight of the mayor and gave him a laughing greeting
+which he returned with a shrug.
+
+"If you want a town-crier," she called up, in a deliciously fresh
+voice, scarcely tinged with the accent, "I'll cry your edicts and
+I'll drum for you, too!"
+
+"Can your daughter beat the drum?" asked the mayor of the poacher,
+ignoring the girl's eager face upturned.
+
+"Yes," said the poacher, indifferently, "and she can also beat the
+devil with two sticks."
+
+The girl threw her rake into a boat and leaped upon the rocks at the
+base of the cliff.
+
+"Jacqueline! Don't come up that way!" bawled the mayor, horrified.
+"Hey! Robert! Ohe! Lizard! Stop her or she'll break her neck!"
+
+The poacher looked up at his daughter then shrugged his shoulders and
+squatted down on his ragged haunches, restless eyes searching the
+level ocean, as sea-birds search.
+
+Breathless, hot, and laughing, the girl pulled herself up over the
+edge of the cliff. I held out my hand to aid her, but she pushed it
+away, crying, "Thank you all the same, but here I am!"
+
+"Spawn of the Lizard," I heard the mayor mutter to himself, "like a
+snake you wriggle where honest folk fall to destruction!" But he spoke
+condescendingly to the bright-eyed, breathless child. "I'll pay six
+sous if you'll drum for me."
+
+"I'll do it for love," she said, saucily--"for the love of drumming,
+not for your beaux yeux, m'sieu le maire."
+
+The mayor looked at her angrily, but, probably remembering he was at
+her mercy, suppressed his wrath and held out the telegram. "Can you
+read that, my child?"
+
+The girl, still breathing rapidly from her scramble, rested her hands
+on her hips and, head on one side, studied the blue sheets of the
+telegram over the mayor's outstretched arm.
+
+"Yes, I can read it. Why not? Can't you?"
+
+"Read? I the mayor of Paradise!" repeated the outraged magistrate.
+"What do you mean, lizard of lizards! gorse cat!"
+
+"Now if you are going to say such things I won't drum for you," said
+the child, glancing at me out of her sea-blue eyes and giving a shake
+to her elf-locks.
+
+"Yes, you will!" bawled the angry mayor. "Shame on your manners,
+Jacqueline Garenne! Shame on your hair hanging where all the world can
+see it! Shame on your bare legs--"
+
+"Not at all," said the child, unabashed. "God made my legs, m'sieu
+the mayor, and my hair, too. If my coiffe does not cover my hair,
+neither does the small Paris hat of the Countess de Vassart cover her
+hair. Complain of the Countess to m'sieu the cure, then I will listen
+to you."
+
+The mayor glared at her, but she tossed her head and laughed.
+
+"Ho fois! Everybody knows what you are," sniffed the mayor--"and
+nobody cares, either," he muttered, waddling past me, telegram in
+hand.
+
+The child, quite unconcerned, fell into step beside me, saying,
+confidentially: "When I was little I used to cry when they talked to
+me like that. But I don't now; I've made up my mind that they are no
+better than I."
+
+"I don't know why anybody should abuse you," I said, loudly enough
+for the mayor to hear. But that functionary waddled on, puffing,
+muttering, stopping every now and then in the narrow cliff-path to
+strike flint to tinder or to refill the tiny bowl of his pipe, which a
+dozen puffs always exhausted.
+
+"Oh, they all abuse us," said the child, serenely. "You see, you are
+a stranger and don't understand; but you will if you live here."
+
+"Why is everybody unkind to you?" I asked, after a moment.
+
+"Why? Oh, because I am what I am and my father is the Lizard."
+
+"A poacher?"
+
+"Ah," she said, looking up at me with delicious malice, "what is a
+poacher, monsieur?"
+
+"Sometimes he's a fine fellow gone wrong," I said, laughing. "So I
+don't believe any ill of your father, or of you, either. Will you drum
+for me, Jacqueline?"
+
+"For you, monsieur? Why, yes. What am I to read for you?"
+
+I gave her a hand-bill; at the first glance her eyes sparkled, the
+color deepened under her coat of amber tan; she caught her breath and
+read rapidly to the end.
+
+"Oh, how beautiful," she said, softly. "Am I to read this in the
+square?"
+
+"I will give you a franc to read it, Jacqueline."
+
+"No, no--only--oh, do let me come in and see the heavenly wonders!
+Would you, monsieur? I--I cannot pay--but would--_could_ you let me
+come in? I will read your notice, anyway," she added, with a quaver in
+her voice.
+
+The flushed face, the eager, upturned eyes, deep blue as the sea, the
+little hands clutching the show-bill, which fairly quivered between
+the tanned fingers--all these touched and amused me. The child was mad
+with excitement.
+
+What she anticipated, Heaven only knows. Shabby and tarnished as we
+were, the language of our hand-bills made up in gaudiness for the
+dingy reality.
+
+"Come whenever you like, Jacqueline," I said. "Ask for me at the
+gate."
+
+"And who are you, monsieur?"
+
+"My name is Scarlett."
+
+"Scarlett," she whispered, as though naming a sacred thing.
+
+The mayor, who had toddled some distance ahead of us, now halted in
+the square, looking back at us through the red evening light.
+
+"Jacqueline, the drum is in my house. I'll lend you a pair of sabots,
+too. Come, hasten little idler!"
+
+We entered the mayor's garden, where the flowers were glowing in the
+lustre of the setting sun. I sat down in a chair; Jacqueline waited,
+hands resting on her hips, small, shapely toes restlessly brushing the
+grass.
+
+"Truly this coming wonder-show will be a peep into paradise," she
+murmured. "Can all be true--really true as it is printed here in this
+bill--I wonder--"
+
+Before she had time to speculate further, the mayor reappeared with
+drum and drum-sticks in one hand and a pair of sabots in the other. He
+flung the sabots on the grass, and Jacqueline, quite docile now,
+slipped both bare feet into them.
+
+"You may keep them," said the mayor, puffing out his mottled cheeks
+benevolently; "decency must be maintained in Paradise, even if it
+beggars me."
+
+"Thank you," said Jacqueline, sweetly, slinging the drum across her
+hip and tightening the cords. She clicked the ebony sticks, touched
+the tightly drawn parchment, sounding it with delicate fingers, then
+looked up at the mayor for further orders.
+
+"Go, my child," said the mayor, amiably, and Jacqueline marched
+through the garden out into the square by the fountain, drum-sticks
+clutched in one tanned fist, the scrolls of paper in the other.
+
+In the centre of the square she stood a moment, looking around, then
+raised the drum-sticks; there came a click, a flash of metal, and the
+quiet square echoed with the startling outcrash. Back from roof and
+wall bounded the echoes; the stony pavement rang with the racket.
+Already a knot of people had gathered around her; others came swiftly
+to windows and doorsteps; the loungers left their stone benches by the
+river, the maids of Paradise flocked from the bridge. Even Robert the
+Lizard drew in his dripping line to listen. The drum-roll ceased.
+
+"_Attention! Men of Finistere!_ By order of the governor of Lorient,
+all men between the ages of twenty and forty, otherwise not exempt,
+are ordered to report at the navy-yard barracks, war-port of Lorient,
+on the 5th of November of the present year, to join the army of the
+Loire.
+
+"Whosoever is absent at roll-call will be liable to the punishment
+provided for such delinquents under the laws governing the state of
+siege now declared in Morbihan and Finistere. _Citizens, to arms!_
+
+"The enemy is on the march! Though Metz has fallen through treachery,
+Paris holds firm! Let the provinces rise and hurl the invader from the
+soil of the mother-land!
+
+"_Bretons!_ France calls! Answer with your ancient battle-cry,
+'Sainte-Anne! Sainte-Anne!' The eyes of the world are on Armorica! _To
+arms!_"
+
+The girl's voice ceased; a dead silence reigned in the square. The men
+looked at one another stupidly; a woman began to whimper.
+
+"The curse is on Paradise!" cried a hoarse voice.
+
+The drummer was already drawing another paper from her ragged pocket,
+and again in the same clear, emotionless voice, but slightly drawling
+her words, she read:
+
+"To the good people of Paradise! The manager of the famous American
+travelling circus, lately returned from a tour of the northern
+provinces, with camels, elephants, lions, and a magnificent company of
+artists, announces a stupendous exhibition to be held in Lorient at
+greatly reduced prices, thus enabling the intelligent and appreciative
+people of Paradise to honor the Republican Circus, recently known as
+the Imperial Circus, with their benevolent and discerning patronage!
+Long live France! Long live the Republic! Long live the Circus!"
+
+A resounding roll of the drum ended the announcements; the girl slung
+the drum over her shoulder, turned to the right, and passed over the
+stone bridge, sabots clicking. Presently from the hamlet of Alincourt
+over the stream came the dull roll of the drum again and the faint,
+clear voice:
+
+"Attention! Men of Finistere! By order of the governor of Lorient,
+all men--" The wind changed and her voice died away among the trees.
+
+The maids of Paradise were weeping now by the fountain; the men
+gathered near, and their slow, hushed voices scarcely rose above the
+ripple of the stream where Robert the Lizard fished in silence.
+
+It was after sunset before Jacqueline finished her rounds. She had
+read her proclamation in Alincourt hamlet, she had read it in
+Sainte-Ysole, her drum had aroused the inert loungers on the
+breakwater at Trinite-on-Sea. Now, with her drum on her shoulder and
+her sabots swinging in her left hand, she came down the cliffs beside
+the Chapel of Our Lady of Paradise, excited and expectant.
+
+Of the first proclamation which she had read she apparently understood
+little. When she announced the great disaster at Metz in the north,
+and when her passionless young voice proclaimed the levee en
+masse--the call to arms for the men of the coast from Sainte-Ysole to
+Trinite Beacon--she scarcely seemed to realize what it meant, although
+all around her women turned away sobbing, or clung, deathly white, to
+sons and husbands.
+
+But there was certainly something in the other proclamation which
+thrilled her and set her heart galloping as she loitered on the
+cliff.
+
+I walked across to the Quimperle road and met her, dancing along with
+her drum; and she promptly confided her longings and desires to me as
+we stood together for an instant on the high-road. The circus! Once,
+it appeared, she had seen--very far off--a glittering creature turning
+on a trapeze. It was at the fair near Bannalec, and it was so long ago
+that she scarcely remembered anything except that somebody had pulled
+her away while she stood enchanted, and the flashing light of
+fairyland had been forever shut from her eyes.
+
+At times, when the maids of Paradise were sociable at the well in the
+square, she had listened to stories of the splendid circus which came
+once to Lorient. And now it was coming again!
+
+We stood in the middle of the high-road looking through the dust haze,
+she doubtless dreaming of the splendors to come, I very, very tired.
+The curtain of golden dust reddened in the west; the afterglow lit up
+the sky once more with brilliant little clouds suspended from
+mid-zenith. The moorland wind rose and tossed her elf-locks in her
+eyes and whipped her skirt till the rags fluttered above her smooth,
+bare knees.
+
+Suddenly, straight out of the flaming gates of the sunset, the miracle
+was wrought. Celestial shapes in gold and purple rose up in the gilded
+dust, chariots of silver, milk-white horses plumed with fire.
+
+Breathless, she shrank back among the weeds, one hand pressed to her
+throbbing throat. But the vision grew as she stared; there was
+heavenly music, too, and the clank of metal chains, and the smothered
+pounding of hoofs. Then she caught sight of something through the dust
+that filled her with a delicious terror, and she cried out. For there,
+uptowering in the haze, came trudging a great, gray creature, a
+fearsome, swaying thing in crimson trappings, flapping huge ears. It
+shuffled past, swinging a dusty trunk; the sparkling horsemen cantered
+by, tin armor blazing in the fading glory; the chariots dragged after,
+and the closed dens of beasts rolled behind in single file, followed
+by the band-wagon, where Heaven-inspired musicians played frantically
+and a white-faced clown balanced his hat on a stick and shrieked.
+
+So the circus passed into Paradise; and I turned and followed in the
+wake of dust, stale odors, and clamorous discord, sick at heart of
+wandering over a world I had not found too kind.
+
+And at my heels stole Jacqueline.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+IN CAMP
+
+
+We went into camp under the landward glacis of the cliffs, in a field
+of clover which was to be ploughed under in a few days. We all were
+there except Kelly Eyre, who had gone to telegraph the governor of
+Lorient for permission to enter the port with the circus. Another
+messenger also left camp on private business for me.
+
+It was part of my duty to ration the hay for the elephant and the
+thrice-accursed camel. The latter had just bitten Mr. Grigg, our
+clown--not severely--and Speed and Horan the "Strong Man" were
+hobbling the brute as I finished feeding my lions and came up to
+assist the others.
+
+"Watch that darn elephant, too, Mr. Grigg," said Byram, looking up
+from a plate of fried ham that Miss Crystal, our "Trapeze Lady," had
+just cooked for him over our gypsy fires of driftwood.
+
+"Look at that elephant! Look at him!" continued Byram, with a trace
+of animation lighting up his careworn face--"look at him now chuckin'
+hay over his back. Scrape it up, Mr. Scarlett; hay's thirty a ton in
+this war-starved country."
+
+As I started to clean up the precious hay, the elephant gave a curious
+grunt and swung his trunk toward me.
+
+"There's somethin' paltry about that elephant," said Byram, in a
+complaining voice, rising, with plate of ham in one hand, fork in the
+other. "He's gittin' as mean as that crafty camuel. Make him move,
+Mr. Speed, or he'll put his foot on the trombone."
+
+"Ho Djebe! Mail!" said Speed, sharply.
+
+The elephant obediently shuffled forward; Byram sat down again, and
+wearily cut himself a bit of fried ham; and presently we were all
+sitting around the long camp-table in the glare of two smoky petroleum
+torches, eating our bread and ham and potatoes and drinking Breton
+cider, a jug of which Mr. Horan had purchased for a few coppers.
+
+Some among us were too tired to eat, many too tired for conversation,
+yet, from habit we fell into small talk concerning the circus, the
+animals, the prospects of better days.
+
+The ladies of the company, whatever quarrels they indulged in among
+themselves, stood loyally by Byram in his anxiety and need. Miss
+Crystal and Miss Delany displayed edifying optimism; Mrs. Horan
+refrained from nagging; Mrs. Grigg, a pretty little creature, who was
+one of the best equestriennes I ever saw, declared that we were living
+too well and that a little dieting wouldn't hurt anybody.
+
+McCadger, our band-master, came over from the other fire to say that
+the men had finished grooming the horses, and would I inspect the
+picket-line, as Kelly Eyre was still absent.
+
+When I returned, the ladies had retired to their blankets under their
+shelter-tent; poor little Grigg lay asleep at the table, his tired,
+ugly head resting among the unwashed tin plates; Speed sprawled in his
+chair, smoking a short pipe; Byram sat all hunched up, his head sunk,
+eyes vacantly following the movements of two men who were washing
+dishes in the flickering torch-light.
+
+He looked up at me, saying: "I guess Mr. Speed is right. Them lions
+o' yourn is fed too much horse-meat. Overeatin' is overheatin'; we've
+got to give 'em beef or they'll be clawin' you. Yes, sir, they're all
+het up. Hear 'em growl!"
+
+"That's a fable, governor," I said, smiling and dropping into a
+chair. "I've heard that theory before, but it isn't true."
+
+"The trouble with your lions is that you play with them too much and
+they're losing respect for you," said Speed, drowsily.
+
+"The trouble with my lions," said I, "is that they were born in
+captivity. Give me a wild lion, caught on his native heath, and I'll
+know what to expect from him when I tame him. But no man on earth can
+tell what a lion born in captivity will do."
+
+The hard cider had cheered Byram a little; he drew a cherished cigar
+from his vest-pocket, offered it to me, and when I considerately
+refused, he carefully set it alight with a splinter from the fire. Its
+odor was indescribable.
+
+"Luck's a curious phenomena, ain't it, Mr. Scarlett?" he said.
+
+I agreed with him.
+
+"Luck," continued Byram, waving his cigar toward the four quarters of
+the globe, "is the rich man's slave an' the poor man's tyrant. It's
+also a see-saw. When the devil plays in luck the cherubim git
+spanked--or words to that effec'--not meanin' no profanity."
+
+"It's about like that, governor," admitted Speed, lazily.
+
+Byram leaned back and sucked meditatively at his cigar. The new moon
+was just rising over the elephant's hindquarters, and the poetry of
+the incident appeared to move the manager profoundly. He turned and
+surveyed the dim bivouac, the two silent tents, the monstrous,
+shadowy bulk of the elephant, rocking monotonously against the sky.
+"Kind of Silurian an' solemn, ain't it," he murmured, "the moon
+shinin' onto the rump of that primeval pachyderm. It's like the dark
+ages of the behemoth an' the cony. I tell you, gentlemen, when them
+fearsome an' gigantic mamuels was aboundin' in the dawn of creation,
+the public missed the greatest show on earth--by a few million
+years!"
+
+We nodded sleepily but gravely.
+
+Byram appeared to have recovered something of his buoyancy and native
+optimism.
+
+"Gentlemen," he said, "let's kinder saunter over to the inn and have
+a night-cap with Kelly Eyre."
+
+This unusual and expensive suggestion startled us wide awake, but we
+were only too glad to acquiesce in anything which tended to raise his
+spirits or ours. Dog tired but smiling we rose; Byram, in his
+shirt-sleeves and suspenders, wearing his silk hat on the back of his
+head, led the way, fanning his perspiring face with a red-and-yellow
+bandanna.
+
+"Luck," said Byram, waving his cigar toward the new moon, "is bound
+to turn one way or t'other--like my camuel. Sometimes, resemblin' the
+camuel, luck will turn on you. Look out it don't bite you. I once made
+up a piece about luck:
+
+ "'Don't buck
+ Bad luck
+ Or you'll get stuck--'
+
+I disremember the rest, but it went on to say a few other words to
+that effec'."
+
+The lighted door of the inn hung ajar as we crossed the star-lit
+square; Byram entered and stood a moment in the doorway, stroking his
+chin. "Bong joor the company!" he said, lifting his battered hat.
+
+The few Bretons in the wine-room returned his civility; he glanced
+about and his eye fell on Kelly Eyre, Speed's assistant balloonist,
+seated by the window with Horan.
+
+"Well, gents," said Byram, hopefully, "an' what aire the prospects
+of smilin' fortune when rosy-fingered dawn has came again to kiss us
+back to life?"
+
+"Rotten," said Eyre, pushing a telegram across the oak table.
+
+Byram's face fell; he picked up the telegram and fumbled in his coat
+for his spectacles with unsteady hand.
+
+"Let me read it, governor," said Speed, and took the blue paper from
+Byram's unresisting, stubby fingers.
+
+"O-ho!" he muttered, scanning the message; "well--well, it's not so
+bad as all that--" He turned abruptly on Kelly Eyre--"What the devil
+are you scaring the governor for?"
+
+"Well, he's got to be told--I didn't mean to worry him," said Eyre,
+stammering, ashamed of his thoughtlessness.
+
+"Now see here, governor," said Speed, "let's all have a drink first.
+He ma belle!"--to the big Breton girl knitting in the corner--"four
+little swallows of eau-de-vie, if you please! Ah, thank you, I knew
+you were from Bannalec, where all the girls are as clever as they are
+pretty! Come, governor, touch glasses! There is no circus but the
+circus, and Byram is it's prophet! Drink, gentlemen!"
+
+But his forced gayety was ominous; we scarcely tasted the liqueur.
+Byram wiped his brow and squared his bent shoulders. Speed, elbows on
+the table, sat musing and twirling his half-empty glass.
+
+"Well, sir?" said Byram, in a low voice.
+
+"Well, governor? Oh--er--the telegram?" asked Speed, like a man
+fighting for time.
+
+"Yes, the telegram," said Byram, patiently.
+
+"Well, you see they have just heard of the terrible smash-up in the
+north, governor. Metz has surrendered with Bazaine's entire army. And
+they're naturally frightened at Lorient.... And I rather fear that the
+Germans are on their way toward the coast.... And ... well ... they
+won't let us pass the Lorient fortifications."
+
+"Won't let us in?" cried Byram, hoarsely.
+
+"I'm afraid not, governor."
+
+Byram stared at us. We had counted on Lorient to pull us through as
+far as the frontier.
+
+"Now don't take it so hard, governor," said Kelly Eyre; "I was
+frightened myself, at first, but I'm ashamed of it now. We'll pull
+through, anyhow."
+
+"Certainly," said Speed, cheerily, "we'll just lay up here for a few
+days and economize. Why can't we try one performance here, Scarlett?"
+
+"We can," said I. "We'll drum up the whole district from Pontivy to
+Auray and from Penmarch Point to Plouharnel! Why should the Breton
+peasantry not come? Don't they walk miles to the Pardons?"
+
+A gray pallor settled on Byram's sunken face; with it came a certain
+dignity which sorrow sometimes brings even to men like him.
+
+"Young gentlemen," he said, "I'm obliged to you. These here reverses
+come to everybody, I guess. The Lord knows best; but if He'll just
+lemme run my show a leetle longer, I'll pay my debts an' say, 'Thy
+will be done, amen!'"
+
+"We all must learn to say that, anyway," said Speed.
+
+"Mebbe," muttered Byram, "but I must pay my debts."
+
+After a painful silence he rose, steadying himself with his hand on
+Eyre's broad shoulder, and shambled out across the square, muttering
+something about his elephant and his camuel.
+
+Speed paid the insignificant bill, emptied his glass, and nodded at
+me.
+
+"It's all up," he said, soberly.
+
+"Let's come back to camp and talk it over," I said.
+
+Together we traversed the square under the stars, and entered the
+field of clover. In the dim, smoky camp all lights were out except one
+oil-drenched torch stuck in the ground between the two tents. Byram
+had gone to rest, so had Kelly Eyre. But my lions were awake, moving
+noiselessly to and fro, eyes shining in the dusk; and the elephant, a
+shapeless pile of shadow against the sky, stood watching us with
+little, evil eyes.
+
+Speed had some cigarettes, and he laid the pink package on the table.
+I lighted one when he did.
+
+"Do you really think there's a chance?" he asked, presently.
+
+"I don't know," I said.
+
+"Well, we can try."
+
+"Oh yes."
+
+Speed dropped his elbows on the table. "Poor old governor," he said.
+
+Then he began to talk of our own prospects, which were certainly
+obscure if not alarming; but he soon gave up speculation as futile,
+and grew reminiscent, recalling our first acquaintance as discharged
+soldiers from the African battalions, our hand-to-mouth existence as
+gentlemen farmers in Algiers, our bankruptcy and desperate struggle in
+Marseilles, first as dock-workmen, then as government horse-buyers for
+the cavalry, then as employes of the Hippodrome in Paris, where I
+finally settled down as bareback rider, lion-tamer, and instructor in
+the haute-ecole; and he accepted a salary as aid to Monsieur Gaston
+Tissandier, the scientist, who was experimenting with balloons at
+Saint-Cloud.
+
+He spoke, too, of our enlistment in the Imperial Police, and the hopes
+we had of advancement, which not only brought no response from me, but
+left us both brooding sullenly on our wrongs, crouched there over the
+rough camp-table under the stars.
+
+"Oh, hell!" muttered Speed, "I'm going to bed."
+
+But he did not move. Presently he said, "How did you ever come to
+handle wild animals?"
+
+"I've always been fond of animals; I broke colts at home; I had bear
+cubs and other things. Then, in Algiers, the regiment caught a couple
+of lions and kept them in a cage, and--well, I found I could do what I
+liked with them."
+
+"They're afraid of your eyes, aren't they?"
+
+"I don't know--perhaps it's that; I can't explain it--or, rather, I
+could partly explain it by saying that I am not afraid of them. But I
+never trust them."
+
+"You drag them all around the cage! You shove them about like sacks
+of meal!"
+
+"Yes,... but I don't trust them."
+
+"It seems to me," said Speed, "that your lions are getting rather
+impudent these days. They're not very much afraid of you now."
+
+"Nor I of them," I said, wearily; "I'm much more anxious about you
+when you go sailing about in that patched balloon of yours. Are you
+never nervous?"
+
+"Nervous? When?"
+
+"When you're up there?"
+
+"Rubbish."
+
+"Suppose the patches give way?"
+
+"I never think of that," he said, leaning on the table with a yawn.
+"Oh, Lord, how tired I am!... but I shall not be able to sleep. I'm
+actually too tired to sleep. Have you got a pack of cards, Scarlett?
+or a decent cigar, or a glass of anything, or anything to show me
+more amusing than that nightmare of an elephant? Oh, I'm sick of the
+whole business--sick! sick! The stench of the tan-bark never leaves my
+nostrils except when the odor of fried ham or of that devilish camel
+replaces it.
+
+"I'm too old to enjoy a gypsy drama when it's acted by myself; I'm
+tired of trudging through the world with my entire estate in my
+pocket. I want a home, Scarlett. Lord, how I envy people with homes!"
+
+He had been indulging in this outburst with his back partly turned
+toward me. I did not say anything, and, after a moment, he looked at
+me over his shoulder to see how I took it.
+
+"I'd like to have a home, too," I said.
+
+"I suppose homes are not meant for men like you and me," he said.
+"Lord, how I would appreciate one, though--anything with a bit of
+grass in the yard and a shovelful of dirt--enough to grow some damn
+flower, you know.... Did you smell the posies in the square
+to-night?... Something of that kind,... anything, Scarlett--anything
+that can be called a home!... But you can't understand."
+
+"Oh yes, I can," I said.
+
+He went on muttering, half to himself: "We're of the same
+breed--pariahs; fortunately, pariahs don't last long,... like the wild
+creatures who never die natural deaths,... old age is one of the
+curses they can safely discount,... and so can we, Scarlett, so can
+we.... For you'll be mauled by a lion or kicked into glory by a horse
+or an ox or an ass,... and I'll fall off a balloon,... or the camel
+will give me tetanus, or the elephant will get me in one way or
+another,... or something...."
+
+Again he twisted around to look at me. "Funny, isn't it?"
+
+"Rather funny," I said, listlessly.
+
+He leaned over, pulled another cigarette from the pink packet, broke a
+match from the card, and lighted it.
+
+"I feel better," he observed.
+
+I expressed sleepy gratification.
+
+"Oh yes, I'm much better. This isn't a bad life, is it?"
+
+"Oh no!" I said, sarcastically.
+
+"No, it's all right, and we've got to pull the poor old governor
+through and give a jolly good show here and start the whole country
+toward the tent door! Eh?"
+
+"Certainly. Don't let me detain you."
+
+"I'll tell you what," he said, "if we only had that poor little
+girl, Miss Claridge, we'd catch these Bretons. That's what took the
+coast-folk all over Europe, so Grigg says."
+
+Miss Claridge had performed in a large glass tank as the "Leaping
+Mermaid." It took like wildfire according to our fellow-performers. We
+had never seen her; she was killed by diving into her tank when the
+circus was at Antwerp in April.
+
+"Can't we get up something like that?" I suggested, hopelessly.
+
+"Who would do it? Miss Claridge's fish-tights are in the prop-box;
+who's to wear them?"
+
+He began to say something else, but stopped suddenly, eyes fixed. We
+were seated nearly opposite each other, and I turned around, following
+the direction of his eyes.
+
+Jacqueline stood behind me in the smoky light of the torch--Jacqueline,
+bare of arm and knee, with her sea-blue eyes very wide and the witch-locks
+clustering around the dim oval of her face. After a moment's absolute
+silence she said: "I came from Paradise. Don't you remember?"
+
+"From Paradise?" said Speed, smiling; "I thought it might be from
+elf-land."
+
+And I said: "Of course I remember you, Jacqueline. And I have an idea
+you ought to be in bed."
+
+There was another silence.
+
+"Won't you sit down?" asked Speed.
+
+"Thank you," said Jacqueline, gravely.
+
+She seated herself on a sack of sawdust, clasping her slender hands
+between her knees, and looked earnestly at the elephant.
+
+"He won't harm you," I assured her.
+
+"If you think I am afraid of _that_," she said, "you are mistaken,
+Monsieur Scarlett."
+
+"I don't think you are afraid of anything," observed Speed, smiling;
+"but I know you are capable of astonishment."
+
+"How do you know that?" demanded the girl.
+
+"Because I saw you with your drum on the high-road when we came past
+Paradise. Your eyes were similar to saucers, and your mouth was not
+closed, Mademoiselle Jacqueline."
+
+"Oh--pour ca--yes, I was astonished," she said. Then, with a quick,
+upward glance: "Were you riding, in armor, on a horse?"
+
+"No," said Speed; "I was on that elephant's head."
+
+This appeared to make a certain impression on Jacqueline. She became
+shyer of speech for a while, until he asked her, jestingly, why she
+did not join the circus.
+
+"It is what I wish," she said, under her breath.
+
+"And ride white horses?"
+
+"Will you take me?" she cried, passionately, springing to her feet.
+
+Amazed at her earnestness, I tried to explain that such an idea was
+out of the question. She listened anxiously at first, then her eyes
+fell and she stood there in the torch-light, head hanging.
+
+"Don't you know," said Speed, kindly, "that it takes years of
+practice to do what circus people do? And the life is not gay,
+Jacqueline; it is hard for all of us. We know what hunger means; we
+know sickness and want and cold. Believe me, you are happier in
+Paradise than we are in the circus."
+
+"It may be," she said, quietly.
+
+"Of course it is," he insisted.
+
+"But," she flashed out, "I would rather be unhappy in the circus
+than happy in Paradise!"
+
+He protested, smiling, but she would have her way.
+
+"I once saw a man, in spangles, turning, turning, and ever turning
+upon a rod. He was very far away, and that was very long ago--at the
+fair in Bannalec. But I have not forgotten! No, monsieur! In our
+net-shed I also have fixed a bar of wood, and on it I turn, turn
+continually. I am not ignorant of twisting. I can place my legs over
+my neck and cross my feet under my chin. Also I can stand on both
+hands, and I can throw scores of handsprings--which I do every morning
+upon the beach--I, Jacqueline!"
+
+She was excited; she stretched out both bare arms as though preparing
+to demonstrate her ability then and there.
+
+"I should like to see a circus," she said. "Then I should know what
+to do. That I can swing higher than any girl in Paradise has been
+demonstrated often," she went on, earnestly. "I can swim farther, I
+can dive deeper, I can run faster, with bare feet or with sabots, than
+anybody, man or woman, from the Beacon to Our Lady's Chapel! At bowls
+the men will not allow me because I have beaten them all, monsieur,
+even the mayor, which he never forgave. As for the farandole, I tire
+last of all--and it is the biniou who cries out for mercy!"
+
+She laughed and pushed back her hair, standing straight up in the
+yellow radiance like a moor-sprite. There was something almost
+unearthly in her lithe young body and fearless sea-blue eyes,
+sparkling from the shock of curls.
+
+"So you can dive and swim?" asked Speed, with a glance at me.
+
+"Like the salmon in the Laita, monsieur."
+
+"Under water?"
+
+"Parbleu!"
+
+After a pause I asked her age.
+
+"Fifteen, M'sieu Scarlett."
+
+"You don't look thirteen, Jacqueline."
+
+"I think I should grow faster if we were not so poor," she said,
+innocently.
+
+"You mean that you don't get enough to eat?"
+
+"Not always, m'sieu. But that is so with everybody except the
+wealthy."
+
+"Suppose we try her," said Speed, after a silence. "You and I can
+scrape up a little money for her if worst comes to worst."
+
+"How about her father?"
+
+"You can see him. What is he?"
+
+"A poacher, I understand."
+
+"Oh, then it's easy enough. Give him a few francs. He'll take the
+child's salary, anyway, if this thing turns out well."
+
+"Jacqueline," I said, "we can't afford to pay you much money, you
+know."
+
+"Money?" repeated the child, vacantly. "_Money!_ If I had my arms
+full--so!--I would throw it into the world--so!"--she glanced at
+Speed--"reserving enough for a new skirt, monsieur, of which I stand
+in some necessity."
+
+The quaint seriousness, the resolute fearlessness of this little maid
+of Paradise touched us both, I think, as she stood there restlessly,
+balancing on her slim bare feet, finger-tips poised on her hips.
+
+"Won't you take me?" she asked, sweetly.
+
+"I'll tell you what I'll do, Jacqueline," said I. "Very early in the
+morning I'll go down to your house and see your father. Then, if he
+makes no objection, I'll get you to put on a pretty swimming-suit, all
+made out of silver scales, and you can show me, there in the sea, how
+you can dive and swim and play at mermaid. Does that please you?"
+
+She looked earnestly at me, then at Speed.
+
+"Is it a promise?" she asked, in a quivering voice.
+
+"Yes, Jacqueline."
+
+"Then I thank you, M'sieu Scarlett,... and you, m'sieur, who ride the
+elephant so splendidly.... And I will be waiting for you when you
+come.... We live in the house below the Saint-Julien Light.... My
+father is pilot of the port.... Anybody will tell you." ...
+
+"I will not forget," said I.
+
+She bade us good-night very prettily, stepped back out of the circle
+of torch-light, and vanished--there is no other word for it.
+
+"Gracious," said Speed, "wasn't that rather sudden? Or is that the
+child yonder? No, it's a bush. Well, Scarlett, there's an uncanny
+young one for you--no, not uncanny, but a spirit in its most delicate
+sense. I've an idea she's going to find poor Byram's lost luck for
+him."
+
+"Or break her neck," I observed.
+
+Speed was quiet for a long while.
+
+"By-the-way," he said, at last, "are you going to tell the Countess
+about that fellow Buckhurst?"
+
+"I sent a note to her before I fed my lions," I replied.
+
+"Are you going to see her?"
+
+"If she desires it."
+
+"Who took the note, Scarlett?"
+
+"Jacqueline's father,... that Lizard fellow."
+
+"Well, don't let's stir up Buckhurst now," said Speed. "Let's do
+what we can for the governor first."
+
+"Of course," said I. "And I'm going to bed. Good-night."
+
+"Good-night," said Speed, thoughtfully. "I'll join you in a
+moment."
+
+When I was ready for bed and stood at the tent door, peering out into
+the darkness, I saw Speed curled up on a blanket between the
+elephant's forefeet, sound asleep.
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+JACQUELINE
+
+
+The stars were still shining when I awoke in my blanket, lighted a
+candle, and stepped into the wooden tub of salt-water outside the
+tent.
+
+I shaved by candle-light, dressed in my worn riding-breeches and
+jacket, then, candle in hand, began groping about among the faded bits
+of finery and tarnished properties until I found the silver-scaled
+swimming-tights once worn by the girl of whom we had heard so much.
+
+She was very young when she leaped to her death in Antwerp--a slim
+slip of a creature, they said--so I thought it likely that her suit
+might fit Jacqueline.
+
+The stars had begun to fade when I stepped out through the dew-soaked
+clover, carrying in one hand a satchel containing the swimming-suit,
+in the other a gun-case, in which, carefully oiled and doubly cased in
+flannel, reposed my only luxury--my breech-loading shot-gun.
+
+The silence, intensified by the double thunder of the breakers on the
+sands, was suddenly pierced by a far cock-crow; vague gray figures
+passed across the square as I traversed it; a cow-bell tinkled near
+by, and I smelt the fresh-blown wind from the downs.
+
+Presently, as I turned into the cliff-path, I saw a sober little
+Breton cow plodding patiently along ahead; beside her moved a
+fresh-faced maid of Paradise in snowy collarette and white-winged
+head-dress, knitting as she walked, fair head bent.
+
+As I passed her she glanced up with tear-dimmed eyes, murmuring the
+customary salutation: "Bonjour d'ac'h, m'sieu!" And I replied in the
+best patois I could command: "Bonjour d'ec'h a laran, na oeled Ket!
+Why do you cry, mademoiselle?"
+
+"Cry, m'sieu? They are taking the men of Paradise to the war. France
+must know how cruel she is to take our men from us."
+
+We had reached the green crest of the plateau; the girl tethered her
+diminutive cow, sat down on a half-imbedded stone, and continued her
+knitting, crying softly all the while.
+
+I asked her to direct me to the house where Robert, the Lizard, lived;
+she pointed with her needles to a large stone house looming up in the
+gray light, built on the rocks just under the beacon. It was white
+with sea-slime and crusted salt, yet heavily and solidly built as a
+fort, and doubtless very old, judging from the traces of sculptured
+work over portal and windows.
+
+I had scarcely expected to find the ragged Lizard and more ragged
+Jacqueline housed in such an anciently respectable structure, and I
+said so to the girl beside me.
+
+"The house is bare as the bones of Sainte-Anne," she said. "There is
+nothing within--not even crumbs enough for the cliff-rats, they say."
+
+So I went away across the foggy, soaking moorland, carrying my gun and
+satchel in their cases, descended the grassy cleft, entered a
+cattle-path, and picked my way across the wet, black rocks toward the
+abode of the poacher.
+
+The Lizard was standing on his doorsill when I came up; he returned my
+greeting sullenly, his keen eyes of a sea-bird roving over me from
+head to foot. A rumpled and sulky yellow cat, evidently just awake,
+sat on the doorstep beside him and yawned at intervals. The pair
+looked as though they had made a night of it.
+
+"You took my letter last night?" I asked.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Was there an answer for me?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Couldn't you have come to the camp and told me?"
+
+"I could, but I had other matters to concern me," he replied.
+"Here's your letter," and he fished it out of his tattered pocket.
+
+I was angry enough, but I did not wish to anger him at that moment. So
+I took the letter and read it--a formal line saying the Countess de
+Vassart would expect me at five that afternoon.
+
+"You are not noted for your courtesy, are you?" I inquired, smiling.
+
+Something resembling a grin touched his sea-scarred visage.
+
+"Oh, I knew you'd come for your answer," he said, coolly.
+
+"Look here, Lizard," I said, "I intend to be friends with you, and I
+mean to make you look on me as a friend. It's to my advantage and to
+yours."
+
+"To mine?" he inquired, sneeringly, amused.
+
+"And this is the first thing I want," I continued; and without
+further preface I unfolded our plans concerning Jacqueline.
+
+"Entendu," he said, drawling the word, "is that all?"
+
+"Do you consent?"
+
+"Is that all?" he repeated, with Breton obstinacy.
+
+"No, not all. I want you to be my messenger in time of need. I want
+you to be absolutely faithful to me."
+
+"Is that all?" he drawled again.
+
+"Yes, that is all."
+
+"And what is there in this, to my advantage, m'sieu?"
+
+"This, for one thing," I said, carelessly, picking up my gun-case. I
+slowly drew out the barrels of Damascus, then the rose-wood stock and
+fore-end, assembling them lovingly; for it was the finest weapon I had
+ever seen, and it was breaking my heart to give it away.
+
+The poacher's eyes began to glitter as I fitted the double bolts and
+locked breech and barrel with the extension rib. Then I snapped on the
+fore-end; and there lay the gun in my hands, a fowling-piece fit for
+an emperor.
+
+"Give it?" muttered the poacher, huskily.
+
+"Take it, my friend the Lizard," I replied, smiling down the wrench
+in my heart.
+
+There was a silence; then the poacher stepped forward, and, looking me
+square in the eye, flung out his hand. I struck my open palm smartly
+against his, in the Breton fashion; then we clasped hands.
+
+"You mean honestly by the little one?"
+
+"Yes," I said; "strike palms by Sainte Thekla of Ycone!"
+
+We struck palms heavily.
+
+"She is a child," he said; "there is no vice in her; yet I've seen
+them nearly finished at her age in Paris." And he swore terribly as he
+said it.
+
+We dropped hands in silence; then, "Is this gun mine?" he demanded,
+hoarsely.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Strike!" he cried; "take my friendship if you want it, on this
+condition--what I am is my own concern, not yours. Don't interfere,
+m'sieu; it would be useless. I should never betray you, but I might
+kill you. Don't interfere. But if you care for the good-will of a man
+like me, take it; and when you desire a service from me, tell me, and
+I'll not fail you, by Sainte-Eline of Paradise!"
+
+"Strike palms," said I, gravely; and we struck palms thrice.
+
+He turned on his heel, kicking off his sabots on the doorsill. "Break
+bread with me; I ask it," he said, gruffly, and stalked before me into
+the house.
+
+The room was massive and of noble proportion, but there was scarcely
+anything in it--a stained table, a settle, a little pile of rags on
+the stone floor--no, not rags, but Jacqueline's clothes!--and there at
+the end of the great chamber, built into the wall, was the ancient
+Breton bed with its Gothic carving and sliding panels of black oak,
+carved like the lattice-work in a chapel screen.
+
+Outside dawn was breaking through a silver shoal of clouds; already
+its slender tentacles of light were probing the shadows behind the
+lattice where Jacqueline lay sleeping.
+
+From the ashes on the hearth a spiral of smoke curled. The yellow cat
+walked in and sat down, contemplating the ashes.
+
+Slowly a saffron light filled the room; Jacqueline awoke in the dim
+bed.
+
+She pushed the panels aside and peered out, her sea-blue eyes heavy
+with slumber.
+
+"Ma doue!" she murmured; "it is M'sieu Scarlett! Aie! Aie! Am I a
+countess to sleep so late? Bonjour, m'sieu! Bonjour, pa-pa!" She
+caught sight of the yellow cat, "Et bien le bonjour, Ange Pitou!"
+
+She swathed herself in a blanket and sat up, looking at me sleepily.
+
+"You came to see me swim," she said.
+
+"And I've brought you a fish's silver skin to swim in," I replied,
+pointing at the satchel.
+
+She cast a swift glance at her father, who, with the gun on his
+knees, sat as though hypnotized by the beauty of its workmanship. Her
+bright eyes fell on the gun; she understood in a flash.
+
+"Then you'll take me?"
+
+"If you swim as well as I hope you can."
+
+"Turn your back!" she cried.
+
+I wheeled about and sat down on the settle beside the poacher. There
+came a light thud of small, bare feet on the stone floor, then
+silence. The poacher looked up.
+
+"She's gone to the ocean," he said; "she has the mania for
+baths--like you English." And he fell to rubbing the gunstock with
+dirty thumb.
+
+The saffron light in the room was turning pink when Jacqueline
+reappeared on the threshold in her ragged skirt and stained velvet
+bodice half laced, with the broken points hanging, carrying an armful
+of driftwood.
+
+Without a word she went to work; the driftwood caught fire from the
+ashes, flaming up in exquisite colors, now rosy, now delicate green,
+now violet; the copper pot, swinging from the crane, began to steam,
+then to simmer.
+
+"Papa!"
+
+"De quoi!" growled the poacher.
+
+"Were you out last night?"
+
+"Dame, I've just come in."
+
+"Is there anything?"
+
+The poacher gave me an oblique and evil glance, then coolly answered:
+"Three pheasant, two partridges, and a sea-trout in the net-shed. All
+are drawn."
+
+So swiftly she worked that the pink light had scarcely deepened to
+crimson when the poacher, laying the gun tenderly in the blankets of
+Jacqueline's tumbled bed, came striding back to the table where a
+sea-trout smoked on a cracked platter, and a bowl of bread and milk
+stood before each place.
+
+We ate silently. Ange Pitou, the yellow cat, came around with tail
+inflated. There were fishbones enough to gratify any cat, and Ange
+Pitou made short work of them.
+
+The poacher bolted his food, sombre eyes brooding or stealing across
+the room to the bed where his gun lay. Jacqueline, to my amazement,
+ate as daintily as a linnet, yet with a fresh, hearty unconsciousness
+that left nothing in her bowl or wooden spoon.
+
+"Schist?" inquired the poacher, lifting his tired eyes to me. I
+nodded. So he brought a jug of cold, sweet cider, and we all drank
+long and deeply, each in turn slinging the jug over the crooked
+elbow.
+
+The poacher rose, wiped his mouth with the back of his hand, and made
+straight for his new gun.
+
+"You two," he said, with a wave of his arm, "you settle it among
+yourselves. Jacqueline, is it true that Le Bihan saw woodcock dropping
+into the fen last night?"
+
+"He says so."
+
+"He is not a liar--usually," observed the poacher. He touched his
+beret to me, flung the fowling-piece over his shoulder, picked up a
+canvas bag in which I heard cartridges rattling, stepped into his
+sabots, and walked away. In a few moments the hysterical yelps of a
+dog, pleased at the prospect of a hunt, broke out from the net-shed.
+
+Jacqueline placed the few dishes in a pan of hot water, wiped her
+fingers, daintily, and picked up Ange Pitou, who promptly acknowledged
+the courtesy by bursting into a crackling purring.
+
+"Show me the swimming-suit," she said, shyly.
+
+I drew it out of the satchel and laid it across my knees.
+
+"Oh, it has a little tail behind--like a fish!" she cried, enchanted.
+"I shall look like the silver grilse of Quimperle!"
+
+"Do you think you can swim in those scales?" I asked.
+
+"Swim? I--Jacqueline? Attendez un peu--you shall see!"
+
+She laughed an excited, confident little laugh and hugged Ange Pitou,
+who closed his eyes in ecstasy sheathing and unsheathing his sharp
+claws.
+
+"It is almost sunrise," I said.
+
+"It lacks many minutes to sunrise," she replied. "Ask Ange Pitou. At
+sunrise he leaves me; nothing can hold him; he does not bite or
+scratch, he just pushes and pulls until my arms are tired. Then he
+goes. It is always so."
+
+"Why does he do that?"
+
+"Ask him. I have often asked, but he never tells me--do you, my
+friend? I think he's a moor-sprite--perhaps a devil. Do devils hate
+all kinds of water?"
+
+"No, only holy water," I replied.
+
+"Well, then, he's something else. Look! Look! He is beginning! See
+him push to get free, see him drive his furry head into my hands. The
+sun is coming up out of the sea! It will soon be here."
+
+She opened her arms; the cat sprang to the doorstep and vanished.
+
+Jacqueline looked at the swimming-suit, then at me. "Will you go down
+to the beach, M'sieu Scarlett?"
+
+But I had not traversed half the strip of rock and hard sand before
+something flew past--a slim, glittering shape which suddenly doubled
+up, straightened again, and fell headlong into the thundering surf.
+
+The waves hurled her from crest to crest, clothing her limbs in froth;
+the singing foam rolled her over and over, stranding her on bubbling
+sands, until the swell found her again, lifted her, and tossed her
+seaward into the wide, white arms of the breakers.
+
+Back to land she drifted and scrambled up on the beach, a slender,
+drenched figure, glistening and flashing with every movement.
+
+Dainty of limb as a cat in wet grass, she shook the spray from her
+fingers and scrubbed each palm with sand, then sprang again headlong
+into the surf; there was a flash, a spatter, and she vanished.
+
+After a long, long while, far out on the water she rose, floating.
+
+Now the red sun, pushing above the ocean's leaden rim, flung its
+crimson net across the water. String after string of white-breasted
+sea-ducks beat to windward from the cove, whirling out to sea; the
+gray gulls flapped low above the shoal and settled in rows along the
+outer bar, tossing their sun-tipped wings; the black cormorant on the
+cliff craned its hideous neck, scanning the ocean with restless,
+brilliant eyes.
+
+Tossed back once more upon the beach like an opalescent shell,
+Jacqueline, ankle-deep in foam, looked out across the flaming waters,
+her drenched hair dripping.
+
+From the gorse on cliff and headland, one by one the larks shot
+skyward like amber rockets, trailing a shower of melody till the whole
+sky rained song. The crested vanneaux, passing out to sea, responded
+plaintively, flapping their bronze-green wings.
+
+The girl twisted her hair and wrung it till the last salt drop had
+fallen. Sitting there in the sands, idle fingers cracking the pods of
+gilded sea-weed, she glanced up at me and laughed contentedly.
+Presently she rose and walked out to a high ledge, motioning me to
+follow. Far below, the sun-lit water shimmered in a shallow basin of
+silver sand.
+
+"Look!" she cried, flinging her arms above her head, and dropped into
+space, falling like a star, down, down into the shallow sea. Far below
+I saw a streak of living light shoot through the water--on, on, closer
+to the surface now, and at last she fairly sprang into the air,
+quivering like a gaffed salmon, then fell back to float and clear her
+blue eyes from her tangled hair.
+
+She gave me a glance full of malice as she landed, knowing quite well
+that she had not only won, but had given me a shock with her long dive
+into scarce three feet of water.
+
+Presently she climbed to the sun-warmed hillock of sand and sat down
+beside me to dry her hair.
+
+A langouste, in his flaming scarlet coat of mail, passed through a
+glassy pool among the rocks, treading sedately on pointed claws; the
+lancons tunnelled the oozing beach under her pink feet, like streams
+of living quicksilver; the big, blue sea-crabs sidled off the reef,
+sheering down sideways into limpid depths. Landward the curlew walked
+in twos and threes, swinging their long sickle bills; the sea-swallows
+drove by like gray snow-squalls, melting away against the sky; a
+vitreous living creature, blazing with purest sapphire light, floated
+past under water.
+
+Ange Pitou, coveting a warm sun-bath in the sand, came wandering along
+pretending not to see us; but Jacqueline dragged him into her arms for
+a hug, which lasted until Ange Pitou broke loose, tail hoisted but
+ears deaf to further flattery.
+
+So Jacqueline chased Ange Pitou back across the sand and up the rocky
+path, pursuing her pet from pillar to post with flying feet that fell
+as noiselessly as the velvet pads of Ange Pitou.
+
+"Come to the net-shed, if you please!" she called back to me,
+pointing to a crazy wooden structure built above the house.
+
+As I entered the net-shed the child was dragging a pile of sea-nets to
+the middle of the floor.
+
+"In case I fall," she said, coolly.
+
+"Better let me arrange them, then," I said, glancing up at the
+improvised trapeze which dangled under the roof-beams.
+
+She thanked me, seized a long rope, and went up, hand over hand. I
+piled the soft nets into a mattress, but decided to stand near, not
+liking the arrangements.
+
+Meanwhile Jacqueline was swinging, head downward, from her trapeze.
+Her cheeks flamed as she twisted and wriggled through a complicated
+manoeuvre, which ended by landing her seated on the bar of the trapeze
+a trifle out of breath. With both hands resting on the ropes, she
+started herself swinging, faster, faster, then pretended to drop off
+backward, only to catch herself with her heels, substitute heels for
+hands, and hang. Doubling back on her own body, she glided to her
+perch beneath the roof, shook her damp hair back, set the trapeze
+flying, and curled up on the bar, resting as fearlessly and securely
+as a bullfinch in a tree-top.
+
+Above her the red-and-black wasps buzzed and crawled and explored the
+sun-scorched beams. Spiders watched her from their silken hammocks,
+and the tiny cliff-mice scuttled from beam to beam. Through the open
+door the sunshine poured a flood of gold over the floor where the
+bronzed nets were spread. Mending was necessary; she mentioned it, and
+set herself swinging again, crossing her feet.
+
+"You think you could drop from there into a tank of water?" I asked.
+
+"How deep?"
+
+"Say four feet."
+
+She nodded, swinging tranquilly.
+
+"Have you any fear at all, Jacqueline?"
+
+"No."
+
+"You would try whatever I asked you to try?"
+
+"If I thought I could," she replied, naively.
+
+"But that is not it. I am to be your master. You must have absolute
+confidence in me and obey orders instantly."
+
+"Like a soldier?"
+
+"Exactly."
+
+"Bien."
+
+"Then hang by your hands!"
+
+Quick as a flash she hung above me.
+
+"You trust me, Jacqueline?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then drop!"
+
+Down she flashed like a falling meteor. I caught her with that quick
+trick known to all acrobats, which left her standing on my knee.
+
+"Jump!"
+
+She sprang lightly to the heap of nets, lost her balance, stumbled,
+and sat down very suddenly. Then she threw back her head and laughed;
+peal on peal of deliciously childish laughter rang through the ancient
+net-shed, until, overhead, the passing gulls echoed her mirth with
+querulous mewing, and the sea-hawk, towering to the zenith, wheeled
+and squealed.
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+FRIENDS
+
+
+At seven o'clock that morning the men in the circus camp awoke,
+worried, fatigued, vaguely resentful, unusually profane. Horan was
+openly mutinous, and announced his instant departure.
+
+By eight o'clock a miraculous change had taken place; the camp was
+alive with scurrying people, galvanized into hopeful activity by my
+possibly unwarranted optimism and a few judiciously veiled threats.
+
+Clothed with temporary authority by Byram, I took the bit between my
+teeth and ordered the instant erection of the main tents, the
+construction of the ring, barriers, and benches, and the immediate
+renovating of the portable tank in which poor little Miss Claridge had
+met her doom.
+
+I detailed Kelly Eyre to Quimperle with orders for ten thousand
+crimson hand-bills; I sent McCadger, with Dawley, the bass-drummer,
+and Irwin, the cornettist, to plaster our posters from Pont Aven to
+Belle Isle, and I gave them three days to get back, and promised them
+a hundred dollars apiece if they succeeded in sticking our bills on
+the fortifications of Lorient and Quimper, with or without
+permission.
+
+I sent Grigg and three exempt Bretons to beat up the country from
+Gestel and Rosporden to Pontivy, clear across to Quiberon, and as far
+east as St. Gildas Point.
+
+By the standing-stones of Carnac, I swore that I'd have all Finistere
+in that tent. "Governor," said I, "we are going to feature
+Jacqueline all over Brittany, and, if the ladies object, it can't be
+helped! By-the-way, _do_ they object?"
+
+The ladies did object, otherwise they would not have been human
+ladies; but the battle was sharp and decisive, for I was desperate.
+
+"It simply amounts to this," I said: "Jacqueline pulls us through or
+the governor and I land in jail. As for you, Heaven knows what will
+happen to you! Penal settlement, probably."
+
+And I called Speed and pointed at Jacqueline, sitting on her satchel,
+watching the proceedings with amiable curiosity.
+
+"Speed, take that child and rehearse her. Begin as soon as the tent
+is stretched and you can rig the flying trapeze. Use the net, of
+course. Horan rehearsed Miss Claridge; he'll stand by. Miss Crystal,
+your good-will and advice I depend upon. Will you help me?"
+
+"With all my heart," said Miss Crystal.
+
+That impulsive reply broke the sullen deadlock.
+
+Pretty little Mrs. Grigg went over and shook the child's hand very
+cordially and talked broken French to her; Miss Delany volunteered to
+give her some "Christian clothes"; Mrs. Horan burst into tears,
+complaining that everybody was conspiring to injure her and her
+husband, but a few moments later she brought Jacqueline some toast,
+tea, and fried eggs, an attention shyly appreciated by the puzzled
+child, who never before had made such a stir in the world.
+
+"Don't stuff her," said Speed, as Mrs. Horan enthusiastically trotted
+past bearing more toast. "Here, Scarlett, the ladies are spoiling
+her. Can I take her for the first lesson?"
+
+Byram, who had shambled up, nodded. I was glad to see him reassert his
+authority. Speed took the child by the hand, and together they entered
+the big white tent, which now loomed up like a mammoth mushroom
+against the blue sky.
+
+"Governor," I said, "we're all a bit demoralized; a few of us are
+mutinous. For Heaven's sake, let the men see you are game. This child
+has got to win out for us. Don't worry, don't object; back me up and
+let me put this thing through."
+
+The old man shoved his hands into his trousers-pockets and looked at
+me with heavy, hopeless eyes.
+
+"Now here's the sketch for the hand-bill," I said, cheerfully, taking
+a pencilled memorandum from my pocket. And I read:
+
+ "THE PATRIOTIC ANTI-PRUSSIAN REPUBLICAN CIRCUS,
+ MORE STUPENDOUS, MORE GIGANTIC, MORE
+ OVERPOWERING THAN EVER!
+ GLITTERING, MARVELLOUS, SOUL-COMPELLING!"
+
+"What's 'soul-compelling'?" asked Byram.
+
+"Anything you please, governor," I said, and read on rapidly until I
+came to the paragraph concerning Jacqueline:
+
+ "THE WONDER OF EARTH AND HEAVEN!
+ THE UNUTTERABLY BEAUTIFUL FLYING
+ MERMAID! CAUGHT ON THE
+ COAST OF BRITTANY!
+ WHAT IS SHE?
+ FISH? BIRD? HUMAN? DIVINE?
+ WHO KNOWS?
+ THE SCIENTISTS OF FRANCE DO NOT KNOW!!
+ THE SCIENTISTS OF THE WORLD
+ ARE CONFOUNDED!
+ IS SHE
+ A LOST SOUL
+ FROM THE SUNKEN CITY OF KER-YS?
+ 50,000 FRANCS REWARD FOR THE BRETON WHO CAN
+ PROVE THAT SHE DID NOT COME STRAIGHT FROM
+ PARADISE!!!"
+
+"That's a damn good bill," said Byram, suddenly.
+
+He was so seldom profane that I stared at him, worried lest his
+misfortunes had unbalanced him. But a faint, healthy color was already
+replacing the pallor in his loose cheeks, a glint of animation came
+into his sunken eyes. He lifted his battered silk hat, replaced it at
+an angle almost defiant, and scowled at Horan, who passed us sullenly,
+driving the camel tentwards with awful profanity.
+
+"Don't talk such langwidge in my presence, Mr. Horan," he said,
+sharply; "a camuel is a camuel, but remember: 'kind hearts is more
+than cornets,' an' it's easier for that there camuel to pass through
+the eye of a needle than for a cussin' cuss to cuss his way into
+Kingdom Come!"
+
+Horan, who had betrayed unmistakable symptoms of insubordination that
+morning, quailed under the flowing rebuke. He was a man of muscular
+strength and meagre intellect; words hit him like trip-hammers.
+
+"Certainly, governor," he stammered, and spoke to the camel politely,
+guiding that enraged and squealing quadruped to his manger with a
+forced smile.
+
+With mallet, hammer, saw, and screw-driver I worked until noon,
+maturing my plans all the while. These plans would take the last penny
+in the treasury and leave us in debt several thousand francs. But it
+was win or go to smash now, and personally I have always preferred a
+tremendous smash to a slow and oozy fizzle.
+
+A big pot of fragrant soup was served to the company at luncheon; and
+it amused me to see Jacqueline troop into the tent with the others and
+sit down with her bit of bread and her bowl of broth.
+
+She was flushed and excited, and she talked to her instructor, Speed,
+all the while, chattering like a linnet between mouthfuls of bread and
+broth.
+
+"How is she getting on?" I called across to Speed.
+
+"The child is simply startling," he said, in English. "She is not
+afraid of anything. She and Miss Crystal have been doing that
+hair-raising 'flying swing' _without rehearsal!_"
+
+Jacqueline, hearing us talking in English, turned and stared at me,
+then smiled and looked up sweetly at Speed.
+
+"You seem to be popular with your pupil," I said, laughing.
+
+"She's a fine girl--a fine, fearless, straight-up-and-down girl," he
+said, with enthusiasm.
+
+Everybody appeared to like her, though how much that liking might be
+modified if prosperity returned I was unable to judge.
+
+Now all our fortunes depended on her. She was not a ballon d'essai;
+she was literally the whole show; and if she duplicated the
+sensational success of poor little Miss Claridge, we had nothing to
+fear. But her troubles would then begin. At present, however, we were
+waiting for her to pull us out of the hole before we fell upon her and
+rent her professionally. And I use that "we" not only professionally,
+but with an attempt at chivalry.
+
+Byram's buoyancy had returned in a measure. He sat in his
+shirt-sleeves at the head of the table, vigorously sopping his tartine
+in his soup, and, mouth full, leaned forward, chewing and listening to
+the conversation around him.
+
+Everybody knew it was life or death now, that each one must drop petty
+jealousies and work for the common salvation. An artificial and almost
+feverish animation reigned, which I adroitly fed with alarming
+allusions to the rigor of the French law toward foreigners and other
+malefactors who ran into debt to French subjects on the sacred soil of
+France. And, having lived so long in France and in the French
+possessions, I was regarded as an oracle of authority by these
+ambulant professional people who were already deadly homesick, and
+who, in eighteen months of Europe, had amassed scarcely a dozen French
+phrases among them all.
+
+"I'll say one thing," observed Byram, with dignity; "if ever I git
+out of this darn continong with my circus, I'll recooperate in the
+undulatin' medders an' j'yful vales of the United States. Hereafter
+that country will continue to remain good enough for me."
+
+All applauded--all except Jacqueline, who looked around in
+astonishment at the proceedings, and only smiled when Speed explained
+in French.
+
+"Ask maddermoselle if she'll go home with us?" prompted Byram. "Tell
+her there's millions in it."
+
+Speed put the question; Jacqueline listened gravely, hesitated, then
+whispered to Speed, who reddened a trifle and laughed.
+
+Everybody waited for a moment. "What does she say?" inquired Byram.
+
+"Oh, nothing; she talked nonsense."
+
+But Jacqueline's dignity and serene face certainly contradicted
+Speed's words.
+
+Presently Byram arose, flourishing his napkin. "Time's up!" he said,
+with decision, and we all trooped off to our appointed labors.
+
+Now that I had stirred up this beehive and set it swarming again, I
+had no inclination to turn drone. Yet I remembered my note to the
+Countess de Vassart and her reply. So about four o'clock I made the
+best toilet I could in my only other suit of clothes, and walked out
+of the bustling camp into the square, where the mossy fountain
+splashed under the oaks and the children of Paradise were playing.
+Hands joined, they danced in a ring, singing:
+
+ "_Barzig ha barzig a Goneri
+ Ari e mab roue gand daou pe dri_"--
+
+ "Little minstrel-bard of Coneri
+ The son of the King has come with two or three--
+ Nay, with a whole bright flock of paroquets,
+ Crimson, silver, and violet."
+
+And the children, in their white coiffes and tiny wooden shoes, moved
+round and round the circle, in the middle of which a little lad and a
+little lass of Paradise stood motionless, hand clasping hand.
+
+The couplet ended, the two children in the middle sprang forward and
+dragged a third child out of the circle. Then the song began again,
+the reduced circle dancing around the three children in the middle.
+
+ "--The son of the King has come with two or three--
+ Nay, with a whole bright flock of paroquets,
+ Crimson, silver, and violet."
+
+It was something like a game I had played long ago--in the age of
+fable--and I lingered, touched with homesickness.
+
+The three children in the middle took a fourth comrade from the
+circle, crying, "Will you go to the moon or will you go to the
+stars?"
+
+"The moon," lisped the little maid, and she was led over to the
+fountain.
+
+"The stars," said the first prisoner, and was conducted to the stone
+bridge.
+
+Soon a small company was clustered on the bridge, another band at the
+fountain. Then, as there were no more to dance in a circle, the lad
+and lassie who had stood in the middle to choose candidates for the
+moon and stars clasped hands and danced gayly across the square to the
+group of expectant children at the fountain, crying:
+
+ "Baradoz! Baradoz!"
+ (Paradise! Paradise!)
+
+and the whole band charged on the little group on the bridge, shouting
+and laughing, while the unfortunate tenants of the supposed infernal
+regions fled in every direction, screaming:
+
+ "Pater noster
+ Dibi doub!
+ Dibi doub!
+ Dibi doub!"
+
+Their shouts and laughter still came faintly from the tree-shaded
+square as I crossed the bridge and walked out into the moorland toward
+the sea, where I could see the sun gilding the headland and the
+spouting-rocks of Point Paradise.
+
+Over the turning tide cormorants were flying, now wheeling like hawks,
+now beating seaward in a duck-like flight. I passed little, lonely
+pools on the moor, from which snipe rose with a startling squak!
+squak! and darted away inland as though tempest blown.
+
+Presently a blue-gray mass in mid-ocean caught my eye. It was the
+island of Groix, and between it and Point Paradise lay an ugly, naked,
+black shape, motionless, oozing smoke from two stubby funnels--the
+cruiser _Fer-de-Lance_! So solidly inert lay the iron-clad that it did
+not seem as if she had ever moved or ever could move; she looked like
+an imbedded ledge cropping up out of the sea.
+
+Far across the hilly moorland the white semaphore glistened like a
+gull's wing--too far for me to see the balls and cones hoisted or the
+bright signals glimmering along the halyards as I followed a trodden
+path winding south through the gorse. Then a dip in the moorland hid
+the semaphore and at the same moment brought a house into full
+view--a large, solid structure of dark stone, heavily Romanesque,
+walled in by an ancient buttressed barrier, above which I could see
+the tree-tops of a fruit-garden.
+
+The Chateau de Trecourt was a fine example of the so called
+"fortified farm"; it had its moat, too, and crumbling wing-walls,
+pierced by loop-holes and over-hung with miniature battlements. A
+walled and loop-holed passageway connected the house with another
+stone enclosure in which stood stable, granary, cattle-house, and
+sheepfold, all of stone, though the roofs of these buildings were
+either turfed or thatched. And over them the weather-vane, a golden
+Dorado, swam in the sunshine.
+
+One thing I noticed as I crossed the unused moat on a permanent
+bridge: the youthful Countess no longer denied herself the services of
+servants, for I saw a cloaked shepherd and his two wolf-like and
+tailless sheep-dogs watching the flock scattered over the downs; and
+there were at least half a dozen farm servants pottering about from
+stable to granary, and a toothless porter to answer the gate-bell and
+pilot me past the tiny loop-holed lodge-turret to the house. There was
+also a man, lying belly down in the bracken, watching me; and as I
+walked into the court I tried to remember where I had seen his face
+before.
+
+The entire front of the house was covered with those splendid
+orange-tinted tea-roses that I had noticed in Paradise; thicket on
+thicket of clove-scented pinks choked the flower-beds; and a broad mat
+of deep-tinted pansies lay on the lawn, spread out for all the world
+like a glorious Eastern rug.
+
+There was a soft whirring in the air like the sound of a humming-bird
+close by; it came from a spinning-wheel, and grew louder as a servant
+admitted me into the house and guided me to a sunny room facing the
+fruit garden.
+
+The spinner at the wheel was singing in an undertone--singing a Breton
+"gwerz," centuries old, retained in memory from generation to
+generation:
+
+ "Woe to the Maids of Paradise,
+ Yvonne!
+ Twice have the Saxons landed; twice!
+ Yvonne!
+ Yet must Paradise see them thrice!
+ Yvonne! Yvonne! Marivonik."
+
+Old as were the words, the melody was older--so old and quaint and
+sweet that it seemed a berceuse fashioned to soothe the drowsing
+centuries, lest the memories of ancient wrongs awake and rouse the
+very dead from their Gothic tombs.
+
+All the sad history of the Breton race was written in every minor
+note; all the mystery, the gentleness, the faith of the lost people of
+Armorica.
+
+And now the singer was intoning the "Gwerz Ar Baradoz"--the
+"Complaint of Paradise"--a slow, thrilling miserere, scarcely
+dominating the velvet whir of the spinning-wheel.
+
+Suddenly the melody ceased, and a young Bretonne girl appeared in the
+doorway, courtesying to me and saying in perfect English: "How do you
+do, Mr. Scarlett; and how do you like my spinning songs, if you
+please?"
+
+The girl was Mademoiselle Sylvia Elven, the marvellously clever
+actress from the Odeon, the same young woman who had played the
+Alsacienne at La Trappe, as perfectly in voice and costume as she now
+played the Bretonne.
+
+"You need not be astonished at all," she said, calmly, "if you will
+only reflect that my name is Elven, which is also the name of a Breton
+town. Naturally, I am a Bretonne from Elven, and my own name is
+Duhamel--Sylvenne Duhamel. I thought I ought to tell you, so that you
+would not think me too clever and try to carry me off on your horse
+again."
+
+I laughed uncertainly; clever women who talk cleverly always disturb
+me. Besides, somehow, I felt she was not speaking the truth, yet I
+could not imagine why she should lie to me.
+
+"You were more fluent to the helpless turkey-girl," she suggested,
+maliciously.
+
+I had absolutely nothing to say, which appeared to gratify her, for
+she dimpled and smiled under her snowy-winged coiffe, from which a
+thick gold strand of hair curled on her forehead--a sad bit of
+coquetry in a Bretonne from Elven, if she told the truth.
+
+"I only came to renew an old and deeply valued friendship," she said,
+with mock sentimentality; "I am going back to my flax now."
+
+However, she did not move.
+
+"And, by-the-way," she said, languidly, "is there in your
+intellectual circus company a young gentleman whose name is Eyre?"
+
+"Kelly Eyre? Yes," I said, sulkily.
+
+"Ah."
+
+She strolled out of the room, hesitated, then turned in the doorway
+with a charming smile.
+
+"The Countess will return from her gallop at five."
+
+She waited as though expecting an answer, but I only bowed.
+
+"Would you take a message to Mistaire Kelly Eyre for me?" she asked,
+sweetly.
+
+I said that I would.
+
+"Then please say that: '_On Sunday the book-stores are closed in
+Paris._'"
+
+"Is that what I am to say?"
+
+"Exactly that."
+
+"Very well, mademoiselle."
+
+"Of course, if he asks who told you--you may say that it was a
+Bretonne at Point Paradise."
+
+"Nothing else?"
+
+"Nothing, monsieur."
+
+She courtesied and vanished.
+
+"Little minx," I thought, "what mischief are you preparing now?" and
+I rested my elbow on the window-sill and gazed out into the garden,
+where apricot-trees and fig-trees lined the winding walks between beds
+of old-fashioned herbs, anise, basil, caraway, mint, sage, and
+saffron.
+
+Sunlight lay warm on wall and gravel-path; scarlet apples hung aloft
+on a few young trees; a pair of trim, wary magpies explored the
+fig-trees, sometimes quarrelling, sometimes making common cause
+against the shy wild-birds that twittered everywhere among the vines.
+
+I fancied, after a few moments, that I heard the distant thudding of a
+horse's hoofs; soon I was sure of it, and rose to my feet expectantly,
+just as a flushed young girl in a riding-habit entered the room and
+gave me her gloved hand.
+
+Her fresh, breezy beauty astonished me; could this laughing, gray-eyed
+girl with her silky, copper-tinted hair be the same slender, grave
+young Countess whom I had known in Alsace--this incarnation of all
+that is wholesome and sweet and winning in woman? What had become of
+her mission and the soiled brethren of the proletariat? What had
+happened?
+
+I looked at her earnestly, scarcely understanding that she was saying
+she was glad I had come, that she had waited for me, that she had
+wanted to see me, that she had wished to tell me how deeply our tragic
+experience at La Trappe and in Morsbronn had impressed her. She said
+she had sent a letter to me in Paris which was returned, _opened_,
+with a strange note from Monsieur Mornac. She had waited for some
+word from me, here in Paradise, since September; "waited
+impatiently," she added, and a slight frown bent her straight brows
+for a moment--a moment only.
+
+"But come out to my garden," she said, smiling, and stripping off her
+little buff gauntlets. "There we will have tea a l'Anglaise, and
+sunshine, and a long, long, satisfying talk; at least I will," she
+added, laughing and coloring up; "for truly, Monsieur Scarlett, I do
+not believe I have given you one second to open your lips."
+
+Heaven knows I was perfectly content to watch her lips and listen to
+the music of her happy, breathless voice without breaking the spell
+with my own.
+
+She led the way along a path under the apricots to a seat against a
+sunny wall, a wall built of massive granite, deeply thatched with
+fungus and lichens, where, palpitating in the hot sun, the tiny
+lizards lay glittering, and the scarlet-banded nettle-butterflies
+flitted and hovered and settled to sun themselves, wings a-droop.
+
+Here in the sunshine the tea-rose perfume, mingling with the incense
+of the sea, mounted to my head like the first flush of wine to a man
+long fasting; or was it the enchantment of her youth and
+loveliness--the subtle influence of physical vigor and spiritual
+innocence on a tired, unstrung man?
+
+"First of all," she said, impulsively, "I know your life--all of it
+in minute particular. Are you astonished?"
+
+"No, madame," I replied; "Mornac showed you my dossier."
+
+"That is true," she said, with a troubled look of surprise.
+
+I smiled. "As for Mornac," I began, but she interrupted me.
+
+"Ah, Mornac! Do you suppose I believed him? Had I not proof on proof
+of your loyalty, your honor, your courtesy, your chivalry--"
+
+"Madame, your generosity--and, I fear, your pity--overpraises."
+
+"No, it does not! I know what you are. Mornac cannot make white
+black! I know what you have been. Mornac could not read you into
+infamy, even with your dossier under my own eyes!"
+
+"In my dossier you read a sorry history, madame."
+
+"In your dossier I read the tragedy of a gentleman."
+
+"Do you know," said I, "that I am now a performer in a third-rate
+travelling circus?"
+
+"I think that is very sad," she said, sweetly.
+
+"Sad? Oh no. It is better than the disciplinary battalions of
+Africa."
+
+Which was simply acknowledging that I had served a term in prison.
+
+The color faded in her face. "I thought you were pardoned."
+
+"I was--from prison, not from the battalion of Biribi."
+
+"I only know," she said, "that they say you were not guilty; that
+they say you faced utter ruin, even the possibility of death, for the
+sake of another man whose name even the police--even Monsieur de
+Mornac--could never learn. Was there such a man?"
+
+I hesitated. "Madame, there is such a man; _I_ am the man who
+_was_."
+
+"With no hope?"
+
+"Hope? With every hope," I said, smiling. "My name is not my own,
+but it must serve me to my end, and I shall wear it threadbare and
+leave it to no one."
+
+"Is there no hope?" she asked, quietly.
+
+"None for the man who _was_. Much for James Scarlett, tamer of lions
+and general mountebank," I said, laughing down the rising tide of
+bitterness. Why had she stirred those dark waters? I had drowned
+myself in them long since. Under them lay the corpse of a man I had
+forgotten--my dead self.
+
+"No hope?" she repeated.
+
+Suddenly the ghost of all I had lost rose before me with her
+words--rose at last after all these years, towering, terrible, free
+once more to fill the days with loathing and my nights with hell
+eternal,... after all these years!
+
+Overwhelmed, I fought down the spectre in silence. Kith and kin were
+not all in the world; love of woman was not all; a chance for a home,
+a wife, children, were not all; a name was not all. Raising my head, a
+trifle faint with the struggle and the cost of the struggle, I saw the
+distress in her eyes and strove to smile.
+
+"There is every hope," I said, "save the hopes of youth--the hope of
+a woman's love, and of that happiness which comes through love. I am a
+man past thirty, madame--thirty-five, I believe my dossier makes it.
+It has taken me fifteen years to bury my youth. Let us talk of
+Mornac."
+
+"Yes, we will talk of Mornac," she said, gently.
+
+So with infinite pains I went back and traced for her the career of
+Buckhurst, sparing her nothing; I led up to my own appearance on the
+scene, reviewed briefly what we both knew, then disclosed to her in
+its most trivial detail the conference between Buckhurst and myself in
+which his cynical avowal was revealed in all its native hideousness.
+
+She sat motionless, her face like cold marble, as I carefully gathered
+the threads of the plot and gently twitched that one which galvanized
+the mask of Mornac.
+
+"Mornac!" she stammered, aghast.
+
+I showed her why Buckhurst desired to come to Paradise; I showed her
+why Mornac had initiated her into the mysteries of my dossier, taking
+that infernal precaution, although he had every reason to believe he
+had me practically in prison, with the keys in his own pocket.
+
+"Had it not been for my comrade, Speed," I said, "I should be in one
+of Mornac's fortress cells. He overshot the mark when he left us
+together and stepped into his cabinet to spread my dossier before you.
+He counted on an innocent man going through hell itself to prove his
+innocence; he counted on me, and left Speed out of his calculations.
+He had your testimony, he had my dossier, he had the order for my
+arrest in his pocket.... And then I stepped out of sight! I, the
+honest fool, with my knowledge of his infamy, of Buckhurst's
+complicity and purposes--I was gone.
+
+"And now mark the irony of the whole thing: he had, criminally,
+destroyed the only bureau that could ever have caught me. But he did
+his best during the few weeks that were left him before the battle of
+Sedan. After that it was too late; it was too late when the first
+Uhlan appeared before the gates of Paris. And now Mornac, shorn of
+authority, is shut up in a city surrounded by a wall of German steel,
+through which not one single living creature has penetrated for two
+months."
+
+I looked at her steadily. "Eliminate Mornac as a trapped rat; cancel
+him as a dead rat since the ship of Empire went down at Sedan. I do
+not know what has taken place in Paris--save what all now know that
+the Empire is ended, the Republic proclaimed, and the Imperial police
+a memory. Then let us strike out Mornac and turn to Buckhurst. Madame,
+I am here to serve you."
+
+The dazed horror in her face which had marked my revelations of
+Buckhurst's villanies gave place to a mantling flush of pure anger.
+Shame crimsoned her neck, too; shame for her credulous innocence, her
+belief in this rogue who had betrayed her, only to receive pardon for
+the purpose of baser and more murderous betrayal.
+
+I said nothing for a long time, content to leave her to her own
+thoughts. The bitter draught she was draining could not harm her,
+could not but act as the most wholesome of tonics.
+
+Hers was not a weak character to sink, embittered, under the weight of
+knowledge--knowledge of evil, that all must learn to carry lightly
+through life; I had once thought her weak, but I had revised that
+opinion and substituted the words "pure in thought, inherently loyal,
+essentially unsuspicious."
+
+"Tell me about Buckhurst," I said, quietly. "I can help you, I
+think."
+
+The quick tears of humiliation glimmered for a second in her angry
+eyes; then pride fell from her, like a stately mantle which a princess
+puts aside, tired and content to rest.
+
+This was a phase I had never before seen--a lovely, natural young
+girl, perplexed, troubled, deeply wounded, ready to be guided, ready
+for reproof, perhaps even for that sympathy without which reproof is
+almost valueless.
+
+She told me that Buckhurst came to her house here in Paradise early in
+September; that while in Paris, pondering on what I had said, she had
+determined to withdraw herself absolutely from all organized
+socialistic associations during the war; that she believed she could
+do the greatest good by living a natural and cheerful life, by
+maintaining the position that birth and fortune had given her, and by
+using that position and fortune for the benefit of those less
+fortunate.
+
+This she had told Buckhurst, and the rascal appeared to agree with her
+so thoroughly that, when Dr. Delmont and Professor Tavernier arrived,
+they also applauded the choice she made of Buckhurst as distributer of
+money, food, and clothing to the provincial hospitals, now crowded to
+suffocation with the wreck of battle.
+
+Then a strange thing occurred. Dr. Delmont and Professor Tavernier
+disappeared without any explanation. They had started for St. Nazaire
+with a sum of money--twenty thousand francs, locked in the private
+strong-box of the Countess--to be distributed among the soldiers of
+Chanzy; and they had never returned.
+
+In the light of what she had learned from me, she feared that
+Buckhurst had won them over; perhaps not--she could not bear to
+suspect evil of such men.
+
+But she now believed that Buckhurst had used every penny he had
+handled for his own purposes; that not one hospital had received what
+she had sent.
+
+"I am no longer wealthy," she said, anxiously, looking up at me. "I
+did find time in Paris to have matters straightened; I sold La Trappe
+and paid everything. It left me with this house in Paradise, and with
+means to maintain it and still have a few thousand francs to give
+every year. Now it is nearly gone--I don't know where. I am dreadfully
+unhappy; I have such a horror of treachery that I cannot even
+understand it, but this ignoble man, Buckhurst, is assuredly a
+heartless rascal."
+
+"But," I said, patiently, "you have not yet told me where he is."
+
+"I don't know," she said. "A week ago a dreadful creature came here
+to see Buckhurst; they went across the moor toward the semaphore and
+stood for a long while looking at the cruiser which is anchored off
+Groix. Then Buckhurst came back and prepared for a journey. He said
+he was going to Tours to confer with the Red Cross. I don't know where
+he went. He took all the money for the general Red Cross fund."
+
+"When did he say he would return?"
+
+"He said in two weeks. He has another week yet."
+
+"Is he usually prompt?"
+
+"Always so--to the minute."
+
+"That is good news," I said, gayly. "But tell me one thing: do you
+trust Mademoiselle Elven?"
+
+"Yes, indeed!--indeed!" she cried, horrified.
+
+"Very well," said I, smiling. "Only for the sake of caution--extra,
+and even perhaps useless caution--say nothing of this matter to her,
+nor to any living soul save me."
+
+"I promise," she said, faintly.
+
+"One thing more: this conspiracy against the state no longer concerns
+me--officially. Both Speed and I did all we could to warn the Emperor
+and the Empress; we sent letters through the police in London, we used
+the English secret-service to get our letters into the Emperor's hand,
+we tried every known method of denouncing Mornac. It was useless;
+every letter must have gone through Mornac's hands before it reached
+the throne. We did all we dared do; we were in disguise and in hiding
+under assumed names; we could not do more.
+
+"Now that Mornac is not even a pawn in the game--as, indeed, I begin
+to believe he never really was, but has been from the first a dupe of
+Buckhurst--it is the duty of every honest man to watch Buckhurst and
+warn the authorities that he possibly has designs on the crown jewels
+of France, which that cruiser yonder is all ready to bear away to
+Saigon.
+
+"How he proposes to attempt such a robbery I can't imagine. I don't
+want to denounce him to General Chanzy or Aurelles de Palladine,
+because the conspiracy is too widely spread and too dangerous to be
+defeated by the capture of one man, even though he be the head of it.
+
+"What I want is to entrap the entire band; and that can only be done
+by watching Buckhurst, not arresting him.
+
+"Therefore, madame, I have written and despatched a telegram to
+General Aurelles de Palladine, offering my services and the services
+of Mr. Speed to the Republic without compensation. In the event of
+acceptance, I shall send to London for two men who will do what is to
+be done, leaving me free to amuse the public with my lions. Meanwhile,
+as long as we stay in Paradise we both are your devoted servants, and
+we beg the privilege of serving you."
+
+During all this time the young Countess had never moved her eyes from
+my face--perhaps I was flattered--perhaps for that reason I talked on
+and on, pouring out wisdom from a somewhat attenuated supply.
+
+And I now rose to take my leave, bowing my very best bow; but she sat
+still, looking up quietly at me.
+
+"You ask the privilege of serving me," she said. "You could serve me
+best by giving me your friendship."
+
+"You have my devotion, madame," I said.
+
+"I did not ask it. I asked your friendship--in all frankness and
+equality."
+
+"Do you desire the friendship of a circus performer?" I asked,
+smiling.
+
+"I desire it, not only for what you are, but for what you have
+been--have always been, let them say what they will!"
+
+I was silent.
+
+"Have you never given women your friendship?" she asked.
+
+"Not in fifteen years--nor asked theirs."
+
+"Will you not ask mine?"
+
+I tried to speak steadily, but my voice was uncertain; I sat down,
+crushed under a flood of memories, hopes accursed, ambitions damned
+and consigned to oblivion.
+
+"You are very kind," I said. "You are the Countess de Vassart. A man
+is what he makes himself. I have made myself--with both eyes open; and
+I am now an acrobat and a tamer of beasts. I understand your goodness,
+your impulse to help those less fortunate than yourself. I also
+understand that I have placed myself where I am, and that, having done
+so deliberately, I cannot meet as friends and equals those who might
+have been my equals if not friends. Besides that, I am a native of a
+paradox--a Republic which, though caste-bound, knows no caste abroad.
+I might, therefore, have been your friend if you had chosen to waive
+the traditions of your continent and accept the traditions of mine.
+But now, madame, I must beg permission to make my adieux."
+
+She sprang up and caught both my hands in her ungloved hands. "Won't
+you take my friendship--and give me yours--my friend?"
+
+"Yes," I said, slowly. The blood beat in my temples, almost blinding
+me; my heart hammered in my throat till I shivered.
+
+As in a dream I bent forward; she abandoned her hands to me; and I
+touched a woman's hands with my lips for the first time in fifteen
+years.
+
+"In all devotion and loyalty--and gratitude," I said.
+
+"And in friendship--say it!"
+
+"In friendship."
+
+"Now you may go--if you desire to. When will you come again?"
+
+"When may I?"
+
+"When you will."
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+THE PATH OF THE LIZARD
+
+
+About nine o'clock the next morning an incident occurred which might
+have terminated my career in one way, and did, ultimately, end it in
+another.
+
+I had been exercising my lions and putting them through their paces,
+and had noticed no unusual insubordination among them, when suddenly,
+Timour Melek, a big Algerian lion, flew at me without the slightest
+provocation or warning.
+
+Fortunately I had a training-chair in my hand, on which Timour had
+just been sitting, and I had time to thrust it into his face. Thrice
+with incredible swiftness he struck the iron-chair, right, left, and
+right, as a cat strikes, then seized it in his teeth. At the same
+moment I brought my loaded whip heavily across his nose.
+
+"Down, Timour Melek! Down! down! down!" I said, steadily,
+accompanying each word with a blow of the whip across the nose.
+
+The brute had only hurt himself when he struck the chair, and now,
+under the blows raining on his sensitive nose, he doubtless remembered
+similar episodes in his early training, and shrank back, nearly
+deafening me with his roars. I followed, punishing him, and he fled
+towards the low iron grating which separated the training-cage from
+the night-quarters.
+
+This I am now inclined to believe was a mistake of judgment on my
+part. I should have driven him into a corner and thoroughly cowed him,
+using the training-chair if necessary, and trusting to my two
+assistants with their irons, who had already closed up on either side
+of the cage.
+
+I was not in perfect trim that morning. Not that I felt nervous in the
+least, nor had I any lack of self-confidence, but I was not myself. I
+had never in my life entered a lion-cage feeling as I did that
+morning--an indifference which almost amounted to laziness, an apathy
+which came close to melancholy.
+
+The lions knew I was not myself--they had been aware of it as soon as
+I set foot in their cage; and I knew it. But my strange apathy only
+increased as I went about my business, perfectly aware all the time
+that, with lions born in captivity, the unexpected is always to be
+expected.
+
+Timour Melek was now close to the low iron door between the
+partitions; the other lions had become unusually excited, bounding at
+a heavy gallop around the cage, or clinging to the bars like enormous
+cats.
+
+Then, as I faced Timour, ready to force him backward through the door
+into the night-quarters, something in the blank glare of his eyes
+seemed to fascinate me. I had an absurd sensation that he was slipping
+away from me--escaping; that I no longer dominated him nor had
+authority. It was not panic, nor even fear; it was a faint
+paralysis--temporary, fortunately; for at that instant instinct saved
+me; I struck the lion a terrific blow across the nose and whirled
+around, chair uplifted, just in time to receive the charge of Empress
+Khatoun, consort of Timour.
+
+She struck the iron-bound chair, doubling it up like crumpled paper,
+hurling me headlong, not to the floor of the cage, but straight
+through the sliding-bars which Speed had just flung open with a shout.
+As for me, I landed violently on my back in the sawdust, the breath
+knocked clean out of me.
+
+When I could catch my breath again I realized that there was no time
+to waste. Speed looked at me angrily, but I jerked open the grating,
+flung another chair into the cage, leaped in, and, singling out
+Empress Khatoun, I sailed into her with passionless thoroughness,
+punishing her to a stand-still, while the other lions, Aicha,
+Marghouz, Timour, and Genghis Khan snarled and watched me steadily.
+
+As I emerged from the cage Speed asked me whether I was hurt, and I
+gasped out that I was not.
+
+"What went wrong?" he persisted.
+
+"Timour and that young lioness--no, _I_ went wrong; the lions knew it
+at once; something failed me, I don't know what; upon my soul, Speed,
+I don't know what happened."
+
+"You lost your nerve?"
+
+"No, not that. Timour began looking at me in a peculiar way--he
+certainly dominated me for an instant--for a tenth of a second; and
+then Khatoun flew at me before I could control Timour--"
+
+I hesitated.
+
+"Speed, it was one of those seconds that come to us, when the
+faintest shadow of indecision settles matters. Engineers are subject
+to it at the throttle, pilots at the helm, captains in battle--"
+
+"Men in love," added Speed.
+
+I looked at him, not comprehending.
+
+"By-the-way," said Speed, "Leo Grammont, the greatest lion-tamer who
+ever lived, once told me that a man in love with a woman could not
+control lions; that when a man falls in love he loses that intangible,
+mysterious quality--call it mesmerism or whatever you like--the occult
+force that dominates beasts. And he said that the lions knew it, that
+they perceived it sometimes even before the man himself was aware
+that he was in love."
+
+I looked him over in astonishment.
+
+"What's the matter with you?" he asked, amused.
+
+"What's the matter with _you_?" I demanded. "If you mean to intimate
+that I have fallen in love you are certainly an astonishing ass!"
+
+"Don't talk that way," he said, good-humoredly. "I didn't dream of
+such a thing, or of offending you, Scarlett."
+
+It struck me at the same moment that my irritable and unwarranted
+retort was utterly unlike me.
+
+"I beg your pardon," I said. "I don't know exactly what is the
+matter with me to-day. First I quarrel with poor old Timour Melek,
+then I insult you. I've discovered that I have nerves; I never before
+knew it."
+
+"Cold flap-jacks and cider would have destroyed Hercules himself in
+time," observed Speed, following with his eyes the movements of a
+lithe young girl, who was busy with the hoisting apparatus of the
+flying trapeze. The girl was Jacqueline, dressed in a mended gown of
+Miss Delany's.
+
+"At times," muttered Speed, partly to himself, "that little witch
+frightens me. There is no risk she dares not take; even Horan gets
+nervous; and when that bull-necked numbskull is scared there's reason
+for it."
+
+We walked out into the main tent, where simultaneous rehearsals were
+everywhere in progress; and I picked up the ring-master's whip and
+sent it curling after "Briza," a harmless, fat, white mare on which
+pretty Mrs. Grigg was sitting expectantly. Round and round the ring
+she cantered, now astride two horses, now guiding a "spike,"
+practising assiduously her acrobatics. At intervals, far up in the
+rigging overhead, I caught glimpses of Miss Crystal swinging on her
+trapeze, watching the ring below.
+
+Byram came in to rehearse the opening processional and to rebuke his
+dearest foe, the unspeakable "camuel," bestridden by Mrs. Horan as
+Fatima, Queen of the Desert. Speed followed, squatted on the head of
+the elephant, ankus on thigh, shouting, "Hout! Mail! Djebe Noain!
+Mail the hezar! Mail!" he thundered, triumphantly, saluting Byram with
+lifted ankus as the elephant ambled past in a cloud of dust.
+
+"Clear the ring!" cried Byram.
+
+Miss Delany, who was outlining Jacqueline with juggler's knives, began
+to pull her stock of cutlery from the soft pine backing; elephant,
+camel, horses trampled out; Miss Crystal caught a dangling rope and
+slid earthward, and I turned and walked towards the outer door with
+Byram.
+
+As I looked back for an instant I saw Jacqueline, in her glittering
+diving-skin, calmly step out of her discarded skirt and walk towards
+the sunken tank in the middle of the ring, which three workmen were
+uncovering.
+
+She was to rehearse her perilous leap for the first time to-day, and I
+told Speed frankly that I was too nervous to be present, and so left
+him staring across the dusky tent at the slim child in spangles.
+
+I had an appointment to meet Robert the Lizard at noon, and I was
+rather curious to find out how much his promises were worth when the
+novelty of his new gun had grown stale. So I started towards the
+cliffs, nibbling a crust of bread for luncheon, though the incident of
+the morning had left me small appetite for food.
+
+The poacher was sunning himself on his doorsill when I came into view
+over the black basalt rocks. To my surprise, he touched his cap as I
+approached, and rose civilly, replying to my greeting with a brief,
+"Salute, m'sieu!"
+
+"You are prompt to the minute," I said, pleasantly.
+
+"You also," he observed. "We are quits, m'sieu--so far."
+
+I told him of the progress that Jacqueline was making; he listened in
+silence, and whether or not he was interested I could not determine.
+
+There was a pause; I looked out across the sun-lit ocean, taking time
+to arrange the order of the few questions which I had to ask.
+
+"Come to the point, m'sieu," he said, dryly. "We have struck
+palms."
+
+Spite of my training, spite of the caution which experience brings to
+the most unsuspicious of us, I had a curious confidence in this
+tattered rascal's loyalty to a promise. And apparently without reason,
+too, for there was something wrong with his eyes--or else with the way
+he used them. They were wonderful, vivid blue eyes, well set and well
+shaped, but he never looked at anybody directly except in moments of
+excitement or fury. At such moments his eyes appeared to be lighted up
+from behind.
+
+"Lizard," I said, "you are a poacher."
+
+His placid visage turned stormy.
+
+"None of that, m'sieu," he retorted; "remember the bargain! Concern
+yourself with your own affairs!"
+
+"Wait," I said. "I'm not trying to reform you. For my purposes it is
+a poacher I want--else I might have gone to another."
+
+"That sounds more reasonable," he admitted, guardedly.
+
+"I want to ask this," I continued: "are you a poacher from
+necessity, or from that pure love of the chase which is born in even
+worse men than you and I?"
+
+"I poach because I love it. There are no poachers from necessity;
+there is always the sea, which furnishes work for all who care to
+steer a sloop, or draw a seine, or wield a sea-rake. I am a pilot."
+
+"But the war?"
+
+"At least the war could not keep me from the sardine grounds."
+
+"So you poach from choice?"
+
+"Yes. It is in me. I am sorry, but what shall I do? _It's in me_."
+
+"And you can't resist?"
+
+He laughed grimly. "Go and call in the hounds from the stag's
+throat!"
+
+Presently I said:
+
+"You have been in jail?"
+
+"Yes," he replied, indifferently.
+
+"For poaching?"
+
+"Eur e'harvik rous," he said in Breton, and I could not make out
+whether he meant that he had been in jail for the sake of a woman or
+of a "little red doe." The Breton language bristles with double
+meanings, symbols, and allegories. The word for doe in Breton is
+_karvez_; or for a doe which never had a fawn, it is _heiez_; for a
+fawn the word is _karvik_.
+
+I mentioned these facts to him, but he only looked dangerous and
+remained silent.
+
+"Lizard," I said, "give me your confidence as I give you mine. I
+will tell you now that I was once in the police--"
+
+He started.
+
+"And that I expect to enter that corps again. And I want your aid."
+
+"My aid? For the police?" His laugh was simply horrible. "I? The
+Lizard? Continue, m'sieu."
+
+"I will tell you why. Yesterday, on a visit to Point Paradise, I saw
+a man lying belly down in the bracken; but I didn't let him know I saw
+him. I have served in the police; I think I recognize that man. He is
+known in Belleville as Tric-Trac. He came here, I believe, to see a
+man called Buckhurst. Can you find this Tric-Trac for me? Do you,
+perhaps, know him?"
+
+"Yes," said the Lizard, "I knew him in prison."
+
+"You have seen him here?"
+
+"Yes, but I will not betray him."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because he is a poor, hunted devil of a poacher like me!" cried the
+Lizard, angrily. "He must live; there's enough land in Finistere for
+us both."
+
+"How long has he been here in Paradise?"
+
+"For two months."
+
+"And he told you he lived by poaching?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"He lies."
+
+The Lizard looked at me intently.
+
+"He has played you; he is a thief, and he has come here to rob. He is
+a filou--a town rat. Can he bend a hedge-snare? Can he line a string
+of dead-falls? Can he even snare enough game to keep himself from
+starving? He a woodsman? _He_ a poacher of the bracken? You are
+simple, my friend."
+
+The veins in the poacher's neck began to swell and a dull color
+flooded his face.
+
+"Prove that he has played me," he said.
+
+"Prove it yourself."
+
+"How?"
+
+"By watching him. He came here to meet a man named Buckhurst."
+
+"I have seen that man Buckhurst, too. What is he doing here?" asked
+the Lizard.
+
+"That is what I want you to find out and help me to find out!" I
+said. "Voila! Now you know what I want of you."
+
+The sombre visage of the poacher twitched.
+
+"I take it," said I, "that you would not make a comrade of a petty
+pickpocket."
+
+The poacher uttered an oath and shook his fist at me. "Bon sang!" he
+snarled, "I am an honest man if I am a poacher!"
+
+"That's the reason I trusted you," said I, good-humoredly. "Take
+your fists down, my friend, and think out a plan which will permit me
+to observe this Monsieur Tric-Trac at my leisure, without I myself
+being observed."
+
+"That is easy," he said. "I take him food to-day."
+
+"Then I was right," said I, laughing. "He is a Belleville rat, who
+cannot feed himself where there are no pockets to pick. Does he know a
+languste from a linnet? Not he, my friend!"
+
+The Lizard sat still, head bent, knees drawn up, apparently buried in
+thought. There is no injury one can do a Breton of his class like the
+injury of deceiving and mocking.
+
+If Tric-Trac, a man of the city, had come here to profit by the
+ignorance of a Breton--and perhaps laugh at his stupidity!
+
+But I let the ferment work in the dark blood of the Lizard, leaving
+him to his own sombre logic, undisturbed.
+
+Presently the Lizard raised his head and fixed his bright, intelligent
+eyes on me.
+
+"M'sieu," he said, in a curiously gentle voice, "we men of Paradise
+are called out for the army. I must go, or go to jail. How can I
+remain here and help you trap these filous?"
+
+"I have telegraphed to General Chanzy," I said, frankly. "If he
+accepts--or if General Aurelles de Palladine is favorable--I shall
+make you exempt under authority from Tours. I mean to keep you in my
+service, anyway," I added.
+
+"You mean that--that I need not go to Lorient--to this war?"
+
+"I hope so, my friend."
+
+He looked at me, astonished. "If you can do that, m'sieu, you can do
+anything."
+
+"In the meanwhile," I said, dryly, "I want another look at
+Tric-Trac."
+
+"I could show you Tric-Trac in an hour--but to go to him direct would
+excite his suspicion. Besides, there are two gendarmes in Paradise to
+conduct the conscripts to Lorient; there are also several
+gardes-champetre. But I can get you there, in the open moorland, too,
+under everybody's noses! Shall I?" he said, with an eager ferocity
+that startled me.
+
+"You are not to injure him, no matter what he does or says," I said,
+sharply. "I want to watch him, not to frighten him away. I want to
+see what he and Buckhurst are doing. Do you understand?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then strike palms!"
+
+We struck vigorously.
+
+"Now I am ready to start," I said, pleasantly.
+
+"And now I am ready to tell you something," he said, with the fierce
+light burning behind his blue eyes. "If you were already in the
+police I would not help you--no, not even to trap this filou who has
+mocked me! If you again enter the police I will desert you!"
+
+He licked his dry lips.
+
+"Do you know what a blood-feud is?"
+
+"Yes," I said.
+
+"Then understand that a man in a high place has wronged me--and that
+he is of the police--the Imperial Military police!"
+
+"Who?"
+
+"You will know when I pass my fagot-knife into his throat," he
+snarled--"not before."
+
+The Lizard picked up his fishing-rod, slung a canvas bag over his
+stained velveteen jacket, gathered together a few coils of hair-wire,
+a pot of twig-lime, and other odds and ends, which he tucked into his
+broad-flapped coat-pocket. "Allons," he said, briefly, and we
+started.
+
+The canvas bag on his back bulged, perhaps with provisions, although
+the steel point of a murderous salmon-gaff protruded from the mouth of
+the sack and curved over his shoulder.
+
+The village square in Paradise was nearly deserted. The children had
+raced away to follow the newly arrived gendarmes as closely as they
+dared, and the women were in-doors hanging about their men, whom the
+government summoned to Lorient.
+
+There were, however, a few people in the square, and these the Lizard
+was very careful to greet. Thus we passed the mayor, waddling across
+the bridge, puffing with official importance over the arrival of the
+gendarmes. He bowed to me; the Lizard saluted him with, "Times are
+hard on the fat!" to which the mayor replied morosely, and bade him go
+to the devil.
+
+"Au revoir, donc," retorted the Lizard, unabashed. The mayor bawled
+after him a threat of arrest unless he reported next day in the
+square.
+
+At that the poacher halted. "Don't you wish you might get me!" he
+said, tauntingly, probably presuming on my conditional promise.
+
+"Do you refuse to report?" demanded the mayor, also halting.
+
+"Et ta soeur!" replied the poacher; "is she reporting at the
+caserne?"
+
+The mayor replied angrily, and a typical Breton quarrel began, which
+ended in the mayor biting his thumb-nail at the Lizard and wishing
+him "St. Hubert's luck"--an insult tantamount to a curse.
+
+Now St. Hubert was a mighty hunter, and his luck was proverbially
+marvellous. But as everything goes by contrary in Brittany, to wish a
+Breton hunter good luck was the very worst thing you could do him. Bad
+luck was certain to follow--if not that very day, certainly,
+inexorably, _some_ day.
+
+With wrath in his eyes the Lizard exhausted his profanity, stretching
+out his arm after the retreating mayor, who waddled away,
+gesticulating, without turning his head.
+
+"Come back! Toad! Sourd! V-Snake! Bat of the gorse!" shouted the
+Lizard. "Do you think I'm afraid of your spells, fat owl of Faouet?
+Evil-eyed eel! The luck of Ker-Ys to you and yours! Ho fois! Do you
+think I am frightened--I, Robert the Lizard? Your wife is a camel and
+your daughter a cow!" The mayor was unmarried, but it didn't matter.
+And, moreover, as that official was now out of ear-shot, the Lizard
+turned anxiously to me.
+
+"Don't tell me you are superstitious enough to care what the mayor
+said," I laughed.
+
+"Dame, m'sieu, we shall have no luck to-day. To-morrow it doesn't
+matter--but if we go to-day, bad luck must come to us."
+
+"To-day? Nonsense!"
+
+"If not, then another day."
+
+"Rubbish! Come on."
+
+"Do you think we could take precautions?" he asked, furtively.
+
+"Take all you like," I said; "rack your brains for an antidote to
+neutralize the bad luck, only come on, you great gaby!"
+
+I knew many of the Finistere legends; out of the corner of my eye I
+watched this stalwart rascal, cowed by gross superstition, peeping
+about for some favorable sign to counteract the luck of St. Hubert.
+
+First he looked up at the crows, and counted them as they passed
+overhead cawing ominously--one--two--three--four--five! Five is danger!
+But wait, more were coming: one--two--three--four--five--six--seven--! A
+loss! Well, that was not as bad as some things. But hark! More crows
+coming: one--two--three! Death!
+
+"Jesu!" he faltered, ducking his head instinctively. "I'll look
+elsewhere for signs."
+
+The signs were all wrong that morning; first we met an ancient crone
+with a great pack of fagots on her bent back, and I was sure he could
+have strangled her cheerfully, because there are few worse omens for a
+hunter of game or of men. Then he examined the first mushroom he
+found, but under the pink-and-pearl cap we saw no insects crawling.
+The veil, too, was rent, showing the poisonous, fluted gills; and the
+toadstool blackened when he cut it with the blade of his fagot-knife.
+
+He tried once more, however, and searched through the gorse until he
+found a heavy lizard, green as an emerald. He teased it till it
+snapped at the silver franc in my hand; its teeth should have
+vanished, but when he held out his finger the creature bit into it
+till the blood spurted.
+
+Still I refused to turn back. What should he do? Then into his mind
+crept a Pouldu superstition. It was a charm against evil, including
+lightning, black-rot, rheumatism, and "douleurs" of other varieties.
+
+The charm was simple. We needed only to build a little fire of gorse,
+and walk through the smoke once or twice. So we built the fire and
+walked through the smoke, the Lizard coughing and cursing until I
+feared he might overdo it by smothering us both. Then stamping out
+the last spark--for he was a woodsman always--we tramped on in better
+humor with destiny.
+
+"You think that turned the curse backward, m'sieu?" he asked.
+
+"There is not the faintest doubt of that," I said.
+
+Far away towards Sainte-Ysole we saw the blue woods which were our
+goal. However, we had no intention of going there as the bee flies,
+partly because Tric-Trac might see us, partly because the Lizard
+wished any prowling passer-by to observe that he was occupied with his
+illegitimate profession. For my part, I very much preferred a brush
+with a garde-champetre or a summons to explain why no shots were found
+in the Lizard's pheasants, rather than have anybody ask us why we were
+walking so fast towards Sainte-Ysole woods.
+
+Therefore we promptly selected a hedge for operations, choosing a
+high, thick one, which separated two fields of wheat stubble.
+
+Kneeling under the hedge, he broke a hole in it just large enough for
+a partridge to worry through. Then he bent his twig, fastened the
+hair-wire into a running noose, adjusted it, and stood up. This
+manoeuvre he repeated at various hedges or in thickets where he
+"lined" his trail with peeled twigs on every bush.
+
+Once he paused to reset a hare-trap with a turnip, picked up in a
+neighboring field; once he limed a young sapling and fixed a bit of a
+mirror in the branches, but not a bird alighted, although the
+blackthorns were full of fluttering wings. And all the while we had
+been twisting and doubling and edging nearer and nearer to the
+Sainte-Ysole woods, until we were already within their cool shadow,
+and I heard the tinkle of a stream among leafy depths.
+
+Now we had no fear; we were hidden from the eyes of the dry, staring
+plain, and the Lizard laughed to himself as he fastened a grasshopper
+to his hook and flung it into the broad, dark water of the pool at his
+feet.
+
+Slowly he fished up stream, but, although he seemed to be intent on
+his sport, there was something in the bend of his head that suggested
+he might be listening for other sounds than the complex melodies of
+mossy waterfalls.
+
+His poacher's eyes began to glisten and shimmer in the forest dusk
+like the eyes of wild things that hunt at night. As he noiselessly
+turned, his nostrils spread with a tremor, as a good dog's nose
+quivers at the point.
+
+Presently he beckoned me, stepped into the moss, and crawled without a
+sound straight through the holly thicket.
+
+"Watch here," he whispered. "Count a hundred when I disappear, then
+creep on your stomach to the edge of that bank. In the bed of the
+stream, close under you, you will see and hear your friend
+Tric-Trac."
+
+Before I had counted fifty I heard the Lizard cry out, "Bonjour,
+Tric-Trac!" but I counted on, obeying the Lizard's orders as I should
+wish mine to be obeyed. I heard a startled exclamation in reply to the
+Lizard's greeting, then a purely Parisian string of profanity, which
+terminated as I counted one hundred and crept forward to the mossy
+edge of the bank, under the yellow beech leaves.
+
+Below me stood the Lizard, intently watching a figure crouched on
+hands and knees before a small, iron-bound box.
+
+The person addressed as Tric-Trac promptly tried to hide the box by
+sitting down on it. He was a young man, with wide ears and unhealthy
+spots on his face. His hair, which was oily and thick, he wore neatly
+plastered into two pointed love-locks. This not only adorned and
+distinguished him, but it lent a casual and detached air to his ears,
+which stood at right angles to the plane of his face. I knew that
+engaging countenance. It was the same old Tric-Trac.
+
+"Zut, alors!" repeated Tric-Trac, venomously, as the poacher smiled
+again; "can't you give the company notice when you come in?"
+
+"Did you expect me to ring the tocsin?" asked the Lizard.
+
+"Flute!" snarled Tric-Trac. "Like a mud-rat, you creep with no
+sound--c'est pas polite, nom d'un nom!"
+
+He began nervously brushing the pine-needles from his skin-tight
+trousers, with dirty hands.
+
+"What's that box?" asked the Lizard, abruptly.
+
+"Box? Where?" A vacant expression came into Tric-Trac's face, and he
+looked all around him except at the box upon which he was sitting.
+
+"Box?" he repeated, with that hopeless effrontery which never deserts
+criminals of his class, even under the guillotine. "I don't see any
+box."
+
+"You're sitting on it," observed the Lizard.
+
+"_That_ box? Oh! You mean _that_ box? Oh!" He peeped at it between
+his meagre legs, then turned a nimble eye on the poacher.
+
+"What's in it?" demanded the poacher, sullenly.
+
+"Don't know," replied Tric-Trac, with brisk interest. "I found it."
+
+"_Found_ it!" repeated the Lizard, scornfully.
+
+"Certainly, my friend; how do you suppose I came by it?"
+
+"You stole it!"
+
+They faced each other for a moment.
+
+"Supposition that you are correct; what of it?" said the young
+ruffian, calmly.
+
+The Lizard was silent.
+
+"Did you bring me anything to chew on?" inquired Tric-Trac, sniffing
+at the poacher's sack.
+
+"Bread, cheese, three pheasants, cider--more than I eat in a week,"
+said the Lizard, quietly. "It will cost forty sous."
+
+He opened his sack and slowly displayed the provisions.
+
+I looked hard at the iron-bound box.
+
+_On one end was painted the Geneva cross._ Dr. Delmont and Professor
+Tavernier had disappeared carrying red-cross funds. Was that their
+box?
+
+"I said it costs forty sous--two silver francs," repeated the Lizard,
+doggedly.
+
+"Forty sous? That's robbery!" sniffed the young ruffian, now using
+that half-whining, half-sneering form of discourse peculiar alike to
+the vicious chevalier of Paris and his confrere of the provincial
+centres. Accent and slang alone distinguish between them; the argot,
+however, is practically the same.
+
+Tric-Trac fished a few coins from his pocket, counted carefully, and
+handed them, one by one, to the poacher.
+
+The poacher coolly tossed the food on the ground, and, as Tric-Trac
+rose to pick it up, seized the box.
+
+"Drop that!" said Tric-Trac, quickly.
+
+"What's in it?"
+
+"Nothing! Drop it, I tell you."
+
+"Where's the key?"
+
+"There's no key--it's a machine."
+
+"What's in it?"
+
+"Now I've been trying to find out for two weeks," sneered Tric-Trac,
+"and I don't know yet. Drop it!"
+
+"I'm going to open it all the same," said the Lizard, coolly, lifting
+the lid.
+
+A sudden silence followed; then the Lizard swore vigorously. There was
+another box within the light, iron-edged casket, a keyless cube of
+shining steel, with a knob on the top, and a needle which revolved
+around a dial on which were engraved the hours and minutes. And
+emblazoned above the dial was the coat of arms of the Countess de
+Vassart.
+
+When Tric-Trac had satisfied himself concerning the situation, he
+returned to devour his food.
+
+"Flute! Zut! Mince!" he observed; "you and your bad manners, they
+sicken me--tiens!"
+
+The Lizard, flat on his stomach, lay with the massive steel box under
+his chin, patiently turning the needle from figure to figure.
+
+"Wonderful! wonderful!" sneered Tric-Trac. "Continue, my friend, to
+put out your eyes with your fingers!"
+
+The Lizard continued to turn the needle backward and forward around
+the face of the dial. Once, when he twirled it impatiently, a tiny
+chime rang out from within the box, but the steel lid did not open.
+
+"It's the Angelus," said Tric-Trac, with a grimace. "Let us pray, my
+friend, for a cold-chisel--when my friend Buckhurst returns."
+
+Still the Lizard lay, unmoved, turning the needle round and round.
+
+Tric-Trac having devoured the cheese, bread, and an entire pheasant,
+made a bundle of the remaining food, emptied the cider-jug, wiped his
+beardless face with his cap, and announced that he would be pleased to
+"broil" a cigarette.
+
+"Do you want the gendarmes to scent tobacco?" said the Lizard.
+
+"Are the 'Flics' out already?" asked Tric-Trac, astonished.
+
+"They're in Paradise, setting the whole Department by the ears. But
+they can't look sideways at me; I'm going to be exempt."
+
+"It strikes me," observed Tric-Trac, "that you take great
+precautions for your own skin."
+
+"I do," said the Lizard.
+
+"What about me?"
+
+The poacher looked around at the young ruffian. Those muscles in the
+human face which draw back the upper lip are not the muscles used for
+laughter. Animals employ them when they snarl. And now the Lizard
+laughed that way; his upper lip shrank from the edge of his yellow
+teeth, and he regarded Tric-Trac with oblique and burning eyes.
+
+"What about me?" repeated Tric-Trac, in an offended tone. "Am I to
+live in fear of the Flics?"
+
+The Lizard laughed again, and Tric-Trac, disgusted, stood up, settled
+his cap over his wide ears, humming a song as he loosened his
+trousers-belt:
+
+ "Si vous t'nez a vot' squelette
+ Ne fait' pas comme Bibi!
+ Claquer plutot dans vot' lit
+ Que de claquer a la Roquette!"--
+
+"Who are you gaping at?" he added, abruptly. "Bon; c'est ma geule.
+Et apres? Drop that box!"
+
+"Come," replied the Lizard, coldly, placing the box on the moss,
+"you'd better not quarrel with me."
+
+"Oh, that's a threat, is it?" sneered Tric-Trac. He walked over to
+the steel box, lifted it, placed it in the iron-edged case, and sat
+down on the case.
+
+"I want you to comprehend," he added, "that you have pushed your
+nose into an affair that does not concern you. The next time you come
+here to sell your snared pheasants, come like a man, nom de Dieu! and
+not like a cat of the Glaciere!--or I'll find a way to stop your
+curiosity."
+
+The dull-red color surged into the poacher's face and heavy neck; for
+a moment he stood as though stunned. Then he dragged out his knife.
+
+Tric-Trac sat looking at him insolently, one hand thrust into the
+bosom of his greasy coat.
+
+"I've got a toy under my cravate that says 'Papa!' six times--pop!
+pop! pop! pop! pop! pop! Papa!" he continued, calmly; "so there's no
+use in your turning red and swelling the veins in your neck. Go to the
+devil! Do you think I can't live without you? Go to the devil with
+your traps and partridges and fish-hooks--and that fagot-knife in your
+fist--and if you try to throw it at me you'll make a sad mistake!"
+
+The Lizard's half-raised hand dropped as Tric-Trac, with a movement
+like lightning, turned a revolver full on him, talking all the while
+in his drawling whine.
+
+"C'est ca! Now you are reasonable. Get out of this forest, my
+friend--or stay and join us. Eh! That astonishes you? Why? Idiot, we
+want men like you. We want men who have nothing to lose and--millions
+to gain! Ah, you are amazed! Yes, millions--I say it. I, Tric-Trac of
+the Glaciere, who have done my time in Noumea, too! Yes, millions."
+
+The young ruffian laughed and slowly passed his tongue over his thin
+lips. The Lizard slowly returned his knife to its sheath, looked all
+around, then deliberately sat down on the moss cross-legged. I could
+have hugged him.
+
+"A million? Where?" he asked, vacantly.
+
+"Parbleu! Naturally you ask where," chuckled Tric-Trac. "Tiens! A
+supposition that it's in this box!"
+
+"The box is too small," said the Lizard, patiently.
+
+Tric-Trac roared. "Listen to him! Listen to the child!" he cried,
+delighted. "Too small to hold gold enough for you? Very well--but is
+_a ship big enough_?"
+
+"A big ship is."
+
+Tric-Trac wriggled in convulsions of laughter.
+
+"Oh, listen! He wants a big ship! Well--say a ship as big as that
+ugly, black iron-clad sticking up out of the sea yonder, like a
+Usine-de-gaz!"
+
+"I think that ship would be big enough," said the poacher,
+seriously.
+
+Tric-Trac did not laugh; his little eyes narrowed, and he looked
+steadily at the poacher.
+
+"Do you mean what I mean?" he asked, deliberately.
+
+"Well," said the Lizard, "what do you mean?"
+
+"I mean that France is busy stitching on a new flag."
+
+"Black?"
+
+"Red--_first_."
+
+"Oh-h!" mused the poacher. "When does France hoist that new red
+flag?"
+
+"When Paris falls."
+
+The poacher rested his chin on his doubled fist and leaned forward
+across his gathered knees. "I see," he drawled.
+
+"Under the commune there can be no more poverty," said Tric-Trac;
+"you comprehend that."
+
+"Exactly."
+
+"And no more aristocrats."
+
+"Exactly."
+
+"Well," said Tric-Trac, his head on one side, "how does that
+programme strike you?"
+
+"It is impossible, your programme," said the poacher, rising to his
+feet impatiently.
+
+"You think so? Wait a few days! Wait, my friend," cried Tric-Trac,
+eagerly; "and say!--come back here next Monday! There will be a few
+of us here--a few friends. And keep your mouth shut tight. Here! Wait.
+Look here, friend, don't let a little pleasantry stand between
+comrades. Your fagot-knife against my little flute that sings
+pa-pa!--that leaves matters balanced, eh?"
+
+The young ruffian had followed the Lizard and caught him by his
+stained velvet coat.
+
+"Voyons," he persisted, "do you think the commune is going to let a
+comrade starve for lack of Badinguet's lozenges? Here, take a few of
+these!" and the rascal thrust out a dirty palm full of twenty-franc
+gold pieces.
+
+"What are these for?" muttered the Lizard, sullenly.
+
+"For your beaux yeux, imbecile!" cried Tric-Trac, gayly. "Come back
+when you want more. My comrade, Citizen Buckhurst, will be glad to see
+you next Monday. Adieu, my friend. Don't chatter to the Flics!"
+
+He picked up his box and the packet of provisions, dropped his
+revolver into the side-pocket of his jacket, cocked his greasy cap,
+blew a kiss to the Lizard, and started off straight into the forest.
+After a dozen steps he hesitated, turned, and looked back at the
+poacher for a moment in silence. Then he made a friendly grimace.
+
+"You are not a fool," he said, "so you won't follow me. Come again
+Monday. It will really be worth while, dear friend." Then, as on an
+impulse, he came all the way back, caught the Lizard by the sleeve,
+raised his meagre body on tip-toe, and whispered.
+
+The Lizard turned perfectly white; Tric-Trac trotted away into the
+woods, hugging his box and smirking.
+
+The Lizard and I walked back together. By the time we reached Paradise
+bridge I understood him better, and he understood me. And when we
+arrived at the circus tent, and when Speed came up, handing me a
+telegram from Chanzy refusing my services, the Lizard turned to me
+like an obedient hound to take my orders--now that I was not to
+re-enter the Military Police.
+
+I ordered him to disobey the orders from Lorient and from the mayor of
+Paradise; to take to the woods as though to avoid the conscription; to
+join Buckhurst's franc-company of ruffians, and to keep me fully
+informed.
+
+"And, Lizard," I said, "you may be caught and hanged for it by the
+police, or stabbed by Tric-Trac."
+
+"Bien," he said, coolly.
+
+"But it is a brave thing you do; a soldierly thing!"
+
+He was silent.
+
+"It is for France," I said.
+
+He shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"And we'll catch this Tric-Trac red-handed," I suggested.
+
+"Ah--yes!" His eyes glowed as though lighted up from behind. "And
+another who is high in the police, and a friend of this Tric-Trac!"
+
+"Was it that man's name he whispered to you when you turned so
+white?" I said, suddenly.
+
+The Lizard turned his glowing eyes on me.
+
+"Was the man's name--Mornac?" I asked, at a hopeless venture.
+
+The Lizard shivered; I needed no reply, not even his hoarse, "Are you
+the devil, that you know all things?"
+
+I looked at him wonderingly. What wrong could Mornac have done a
+ragged outcast here on the Breton coast? And where was Mornac? Had he
+left Paris in time to avoid the Prussian trap? Was he here in this
+country, rubbing elbows with Buckhurst?
+
+"Did Tric-Trac tell you that Mornac was at the head of that band?" I
+demanded.
+
+"Why do you ask me?" stammered the Lizard; "you know
+everything--even when it is scarcely whispered!"
+
+The superstitious astonishment of the man, his utter collapse and his
+evident fear of me, did not suit me. Treachery comes through that kind
+of fear; I meant to rule him in another and safer manner. I meant to
+be absolutely honest with him.
+
+It was difficult to persuade him that I had only guessed the name
+whispered; that, naturally, I should think of Mornac as a high officer
+of police, and particularly so since I knew him to be a villain, and
+had also divined his relations with Buckhurst.
+
+I drew from the poacher that Tric-Trac had named Mornac as head of the
+communistic plot in Brittany; that Mornac was coming to Paradise very
+soon, and that then something gay might be looked for.
+
+And that night I took Speed into my confidence and finally Kelly Eyre,
+our balloonist.
+
+And we talked the matter over until long after midnight.
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+FOREWARNED
+
+
+The lions had now begun to give me a great deal of trouble. Timour
+Melek, the old villain, sat on his chair, snarling and striking at me,
+but still going through his paces; Empress Khatoun was a perfect devil
+of viciousness, and refused to jump her hoops; even poor little Aicha,
+my pet, fed by me soon after her foster-mother, a big Newfoundland,
+had weaned her, turned sullen in the pyramid scene. I roped her and
+trimmed her claws; it was high time.
+
+Oh, they knew, and I knew, that matters had gone wrong with me; that I
+had, for a time, at least, lost the intangible something which I once
+possessed--that occult right to dominate.
+
+It worried me; it angered me. Anger in authority, which is a weakness,
+is quickly discovered by beasts.
+
+Speed's absurd superstition continued to recur to me at inopportune
+moments; in my brain his voice was ceaselessly sounding--"A man in
+love, a man in love, a man in love"--until a flash of temper sent my
+lions scurrying and snarling into a pack, where they huddled and
+growled, staring at me with yellow, mutinous eyes.
+
+Yet, strangely, the greater the risk, and the plainer to me that my
+lions were slipping out of my control, the more my apathy increased,
+until even Byram began to warn me.
+
+Still I never felt the slightest physical fear; on the contrary, as
+my irritation increased my disdain grew. It seemed a monstrous bit of
+insolence on the part of these overgrown cats to meditate an attack on
+me. Even though I began to feel that it was only a question of time
+when the moment must arrive, even though I gradually became certain
+that the first false move on my part would precipitate an attack, the
+knowledge left me almost indifferent.
+
+That morning, as I left the training-cage--where, among others, Kelly
+Eyre stood looking on--I suddenly remembered Sylvia Elven and her
+message to Eyre, which I had never delivered.
+
+We strolled towards the stables together; he was a pleasant,
+clean-cut, fresh-faced young fellow, a man I had never known very
+well, but one whom I was inclined to respect and trust.
+
+"My son," said I, politely, "do you think you have arrived at an age
+sufficiently mature to warrant my delivering to you a message from a
+pretty girl?"
+
+"There's no harm in attempting it, my venerable friend," he replied,
+laughing.
+
+"This is the message," I said: "_On Sunday the book-stores are
+closed in Paris._"
+
+"Who gave you that message, Scarlett?" he stammered.
+
+I looked at him curiously, brutally; a red, hot blush had covered his
+face from neck to hair.
+
+"In case you asked, I was to inform you," said I, "that a Bretonne
+at Point Paradise sent the message."
+
+"A Bretonne!" he repeated, as though scared.
+
+"A Bretonne!"
+
+"But I don't know any!"
+
+I shrugged my shoulders discreetly.
+
+"Are you certain she was a Bretonne?" he asked. His nervousness
+surprised me.
+
+"Does she not say so?" I replied.
+
+"I know--I know--but that message--there is only one woman who could
+have sent it--" He hesitated, red as a pippin.
+
+He was so young, so manly, so unspoiled, and so red, that on an
+impulse I said: "Kelly, it was Mademoiselle Elven who sent you the
+message."
+
+His face expressed troubled astonishment.
+
+"Is that her name?" he asked.
+
+"Well--it's one of them, anyway," I replied, beginning to feel
+troubled in my turn. "See here, Kelly, it's not my business, but you
+won't mind if I speak plainly, will you? The times are queer--you
+understand. Everybody is suspicious; everybody is under suspicion in
+these days. And I want to say that the young lady who sent that
+curious message to you is as clever as twenty men like you and me."
+
+He was silent.
+
+"If it is a love affair, I'll stop now--not a question, you
+understand. If it is not--well, as an older and more battered and
+world-worn man, I'm going to make a suggestion to you--with your
+permission."
+
+"Make it," he said, quietly.
+
+"Then I will. Don't talk to Mademoiselle Elven. You, Speed, and I
+know something about a certain conspiracy; we are going to know more
+before we inform the captain of that cruiser out there beyond Point
+Paradise. I know Mademoiselle Elven--slightly. I am afraid of her--and
+I have not yet decided why. Don't talk to her."
+
+"But--I don't know her," he said; "or, at least I don't know her by
+that name."
+
+After a moment I said: "Is the person in question the companion of
+the Countess de Vassart?"
+
+"If she is I do not know it," he replied.
+
+"Was she once an actress?"
+
+"It would astonish me to believe it!" he said.
+
+"Then who do you believe sent you that message, Kelly?"
+
+His cheeks began to burn again, and he gave me an uncomfortable look.
+A silence, and he sat down in my dressing-room, his boyish head buried
+in his hands. After a glance at him I began changing my training-suit
+for riding-clothes, whistling the while softly to myself. As I
+buttoned a fresh collar he looked up.
+
+"Mr. Scarlett, you are well-born and--you are here in the circus with
+the rest of us. You know what we are--you know that two or three of us
+have seen better days,... that something has gone wrong with us to
+bring us here,... but we never speak of it,... and never ask
+questions.... But I should like to tell you about myself;... you are a
+gentleman, you know,... and I was not born to anything in
+particular.... I was a clerk in the consul's office in Paris when
+Monsieur Tissandier took a fancy to me, and I entered his balloon
+ateliers to learn to assist him."
+
+He hesitated. I tied my necktie very carefully before a bit of broken
+mirror.
+
+"Then the government began to make much of us,... you remember? We
+started experiments for the army.... I was intensely interested, and
+... there was not much talk about secrecy then,... and my salary was
+large, and I was received at the Tuileries. My head was turned;...
+life was easy, brilliant. I made an invention--a little electric screw
+which steered a balloon ... sometimes..." He laughed, a mirthless
+laugh, and looked at me. All the color had gone from his face.
+
+"There was a woman--" I turned partly towards him.
+
+"We met first at the British Embassy,... then elsewhere,...
+everywhere.... We skated together at the club in the Bois at that
+celebrated fete,... you know?--the Emperor was there--"
+
+"I know," I said.
+
+He looked at me dreamily, passed his hand over his face, and went on:
+
+"Somehow we always talked about military balloons. And that evening
+... she was so interested in my work ... I brought some little
+sketches I had made--"
+
+"I understand," I said.
+
+He looked at me miserably. "She was to return the sketches to me at
+Calman's--the fashionable book-store,... next day.... I never thought
+that the next day was to be Sunday.... The book-stores of Paris are
+not open on Sunday--_but the War Office is_."
+
+I began to put on my coat.
+
+"And the sketches were asked for?" I suggested--"and you naturally
+told what had become of them?"
+
+"I refused to name her."
+
+"Of course; men of our sort can't do that."
+
+"I am not of your sort--you know it."
+
+"Oh yes, you are, my friend--and the same kind of fool, too. There's
+only one kind of man in this world."
+
+He looked at me listlessly.
+
+"So they sent you to a fortress?" I asked.
+
+"To New Caledonia,... four years.... I was only twenty, Scarlett,...
+and ruined.... I joined Byram in Antwerp and risked the tour through
+France."
+
+After a moment's thought I said: "In your opinion, what nation
+profited by your sketches? Italy? Spain? Prussia? Bavaria? England?...
+Perhaps Russia?"
+
+"Do you mean that this woman was a foreign spy?"
+
+"Perhaps. Perhaps she was only careless, or capricious,... or
+inconstant.... You never saw her again?"
+
+"I was under arrest on Sunday. I do not know.... I like to believe
+that she went to the book-store on Monday,... that she made an
+innocent mistake,... but I never knew, Scarlett,... I never knew."
+
+"Suppose you ask her?" I said.
+
+He reddened furiously.
+
+"I cannot.... If she did me a wrong, I cannot reproach her; if she
+was innocent--look at me, Scarlett!--a ragged, ruined mountebank in a
+travelling circus,... and she is--"
+
+"An honest woman that a man might care for?"
+
+"That is ... my belief."
+
+"If she is," I said, "go and ask her about those drawings."
+
+"But if she is not,... I cannot tell _you_!" he flashed out.
+
+"Let us shake hands, Kelly," I said,... "and be very good friends.
+Will you?"
+
+He gave me his hand rather shyly.
+
+"We will never speak of her again," I said,... "unless you desire
+it. You have had a terrible lesson in caution; I need say no more.
+Only remember that I have trusted you with a secret concerning
+Buckhurst's conspiracy."
+
+His firm hand tightened on mine, then he walked away, steadily, head
+high. And I went out to saddle my horse for a canter across the moor
+to Point Paradise.
+
+It was a gray day, with a hint of winter in the air, and a wind that
+set the gorse rustling like tissue-paper. Up aloft the sun glimmered,
+a white spot in a silvery smother; pale lights lay on moorland and
+water; the sea tumbled over the bar, boiling like a flood of liquid
+lead from which the spindrift curled and blew into a haze that buried
+the island of Groix and turned the anchored iron-clad to a phantom.
+
+A day for a gallop, if ever there was such a day!--a day to wash out
+care from a troubled mind and cleanse it in the whipping, reeking, wet
+east wind--a day for a fox! And I rose in my saddle and shouted aloud
+as a red fox shot out of the gorse and galloped away across the
+endless moorland, with the feathers of a mallard still sticking to his
+whiskers.
+
+Oh, what a gallop, with risk enough, too; for I did not know the coast
+moors; and the deep clefts from the cliffs cut far inland, so that eye
+and ear and bridle-hand were tense and ready to catch danger ere it
+ingulfed us in some sea-churned crevice hidden by the bracken. And how
+the gray gulls squealed, high whirling over us, and the wild ducks in
+the sedge rose with clapping wings, craning their necks, only to swing
+overhead in circles, whimpering, and drop, with pendent legs and wings
+aslant, back into the bog from which we startled them.
+
+A ride into an endless gray land, sweet with sea-scents, rank with the
+perfume of salty green things; a ride into a land of gushing winds,
+wet as spray, strong and caressing, too, and full of mischief; winds
+that set miles of sedge rippling; sudden winds, that turned still
+pools to geysers and set the yellow gorse flowers flying; winds that
+rushed up with a sea-roar like the sound in shells, then, sudden, died
+away, to leave the furrowed clover motionless and the tall reeds still
+as death.
+
+So, by strange ways and eccentric circles, like the aerial paths of
+homing sea-birds, I came at last to the spot I had set out for,
+consciously; yet it surprised me to find I had come there.
+
+Before I crossed the little bridge I scented the big orange-tinted
+tea-roses and the pinks. Leaves on apricots were falling; the fig-tree
+was bare of verdure, and the wind chased the big, bronzed leaves
+across the beds of herbs, piling them into heaps at the base of the
+granite wall.
+
+A boy took my horse; a servant in full Breton costume admitted me;
+the velvet humming of Sylvia Elven's spinning-wheel filled the
+silence, like the whirring of a great, soft moth imprisoned in a
+room:
+
+ "Woe to the Maids of Paradise,
+ Yvonne!
+ Twice have the Saxons landed--twice!
+ Yvonne!
+ Yet shall Paradise see them thrice!
+ Yvonne! Yvonne! Marivonik!
+
+ "Fair is their hair and blue their eyes,
+ Yvonne!
+ Body o' me! their words are lies,
+ Yvonne!
+ Maids of Paradise, oh, be wise!
+ Yvonne! Yvonne! Marivonik!"
+
+The door swung open noiselessly; the whir of the wheel and the sound
+of the song filled the room for an instant, then was shut out as the
+Countess de Vassart closed the door and came forward to greet me.
+
+In her pretty, soft gown, with a tint of blue ribbon at the neck and
+shoulders, she seemed scarcely older than a school-girl, so radiant,
+so sweet and fresh she stood there, giving me her little hand to touch
+in friendship.
+
+"It was so good of you to come," she said; "I know you made it a
+duty and gave up a glorious gallop to be amiable to me. Did you?"
+
+I tried to say something, but her loveliness confused me.
+
+Somebody brought tea--I don't know who; all I could see clearly was
+her gray eyes meeting mine--the light from the leaded window touching
+her glorious, ruddy hair.
+
+As for the tea, I took whatever she offered; doubtless I drank it, but
+I don't remember. Nor do I remember what she said at first, for
+somehow I began thinking about my lions, and the thought obsessed me
+even while striving to listen to her, even in the tingling maze of
+other thoughts which kept me dumb under the exquisite spell of this
+intimacy with her.
+
+The delicate odor of ripened herbs stole into the room from the
+garden; far away, through the whispering whir of the spinning-wheel, I
+heard the sea.
+
+"Do you like Sylvia's song?" she asked, turning her head to listen.
+"It is a very old song--a very, very old one--centuries old. It's all
+about the English, how they came to harry our coasts in those
+days--and it has almost a hundred verses!" Something of the Bretonne
+came into her eyes for a moment, that shadow of sadness, that patient
+fatalism in which, too, there is something of distrust. The next
+instant her eyes cleared and she smiled.
+
+"The Trecourts suffered much from the English raiders. I am a
+Trecourt, you know. That song was made about us--about a young girl,
+Yvonne de Trecourt, who was carried away by the English. She was
+foolish; she had a lover among the Saxons,... and she set a signal for
+him, and they came and sacked the town, and carried her away, and that
+was what she got for her folly."
+
+She bent her head thoughtfully; the sound of the sea grew louder in
+the room; a yellow light stole out of the west and touched the
+window-panes, slowly deepening to orange; against it the fruit trees
+stood, a leafless tracery of fragile branches.
+
+"It is the winter awaking, very far away," she said, under her
+breath.
+
+Something in the hollow monotone of the sea made me think again of the
+low grumble of restless lions. The sound was hateful. Why should it
+steal in here--why haunt me even in this one spot in all the world
+where a world-tired man had found a moment's peace in a woman's eyes.
+
+"Are you troubled?" she asked, then colored at her own question, as
+though deeming the impulse to speak unwarranted.
+
+"No, not troubled. Happiness is often edged with a shadow. I am
+content to be here."
+
+She bent her head and looked at the heavy rose lying in solitary
+splendor on the table. The polished wood reflected it in subdued tints
+of saffron.
+
+"It is a strange friendship," I said.
+
+"Ours?... yes."
+
+I said, musing: "To me it is like magic. I scarce dare speak, scarce
+breathe, lest the spell break."
+
+She was silent.
+
+"--Lest the spell break--and this house, this room, fade away,
+leaving me alone, staring at the world once more."
+
+"If there is a spell, you have cast it," she said, laughing at my
+sober face. "A wizard ought to be able to make his spells endure."
+
+Then her face grew graver. "You must forget the past," she said;
+"you must forget all that was cruel and false and unhappy,... will
+you not?"
+
+"Yes, madame."
+
+"I, too," she said, "have much to forget and much to hope for; and
+you taught me how to forget and how to hope."
+
+"I, madame?"
+
+"Yes,... at La Trappe, at Morsbronn, and here. Look at me. Have I not
+changed?"
+
+"Yes," I said, fascinated.
+
+"I know I have," she said, as though speaking to herself. "Life
+means more now. Somehow my childhood seems to have returned, with all
+its hope of the world and all its confidence in the world, and its
+certainty that all will be right. Years have fallen from my shoulders
+like a released burden that was crushing me to my knees. I have
+awakened from a dream that was not life at all,... a dream in which
+I, alone, staggered through darkness, bearing the world on my
+shoulders--the world doubly weighted with the sorrows of mankind,... a
+dream that lasted years, but..._you_ awoke me."
+
+She leaned forward and lifted the rose, touching her face with it.
+
+"It was so simple, after all--this secret of the world's malady. You
+read it for me. I know now what is written on the eternal tablets--to
+live one's own life as it is given, in honor, charity, without malice;
+to seek happiness where it is offered; to share it when possible; to
+uplift. But, most of all, to be happy and accept happiness as a
+heavenly gift that is to be shared with as many as possible. And this
+I have learned since ... I knew you."
+
+The light in the room had grown dimmer; I leaned forward to see her
+face.
+
+"Am I not right?" she asked.
+
+"I think so.... I am learning from you."
+
+"But you taught this creed to me!" she cried.
+
+"No, you are teaching it to me. And the first lesson was a gift,...
+your friendship."
+
+"Freely given, gladly given," she said, quickly. "And yours I have
+in return,... and will keep always--always--"
+
+She crushed the rose against her mouth, looking at me with inscrutable
+gray eyes, as I had seen her look at me once at La Trappe, once in
+Morsbronn.
+
+I picked up my gloves and riding-crop; as I rose she stood up in the
+dusk, looking straight at me.
+
+I said something about Sylvia Elven and my compliments to her,
+something else about the happiness I felt at coming to the chateau
+again, something about her own goodness to me--Heaven knows what!--and
+she gave me her hand and I held it a moment.
+
+"Will you come again?" she asked.
+
+I stammered a promise and made my way blindly to the door which a
+servant threw open, flung myself astride my horse, and galloped out
+into the waste of moorland, seeing nothing, hearing nothing save the
+low roar of the sea, like the growl of restless lions.
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+A RESTLESS MAN
+
+
+When I came into camp, late that afternoon, I found Byram and Speed
+groping about among a mass of newspapers and letters, the first mail
+we circus people had received for nearly two months.
+
+There were letters for all who were accustomed to look for letters
+from families, relatives, or friends at home. I never received
+letters--I had received none of that kind in nearly a score of years,
+yet that curious habit of expectancy had not perished in me, and I
+found myself standing with the others while Byram distributed the
+letters, one by one, until the last home-stamped envelope had been
+given out, and all around me the happy circus-folk were reading in
+homesick contentment. I know of no lonelier man than he who lingers
+empty-handed among those who pore over the home mail.
+
+But there were newspapers enough and to spare--French, English,
+American; and I sat down by my lion's cage and attempted to form some
+opinion of the state of affairs in France. And, as far as I could read
+between the lines, this is what I gathered, partly from my own
+knowledge of past events, partly from the foreign papers, particularly
+the English:
+
+When, on the 3d of September, the humiliating news arrived that the
+Emperor was a prisoner and his army annihilated, the government, for
+the first time in its existence, acted with promptness and decision
+in a matter of importance. Secret orders were sent by couriers to the
+Bank of France, to the Louvre, and to the Invalides; and, that same
+night, train after train rushed out of Paris loaded with the
+battle-flags from the Invalides, the most important pictures and
+antique sculptures from the Louvre, the greater part of the gold and
+silver from the Bank of France, and, last but by no means least, the
+crown and jewels of France.
+
+This Speed and I already knew.
+
+These trains were despatched to Brest, and at the same time a telegram
+was directed to the admiral commanding the French iron-clad fleet in
+the Baltic to send an armored cruiser to Brest with all haste
+possible, there to await further orders, but to be fully prepared in
+any event to take on board certain goods designated in cipher. This we
+knew in a general way, though Speed understood that Lorient was to be
+the port of departure.
+
+The plan was a good one and apparently simple; and there seemed to be
+no doubt that jewels, battle-flags, pictures, and coin were already
+beyond danger from the German armies, now plodding cautiously
+southward toward the capital, which was slowly recovering from its
+revolutionary convulsions and preparing for a siege.
+
+The plan, then, was simple; but, for an equally simple reason, it
+miscarried in the following manner. Early in August, while the French
+armies from the Rhine to the Meuse were being punished with frightful
+regularity and precision, the French Mediterranean squadron had sailed
+up and down that interesting expanse of water, apparently in patriotic
+imitation of the historic
+
+ "King of France and twenty thousand men."
+For, it now appeared, the French admiral was afraid that the Spanish
+navy might aid the German ships in harassing the French transports,
+which at that time were frantically engaged in ferrying a sea-sick
+Algerian army across the Mediterranean to the mother country.
+
+Of course there was no ground for the admiral's suspicions. The German
+war-ships stayed in their own harbors, the Spaniards made no offensive
+alliance with Prussia, and at length the French admiral sailed
+triumphantly away with his battleships and cruisers.
+
+On the 7th of August the squadron of four battleships, two armored
+corvettes, and a despatch-boat steamed out of Brest, picking up on its
+way northward three more iron-clad frigates, and several cruisers and
+despatch-boats; and on the 11th of August, 1870, the squadron anchored
+off Heligoland, from whence Admiral Fourichon proclaimed the blockade
+of the German coast.
+
+It must have been an imposing sight! There lay the great iron-clads,
+the _Magnanime_, the _Heroine_, the _Provence_, the _Valeureuse_, the
+_Revanche_, the _Invincible_, the _Couronne_! There lay the cruisers,
+the _Atalante_, the _Renaud_, the _Cosmao_, the _Decres_! There, too,
+lay the single-screw despatch-boats _Reine-Hortense_, _Renard_, and
+_Dayot_. And upon their armored decks, three by three, stalked the
+French admirals. Yet, without cynicism, it may be said that the
+admirals of France fought better, in 1870, on dry land than they did
+on the ocean.
+
+However, the German ships stayed peacefully inside their fortified
+ports, and the three French admirals pranced peacefully up and down
+outside, until the God of battles intervened and trouble naturally
+ensued.
+
+On the 6th of September all the seas of Europe were set clashing under
+a cyclone that rose to a howling hurricane. The British iron-clad
+_Captain_ foundered off Finistere; the French fleet in the Baltic was
+scattered to the four winds.
+
+In the midst of the tempest a French despatch-boat, the _Hirondelle_,
+staggered into sight, signalling the flag-ship. Then the French
+admiral for the first time learned the heart-breaking news of Sedan,
+and as the tempest-tortured battle-ship drove seaward the signals went
+up: "Make for Brest!" The blockade of the German coast was at an
+end.
+
+On the 4th of September the treasure-laden trains had left Paris for
+Brest. On the 5th the _Hirondelle_ steamed out towards the fleet with
+the news from Sedan and the orders for the detachment of a cruiser to
+receive the crown jewels. On the 6th the news and the orders were
+signalled to the flag-ship; but the God of battles unchained a tempest
+which countermanded the order and hurled the iron-clads into outer
+darkness.
+
+Some of the ships crept into English ports, burning their last lumps
+of coal, some drifted into Dunkerque; but the flag-ship disappeared
+for nine long days, at last to reappear off Cherbourg, a stricken
+thing with a stricken crew and an admiral broken-hearted.
+
+So, for days and days, the treasure-laden trains must have stood
+helpless in the station at Brest, awaiting the cruiser that did not
+come.
+
+On the 17th of September the French Channel squadron, of seven heavy
+iron-clads, unexpectedly steamed into Lorient harbor and dropped
+anchor amid thundering salutes from the forts; and the next day one of
+the treasure-trains came flying into Lorient, to the unspeakable
+relief of the authorities in the beleaguered capital.
+
+Speed and I already knew the secret orders sent. The treasures,
+including the crown diamonds, were to be stored in the citadel, and an
+armored cruiser was to lie off the arsenal with banked fires, ready to
+receive the treasures at the first signal and steam to the French
+fortified port of Saigon in Cochin China, by a course already
+determined.
+
+Why on earth those orders had been changed so that the cruiser was to
+lie off Groix I could not imagine, unless some plot had been
+discovered in Lorient which had made it advisable to shift the
+location of the treasures for the third time.
+
+Pondering there at the tent door, amid my heap of musty newspapers, I
+looked out into the late, gray afternoon and saw the maids of Paradise
+passing and repassing across the bridge with a clicking of wooden
+shoes and white head-dresses glimmering in the dusk of the trees.
+
+The town had filled within a day or two; the Paradise coiffe was not
+the only coiffe to be seen in the square; there was the
+delicate-winged head-dress of Faouet, the beautiful coiffes of
+Rosporden, Sainte-Anne d'Auray, and Pont Aven; there, too, flashed the
+scarlet skirts of Bannalec and the gorgeous embroidered bodices of the
+interior; there were the men of Quimperle in velvet, the men of
+Penmarch, the men of Faouet with their dark, Spanish-like faces and
+their sombreros, and their short yellow jackets and leggings. All in
+holiday costume, too, for the maids were stiff in silver and lace, and
+the men wore carved sabots and embroidered gilets.
+
+"Governor," I called out to Byram, "the town is filling fast. It's
+like a Pardon in Morbihan; we'll pack the old tent to the
+nigger's-heaven!"
+
+"It's a fact," he said, pushing his glasses up over his forehead and
+fanning his face with his silk hat. "We're going to open to a lot of
+money, Mr. Scarlett, and ... I ain't goin' to forgit them that stood
+by me, neither."
+
+He placed a heavy hand on my shoulder, and, stooping, peered into my
+face.
+
+"Air you sick, m' friend?" he asked.
+
+"I, governor? Why, no."
+
+"Ain't been bit by that there paltry camuel nor nothin', hev ye?"
+
+"No; do I look ill?"
+
+"Peaked--kind o' peaked. White, with dark succles under your eyes.
+Air you nervous?"
+
+"About the lions? Oh no. Don't worry about me, governor."
+
+He sighed, adjusted his spectacles, and blew his nose.
+
+"Mr. Speed--he's worriting, too; he says that Empress Khatoun means
+to hev ye one o' these days."
+
+"You tell Mr. Speed to worry over his own affairs--that child,
+Jacqueline, for instance. I suppose she made her jump without trouble
+to-day? I was too nervous to stay and watch her."
+
+"M' friend," said Byram, in solemn ecstasy, "I take off my hat to
+that there kid!" And he did so with a flourish. "You orter seen her;
+she hung on that flying trap, jest as easy an' sassy! We was all half
+crazy. Speed he grew blue around the gills; Miss Crystal, a-swingin'
+there in the riggin' by her knees, kept a swallerin' an' lickin' her
+lips, she was that scared.
+
+"'Ready?' she calls out in a sort o' quaver.
+
+"'Ready!' sez little Jacqueline, cool as ice, swingin' by her knees.
+'Go!' sez Miss Crystal, an' the kid let go, an' Miss Crystal grabbed
+her by the ankles. 'Ready?' calls up Speed, beside the tank.
+
+"'Ready!' sez the kid, smilin'. 'Drop!' cries Speed. An' Jacqueline
+shot down like a blazing star--whir! swish! splash! All over! An' that
+there nervy kid a floatin' an' a sportin' like a minnie-fish at
+t'other end o' the tank! Oh, gosh, but it was grand! It was jest--"
+
+Speech failed; he walked away, waving his arms, his rusty silk hat on
+the back of his head.
+
+A few moments later drums began to roll from the square. Speed,
+passing, called out to me that the conscripts were leaving for
+Lorient; so I walked down to the bridge, where the crowd had gathered
+and where a tall gendarme stood, his blue-and-white uniform distinct
+in the early evening light. The mayor was there, too, dressed in his
+best, waddling excitedly about, and buttonholing at intervals a young
+lieutenant of infantry, who appeared to be extremely bored.
+
+There were the conscripts of the Garde Mobile, an anxious peasant
+rabble, awkward, resigned, docile as cattle. Here stood a farmer,
+reeking of his barnyard; here two woodsmen from the forest, belted and
+lean; but the majority were men of the sea, heavy-limbed, sun-scorched
+fellows, with little, keen eyes always half closed, and big, helpless
+fists hanging. Some carried their packets slung from hip to shoulder,
+some tied their parcels to the muzzles of their obsolete muskets. A
+number wore the boatman's smock, others the farmer's blouse of linen,
+but the greater number were clad in the blue-wool jersey and cloth
+beret of the sailor.
+
+Husbands, sons, lovers, looked silently at the women. The men uttered
+no protest, no reproach; the women wept very quietly. In their hearts
+that strange mysticism of the race predominated--the hopeless
+acceptance of a destiny which has, for centuries, left its imprint in
+the sad eyes of the Breton. Generations of martyrdom leave a cowed and
+spiritually fatigued race which breeds stoics.
+
+Like great white blossoms, the spotless head-dresses of the maids of
+Paradise swayed and bowed above the crowd.
+
+A little old woman stood beside a sailor, saying to anybody who would
+listen to her: "My son--they are taking my son. Why should they take
+my son?"
+
+Another said: "They are taking mine, too, but he cannot fight on
+land. He knows the sea; he is not afraid at sea. Can nobody help us?
+He cannot fight on land; he does not know how!"
+
+A woman carrying a sleeping baby stood beside the drummers at the
+fountain. Five children dragged at her skirts and peered up at the
+mayor, who shrugged his shoulders and shook his fat head.
+
+"What can I do? He must march with the others, your man," said the
+mayor, again and again. But the woman with the baby never ceased her
+eternal question: "What can we live on if you take him? I do not mean
+to complain too much, but we have nothing. What can we live on, m'sieu
+the mayor?"
+
+But now the drummers had stepped out into the centre of the square and
+were drawing their drum-sticks from the brass sockets in their
+baldricks.
+
+"Good-bye! Good-bye!" sobbed the maids of Paradise, giving both hands
+to their lovers. "We will pray for you!"
+
+"Pray for us," said the men, holding their sweethearts' hands.
+
+"Attention!" cried the officer, a slim, hectic lieutenant from
+Lorient.
+
+The mayor handed him the rolls, and the lieutenant, facing the
+shuffling single rank, began to call off:
+
+"Roux of Bannalec?"
+
+"Here, monsieur--"
+
+"Don't say, 'Here, monsieur!' Say, 'Present!' Now, Roux?"
+
+"Present, monsieur--"
+
+"Idiot! Kedrec?"
+
+"Present!"
+
+"That's right! Penmarch?"
+
+"Present!"
+
+"Rhuis of Sainte-Yssel?"
+
+"Present!"
+
+"Herve of Paradise Beacon?"
+
+"Present!"
+
+"Laenec?"
+
+"Present!"
+
+"Duhamel?"
+
+"Present!"
+
+The officer moistened his lips, turned the page, and continued:
+
+"Carnac of Alincourt?"
+
+There was a silence, then a voice cried, "Crippled!"
+
+"Mark him off, lieutenant," said the mayor, pompously; "he's our
+little hunchback."
+
+"Shall I mark you in his place?" asked the lieutenant, with a smile
+that turned the mayor's blood to water. "No? You would make a fine
+figure for a forlorn hope."
+
+A man burst out laughing, but he was half crazed with grief, and his
+acrid mirth found no response. Then the roll-call was resumed:
+
+"Gestel?"
+
+"Present!"
+
+"Garenne!"
+
+There was another silence.
+
+"Robert Garenne!" repeated the officer, sharply. "Monsieur the mayor
+has informed me that you are liable for military duty. If you are
+present, answer to your name or take the consequences!"
+
+The poacher, who had been lounging on the bridge, slouched slowly
+forward and touched his cap.
+
+"I am organizing a franc corps," he said, with a deadly sidelong
+glance at the mayor, who now stood beside the lieutenant.
+
+"You can explain that at Lorient," replied the lieutenant. "Fall in
+there!"
+
+"But I--"
+
+"Fall in!" repeated the lieutenant.
+
+The poacher's visage became inflamed. He hesitated, looking around for
+an avenue of escape. Then he caught my disgusted eye.
+
+"For the last time," said the lieutenant, coolly drawing his
+revolver, "I order you to fall in!"
+
+The poacher backed into the straggling rank, glaring.
+
+"Now," said the lieutenant, "you may go to your house and get your
+packet. If we have left when you return, follow and report at the
+arsenal in Lorient. Fall out! March!"
+
+The poacher backed out to the rear of the rank, turned on his heel,
+and strode away towards the coast, clinched fists swinging by his
+side.
+
+There were not many names on the roll, and the call was quickly
+finished. And now the infantry drummers raised their sticks high in
+the air, there was a sharp click, a crash, and the square echoed.
+
+"March!" cried the officer; and, drummers ahead, the long single rank
+shuffled into fours, and the column started, enveloped in a throng of
+women and children.
+
+"Good-bye!" sobbed the women. "We will pray!"
+
+"Good-bye! Pray!"
+
+The crowd pressed on into the dusk. Far up the darkening road the
+white coiffes of the women glimmered; the drum-roll softened to a
+distant humming.
+
+The children, who did not understand, had gathered around a hunchback,
+the exempt cripple of the roll-call.
+
+"Ho! Fois!" I heard him say to the crowd of wondering little ones,
+"if I were not exempt I'd teach these Prussians to dance the
+farandole to my biniou! Oui, dame! And perhaps I'll do it yet, spite
+of the crooked back I was not born with--as everybody knows! Oui,
+dame! Everybody knows I was born as straight as the next man!"
+
+The children gaped, listening to the distant drumming, now almost
+inaudible.
+
+The cripple rose, lighted a lantern, and walked slowly out toward the
+cliffs, carrying himself with that uncanny dignity peculiar to
+hunchbacks. And as he walked he sang, in his thin, sharp voice, the
+air of "The Three Captains":
+
+ "J'ai eu dans son coeur la plac' la plus belle,
+ La plac' la plus belle.
+ J'ai passe trois ans, trois ans avec elle,
+ Trois ans avec elle.
+ J'ai eu trois enfants qui sont capitaines,
+ Qui sont capitaines.
+ L'un est a Bordeaux, l'autre a la Rochelle,
+ L'autre a la Rochelle.
+ Le troisieme ici, caressent les belles,
+ Caressent les belles."
+
+Far out across the shadowy cliffs I heard his lingering, strident
+chant, and caught the spark of his lantern; then silence and darkness
+fell over the deserted square; the awed children, fingers interlocked,
+crept homeward through the dusk; there was no sound save the rippling
+wash of the river along the quay of stone.
+
+Tired, a trifle sad, thinking perhaps of those home letters which had
+come to all save me, I leaned against the river wall, staring at the
+darkness; and over me came creeping that apathy which I had already
+learned to recognize and even welcome as a mental anaesthetic which set
+that dark sentinel, care, a-drowsing.
+
+What did I care, after all? Life had stopped for me years before;
+there was left only a shell in which that unseen little trickster, the
+heart, kept tap-tapping away against a tired body. Was that what we
+call life? The sorry parody!
+
+A shape slunk near me through the dusk, furtive, uncertain. "Lizard,"
+I said, indifferently. He came up, my gun on his ragged shoulder.
+
+"You go with your class?" I asked.
+
+"No, I go to the forest," he said, hoarsely. "You shall hear from
+me."
+
+I nodded.
+
+"Are you content?" he demanded, lingering.
+
+The creature wanted sympathy, though he did not know it. I gave him my
+hand and told him he was a brave man; and he went away, noiselessly,
+leaving me musing by the river wall.
+
+After a long while--or it may only have been a few minutes--the square
+began to fill again with the first groups of women, children, and old
+men who had escorted the departing conscripts a little way on their
+march to Lorient. Back they came, the maids of Paradise silent,
+tearful, pitifully acquiescent; the women of Bannalec, Faouet,
+Rosporden, Quimperle chattering excitedly about the scene they had
+witnessed. The square began to fill; lanterns were lighted around the
+fountain; the two big lamps with their brass reflectors in front of
+the mayor's house illuminated the pavement and the thin tree-foliage
+with a yellow radiance.
+
+The chatter grew louder as new groups in all sorts of gay head-dresses
+arrived; laughter began to be heard; presently the squealing of the
+biniou pipes broke out from the bowling-green, where, high on a bench
+supported by a plank laid across two cider barrels, the hunchback sat,
+skirling the farandole. Ah, what a world entire was this lost little
+hamlet of Paradise, where merrymakers trod on the mourners' heels,
+where the scream of the biniou drowned the floating note of the
+passing bell, where Misery drew the curtains of her bed and lay
+sleepless, listening to Gayety dancing breathless to the patter of a
+coquette's wooden shoes!
+
+Long tables were improvised in the square, piled up with bread,
+sardines, puddings, hams, and cakes. Casks of cider, propped on skids,
+dotted the outskirts of the bowling-green, where the mayor, enthroned
+in his own arm-chair, majestically gave his orders in a voice
+thickened by pork, onions, and gravy.
+
+Truly enough, half of Finistere and Morbihan was gathering at Paradise
+for a fete. The slow Breton imagination had been fired by our circus
+bills and posters; ancient Armorica was stirring in her slumber,
+roused to consciousness by the Yankee bill-poster.
+
+At the inn all rooms were taken; every house had become an inn; barns,
+stables, granaries had their guests; fishermen's huts on coast and
+cliff were bright with coiffes and embroidered jerseys.
+
+In their misfortune, the lonely women of Paradise recognized in this
+influx a godsend--a few francs to gain with which to face those coming
+wintry months while their men were absent. And they opened their tiny
+houses to those who asked a lodging.
+
+The crowds which had earlier in the evening gathered to gape at our
+big tent were now noisiest in the square, where the endless drone of
+the pipes intoned the farandole.
+
+A few of our circus folk had come down to enjoy the picturesque
+spectacle. Speed, standing with Jacqueline beside me, began to laugh
+and beat time to the wild music. A pretty maid of Bannalec, white
+coiffe and scarlet skirts a-flutter, called out with the broad freedom
+of the chastest of nations: "There is the lover I could pray for--if
+he can dance the farandole!"
+
+"I'll show you whether I can dance the farandole, ma belle!" cried
+Speed, and caught her hand, but she snatched her brown fingers away
+and danced off, laughing: "He who loves must follow, follow, follow
+the farandole!"
+
+Speed started to follow, but Jacqueline laid a timid hand on his arm.
+
+"I dance, M'sieu Speed," she said, her face flushing under her
+elf-locks.
+
+"You blessed child," he cried, "you shall dance till you drop to
+your knees on the bowling-green!" And, hand clasping hand, they swung
+out into the farandole. For an instant only I caught a glimpse of
+Jacqueline's blissful face, and her eyes like blue stars burning; then
+they darkened into silhouettes against the yellow glare of the
+lanterns and vanished.
+
+Byram rambled up for a moment, to comment on the quaint scene from a
+showman's point of view. "It would fill the tent in old Noo York, but
+it's n. g. in this here country, where everybody's either a coryphee
+or a clown or a pantaloon! Camuels ain't no rara avises in the Sairy,
+an' no niggers go to burnt-cork shows. Phylosophy is the thing, Mr.
+Scarlett! Ruminate! Ruminate!"
+
+I promised to do so, and the old man rambled away, coat and vest on
+his arm, silk hat cocked over his left eye, the lamp-light shining on
+the buckles of his suspenders. Dear old governor!--dear, vulgar
+incarnation of those fast vanishing pioneers who invented
+civilization, finding none; who, self-taught, unashamed taught their
+children the only truths they knew, that the nation was worthy of all
+good, all devotion, and all knowledge that her sons could bring her to
+her glory that she might one day fulfil her destiny as greatest among
+the great on earth.
+
+The whining Breton bagpipe droned in my ears; the dancers flew past;
+laughter and cries arose from the tables in the square where the
+curate of St. Julien stood, forefinger wagging, soundly rating an
+intoxicated but apologetic Breton in the costume of Faouet.
+
+I was tired--tired of it all; weary of costumes and strange customs,
+weary of strange tongues, of tinsel and mummers, and tarnished finery;
+sick of the sawdust and the rank stench of beasts--and the vagabond
+life--and the hopeless end of it all--the shabby end of a useless
+life--a death at last amid strangers! Soldiers in red breeches,
+peasants in embroidered jackets, strolling mountebanks all tinselled
+and rouged--they were all one to me.... I wanted my own land.... I
+wanted my own people.... I wanted to go home ... home!--and die, when
+my time came, under the skies I knew as a child,... under that
+familiar moon which once silvered my nursery windows....
+
+I turned away across the bridge out into the dark road. Long before I
+came to the smoky, silent camp I heard the monotonous roaring of my
+lions, pacing their shadowy dens.
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+THE CIRCUS
+
+
+A little after sunrise on the day set for our first performance, Speed
+sauntered into my dressing-room in excellent humor, saying that not
+only had the village of Paradise already filled up with the peasantry
+of Finistere and Morbihan, but every outlying hamlet from St. Julien
+to Pont Aven was overflowing; that many had even camped last night
+along the roadside; in short, that the country was unmistakably
+aroused to the importance of the Anti-Prussian Republican circus and
+the Flying Mermaid of Ker-Ys.
+
+I listened to him almost indifferently, saying that I was very glad
+for the governor's sake, and continued to wash a deep scratch on my
+left arm, using salt water to allay the irritation left by Aicha's
+closely pared claws--the vixen.
+
+But the scratch had not poisoned me; I was in fine physical condition;
+rehearsals had kept us all in trim; our animals, too, were in good
+shape; and the machinery started without a creak when, an hour later,
+Byram himself opened the box-office at the tent-door and began to sell
+tickets to an immense crowd for the first performance, which was set
+for two o'clock that afternoon.
+
+I had had an unpleasant hour's work with the lions, during which
+Marghouz, a beast hitherto lazy and docile, had attempted to creep
+behind me. Again I had betrayed irritation; again the lions saw it,
+understood it, and remembered. Aicha tore my sleeve; when I dragged
+Timour Melek's huge jaws apart he endured the operation patiently, but
+as soon as I gave the signal to retire he sprang snarling to the
+floor, mane on end, and held his ground, just long enough to defy me.
+Poor devils! Who but I knew that they were right and I was wrong! Who
+but I understood what lack of freedom meant to the strong--meant to
+caged creatures, unrighteously deprived of liberty! Though born in
+captivity, wild things change nothing; they sleep by day, walk by
+night, follow as well as they can the instincts which a caged life
+cannot crush in them, nor a miserable, artificial existence
+obliterate.
+
+They are right to resist.
+
+I mentioned something of this to Speed as I was putting on my coat to
+go out, but he only scowled at me, saying: "Your usefulness as a
+lion-tamer is ended, my friend; you are a fool to enter that cage
+again, and I'm going to tell Byram."
+
+"Don't spoil the governor's pleasure now," I said, irritably; "the
+old man is out there selling tickets with both hands, while little
+Griggs counts receipts in a stage whisper. Let him alone, Speed; I'm
+going to give it up soon, anyway--not now--not while the governor has
+a chance to make a little money; but soon--very soon. You are right; I
+can't control anything now--not even myself. I must give up my lions,
+after all."
+
+"When?" said Speed.
+
+"Soon--I don't know. I'm tired--really tired. I want to go home."
+
+"Home! Have you one?" he asked, with a faint sneer of surprise.
+
+"Yes; a rather extensive lodging, bounded east and west by two
+oceans, north by the lakes, south by the gulf. Landlord's a
+relation--my Uncle Sam."
+
+"Are you really going home, Scarlett?" he asked, curiously.
+
+"I have nothing to keep me here, have I?"
+
+"Not unless you choose to settle down and ... marry."
+
+I looked at him; presently my face began to redden; and, "What do you
+mean?" I asked, angrily.
+
+He replied, in a very mild voice, that he did not mean anything that
+might irritate me.
+
+I said, "Speed, don't mind my temper; I can't seem to help it any
+more; something has changed me, something has gone wrong."
+
+"Perhaps something has gone right," he mused, looking up at the
+flying trapeze, where Jacqueline swung dangling above the tank,
+watching us with sea-blue eyes.
+
+After a moment's thought I said: "Speed, what the devil do you mean
+by that remark?"
+
+"Now you're angry again," he said, wearily.
+
+"No, I'm not. Tell me what you mean."
+
+"Oh, what do you imagine I mean?" he retorted. "Do you think I'm
+blind? Do you suppose I've watched you all these years and don't know
+you? Am I an ass, Scarlett? Be fair; am I?"
+
+"No; not an ass," I said.
+
+"Then let me alone--unless you want plain speaking instead of a
+bray."
+
+"I do want it."
+
+"Which?"
+
+"You know; go on."
+
+"Am I to tell you the truth?"
+
+"As you interpret it--yes."
+
+"Very well, my friend; then, at your respectful request, I beg to
+inform you that you are in love with Madame de Vassart--and have been
+for months."
+
+I did not pretend surprise; I knew he was going to say it. Yet it
+enraged me that he should think it and say it.
+
+"You are wrong," I said, steadily.
+
+"No, Scarlett; I am right."
+
+"You are wrong," I repeated.
+
+"Don't say that again," he retorted. "If you do not know it, you
+ought to. Don't be unfair; don't be cowardly. Face it, man! By Heaven,
+you've got to face it some time--here, yonder, abroad, on the ocean,
+at home--no matter where, you've got to face it some day and tell
+yourself the truth!"
+
+His words hurt me for a moment; then, as I listened, that strange
+apathy once more began to creep over me. Was it really the truth he
+had told me? Was it? Well--and then? What meaning had it to me?... Of
+what help was it?... of what portent?... of what use?... What door did
+it unlock? Surely not the door I had closed upon myself so many years
+ago!
+
+Something of my thoughts he may have divined as I stood brooding in
+the sunny tent, staring listlessly at my own shadow on the floor, for
+he laid his hand on my shoulder and said: "Surely, Scarlett, if
+happiness can be reborn in Paradise, it can be reborn here. I know
+you; I have known you for many years. And in all that time you have
+never fallen below my ideal!"
+
+"What are you saying, Speed?" I asked, rousing from my lethargy to
+shake his hand from my shoulder.
+
+"The truth. In all these years of intimacy, familiarity has never
+bred contempt in me; I am not your equal in anything; it does not hurt
+me to say so. I have watched you as a younger brother watches,
+lovingly, jealous yet proud of you, alert for a failing or a weakness
+which I never found--or, if I thought I found a flaw in you, knowing
+that it was but part of a character too strong, too generous for me to
+criticise."
+
+"Speed," I said, astonished, "are you talking about me--about
+_me_--a mountebank--and a failure at that? You know I'm a failure--a
+nobody--" I hesitated, touched by his kindness. "Your loyalty to me
+is all I have. I wish it were true that I am such a man as you believe
+me to be."
+
+"It is true," he said, almost sullenly. "If it were not, no man
+would say it of you--though a woman might. Listen to me, Scarlett. I
+tell you that a man shipwrecked on the world's outer rocks--if he does
+not perish--makes the better pilot afterwards."
+
+"But ... I perished, Speed."
+
+"It is not true," he said, violently; "but you will if you don't
+steer a truer course than you have. Scarlett, answer me!"
+
+"Answer you? What?"
+
+"Are you in love?"
+
+"Yes," I said.
+
+He waited, looked up at me, then dropped his hands in his pockets and
+turned away toward the interior of the tent where Jacqueline, having
+descended from the rigging, stood, drawing her slim fingers across the
+surface of the water in the tank.
+
+I walked out through the tent door, threading my way among the curious
+crowds gathered not only at the box-office, but even around the great
+tent as far as I could see. Byram hailed me with jovial abandon,
+perspiring in his shirt-sleeves, silk hat on the back of his head;
+little Grigg made one of his most admired grimaces and shook the heavy
+money-box at me; Horan waved his hat above his head and pointed at the
+throng with a huge thumb. I smiled at them all and walked on.
+
+Cloud and sunshine alternated on that capricious November morning; the
+sea-wind was warm; the tincture of winter had gone. On that day,
+however, I saw wavering strings of wild ducks flying south; and the
+little hedge-birds of different kinds were already flocking amiably
+together in twittering bands that filled the leafless blackthorns on
+the cliffs;--true prophets, all, of that distant cold, gathering
+somewhere in the violet north.
+
+I walked fast across the moors, as though I had a destination. And I
+had; yet when I understood it I sheered off, only to turn again and
+stare fascinated in the direction of the object that frightened me.
+
+There it rose against the seaward cliffs, the little tower of Trecourt
+farm, sea-smitten and crusted, wind-worn, stained, gray as the
+lichened rocks scattered across the moorland. Over it the white gulls
+pitched and tossed in a windy sky; beyond crawled the ancient and
+wrinkled sea.
+
+"It is a strange thing," I said aloud, "to find love at the world's
+edge." I looked blindly across the gray waste. "But I have found it
+too late."
+
+The wind blew furiously; I heard the gulls squealing in the sky, the
+far thunder of the surf.
+
+Then, looking seaward again, for the first time I noticed that the
+black cruiser was gone, that nothing now lay between the cliffs and
+the hazy headland of Groix save a sheet of lonely water spreading
+league on league to meet a flat, gray sky.
+
+Why had the cruiser sailed? As I stood there, brooding, to my numbed
+ears the moor-winds bore a sound coming from a great distance--the
+sound of cannon--little, soft reports, all but inaudible in the wind
+and the humming undertone of the breakers. Yet I knew the sound, and
+turned my unquiet eyes to the sea, where nothing moved save the far
+crests of waves.
+
+For a while I stood listening, searching the sea, until a voice hailed
+me, and I turned to find Kelly Eyre almost at my elbow.
+
+"There is a man in the village haranguing the people," he said,
+abruptly. "We thought you ought to know."
+
+"A man haranguing the people," I repeated. "What of it?"
+
+"Speed thinks the man is Buckhurst."
+
+"What!" I cried.
+
+"There's something else, too," he said, soberly, and drew a telegram
+from his pocket.
+
+I seized it, and studied the fluttering sheet:
+
+ "The governor of Lorient, on complaint of the mayor of
+ Paradise, forbids the American exhibition, and orders
+ the individual Byram to travel immediately to Lorient
+ with his so-called circus, where a British steamship
+ will transport the personnel, baggage, and animals to
+ British territory. The mayor of Paradise will see that
+ this order of expulsion is promptly executed.
+
+ "(Signed) Breteuil.
+ "Chief of Police."
+
+"Where did you get that telegram?" I asked.
+
+"It's a copy; the mayor came with it. Byram does not know about it."
+
+"Don't let him know it!" I said, quickly; "this thing will kill him,
+I believe. Where is that fool of a mayor? Come on, Kelly! Stay close
+beside me." And I set off at a swinging pace, down the hollow, out
+across the left bank of the little river, straight to the bridge,
+which we reached almost on a run.
+
+"Look there!" cried my companion, as we came in sight of the square.
+
+The square was packed with Breton peasants; near the fountain two
+cider barrels had been placed, a plank thrown across them, and on this
+plank stood a man holding a red flag.
+
+The man was John Buckhurst.
+
+When I came nearer I could see that he wore a red scarf across his
+breast; a little nearer and I could hear his passionless voice
+sounding; nearer still, I could distinguish every clear-cut word:
+
+"Men of the sea, men of that ancient Armorica which, for a thousand
+years, has suffered serfdom, I come to you bearing no sword. You need
+none; you are free under this red flag I raise above you."
+
+He lifted the banner, shaking out the red folds.
+
+"Yet if I come to you bearing no sword, I come with something better,
+something more powerful, something so resistless that, using it as
+your battle-cry, the world is yours!
+
+"I come bearing the watchword of world-brotherhood--Peace, Love,
+Equality! I bear it from your battle-driven brothers, scourged to the
+battlements of Paris by the demons of a wicked government! I bear it
+from the devastated towns of the provinces, from your homeless
+brothers of Alsace and Lorraine.
+
+"Peace, Love, Equality! All this is yours for the asking. The commune
+will be proclaimed throughout France; Paris is aroused, Lyons is
+ready, Bordeaux watches, Marseilles waits!
+
+"You call your village Paradise--yet you starve here. Let this little
+Breton village be a paradise in truth--a shrine for future happy
+pilgrims who shall say: 'Here first were sewn the seeds of the world's
+liberty! Here first bloomed the perfect flower of universal
+brotherhood!"
+
+He bent his sleek, gray head meekly, pausing as though in profound
+meditation. Suddenly he raised his head; his tone changed; a faint
+ring of defiance sounded under the smooth flow of words.
+
+He began with a blasphemous comparison, alluding to the money-changers
+in the temple--a subtle appeal to righteous violence.
+
+"It rests with us to cleanse the broad temple of our country and
+drive from it the thieves and traitors who enslave us! How can we do
+it? They are strong; we are weak. Ah, but _are_ they truly strong?
+You say they have armies? Armies are composed of men. These men are
+your brothers, whipped forth to die--for what? For the pleasure of a
+few aristocrats. Who was it dragged your husbands and sons away from
+your arms, leaving you to starve? The governor of Lorient. Who is he?
+An aristocrat, paid to scourge your husbands and children to
+battle--paid, perhaps, by Prussia to betray them, too!"
+
+A low murmur rose from the people. Buckhurst swept the throng with
+colorless eyes.
+
+"Under the commune we will have peace. Why? Because there can be no
+hunger, no distress, no homeless ones where the wealth of all is
+distributed equally. We will have no wars, because there will be
+nothing to fight for. We will have no aristocrats where all must labor
+for the common good; where all land is equally divided; where love,
+equality, and brotherhood are the only laws--"
+
+"Where's the mayor?" I whispered to Eyre.
+
+"In his house; Speed is with him."
+
+"Come on, then," I said, pushing my way around the outskirts of the
+crowd to the mayor's house.
+
+The door was shut and the blinds drawn, but a knock brought Speed to
+the door, revolver in hand.
+
+"Oh," he said, grimly, "it's time you arrived. Come in."
+
+The mayor was lying in his arm-chair, frightened, sulky, obstinate,
+his fat form swathed in a red sash.
+
+"O-ho!" I said, sharply, "so you already wear the colors of the
+revolution, do you?"
+
+"Dame, they tied it over my waistcoat," he said, "and there are no
+gendarmes to help me arrest them--"
+
+"Never mind that just now," I interrupted; "what I want to know is
+why you wrote the governor of Lorient to expel our circus."
+
+"That's my own affair," he snapped; "besides, who said I wrote?"
+
+"Idiot," I said, "somebody paid you to do it. Who was it?"
+
+The mayor, hunched up in his chair, shut his mouth obstinately.
+
+"Somebody paid you," I repeated; "you would never have complained of
+us unless somebody paid you, because our circus is bringing money into
+your village. Come, my friend, that was easy to guess. Now let me
+guess again that Buckhurst paid you to complain of us."
+
+The mayor looked slyly at me out of the corner of his mottled eyes,
+but he remained mute.
+
+"Very well," said I; "when the troops from Lorient hear of this
+revolution in Paradise, they'll come and chase these communards into
+the sea. And after that they'll stand you up against a convenient wall
+and give you thirty seconds for absolution--"
+
+"Stop!" burst out the mayor, struggling to his feet. "What am I to
+do? This gentleman, Monsieur Buckhurst, will slay me if I disobey him!
+Besides," he added, with cowardly cunning, "they are going to do the
+same thing in Lorient, too--and everywhere--in Paris, in Bordeaux, in
+Marseilles--even in Quimperle! And when all these cities are flying
+the red flag it won't be comfortable for cities that fly the
+tricolor." He began to bluster. "I'm mayor of Paradise, and I won't
+be bullied! You get out of here with your circus and your foolish
+elephants! I haven't any gendarmes just now to drive you out, but you
+had better start, all the same--before night."
+
+"Oh," I said, "before night? Why before night?"
+
+"Wait and see then," he muttered. "Anyway, get out of my house--d'
+ye hear?"
+
+"We are going to give that performance at two o'clock this
+afternoon," I said. "After that, another to-morrow at the same hour,
+and on every day at the same hour, as long as it pays. Do you
+understand?"
+
+"Perfectly," sneered the mayor.
+
+"And," I continued, "if the governor of Lorient sends gendarmes to
+conduct us to the steamship in Lorient harbor, they'll take with them
+somebody besides the circus folk."
+
+"You mean me?" he inquired.
+
+"I do."
+
+"What do I care?" he bawled in a fury. "You had better go to
+Lorient, I tell you. What do you know about the commune? What do you
+know about universal brotherhood? Everybody's everybody's brother,
+whether you like it or not! I'm your brother, and if it doesn't suit
+you you may go to the devil!"
+
+Watching the infuriated magistrate, I said in English to Speed: "This
+is interesting. Buckhurst has learned we are here, and has paid this
+fellow heavily to have us expelled. What sense do you make of all
+this?--for I can make none."
+
+"Nor can I," muttered Speed; "there's a link gone; we'll find it
+soon, I fancy. Without that link there's no logic in this matter."
+
+"Look here," I said, sharply, to the mayor, who had waddled toward
+the door, which was guarded by Kelly Eyre.
+
+"Well, I'm looking," he snarled.
+
+Then I patiently pointed out to him his folly, and he listened with
+ill-grace, obstinate, mute, dull cunning gleaming from his half-closed
+eyes.
+
+Then I asked him what he would do if the cruiser began dropping shells
+into Paradise; he deliberately winked at me and thrust his tongue into
+his cheek.
+
+"So you know that the cruiser has gone?" I asked.
+
+He grinned.
+
+"Do you suppose Buckhurst's men hold the semaphore? If they do, they
+sent that cruiser on a fool's errand," whispered Speed.
+
+Here was a nice plot! I stepped to the window. Outside in the square
+Buckhurst was still speaking to a spellbound, gaping throng. A few men
+cheered him. They were strangers in Paradise.
+
+"What's he doing it for?" I asked, utterly at a loss to account for
+proceedings which seemed to me the acme of folly. "He must know that
+the commune cannot be started here in Brittany! Speed, what is that
+man up to?"
+
+Behind us the mayor was angrily demanding that we leave his house; and
+after a while we did so, skirting the crowd once more to where, in a
+cleared space near the fountain, Buckhurst stood, red flag in hand,
+ranging a dozen peasants in line. The peasants were not Paradise men;
+they wore the costumes of the interior, and somebody had already armed
+them with scythes, rusty boarding-pikes, stable-forks, and one or two
+flintlock muskets. An evil-looking crew, if ever I saw one; wild-eyed,
+long-haired, bare of knee and ankle, loutish faces turned toward the
+slim, gray, pale-faced orator who confronted them, flag in hand. They
+were the scum of Morbihan.
+
+He told them that they were his guard of honor, the glory of their
+race--a sacred battalion whose names should shine high on the
+imperishable battlements of freedom.
+
+Around them the calm-eyed peasants stared at them stupidly; women
+gazed fascinated when Buckhurst, raising his flag, pointed in silence
+to the mayor's house, where that official stood in his doorway,
+observing the scene:
+
+"Forward!" said Buckhurst, and the grotesque escort started with a
+clatter of heavy sabots and a rattle of scythes. The crowd fell back
+to give them way, then closed in behind like a herd of sheep,
+following to the mayor's house, where Buckhurst set his sentinels and
+then entered, closing the door behind him.
+
+"Well!" muttered Speed, in amazement.
+
+After a long silence, Kelly Eyre looked at his watch. "It's time we
+were in the tent," he observed, dryly; and we turned away without a
+word. At the bridge we stopped and looked back. The red flag was
+flying from the mayor's house.
+
+"Speed," I said, "there's one thing certain: Byram can't stay if
+there's going to be fighting here. I heard guns at sea this morning; I
+don't know what that may indicate. And here's this idiotic revolution
+started in Paradise! That means the troops from Lorient, and a
+wretched lot of bushwhacking and guerrilla work. Those Faouet Bretons
+that Buckhurst has recruited are a bad lot; there is going to be
+trouble, I tell you."
+
+Eyre suggested that we arm our circus people, and Speed promised to
+attend to it and to post them at the tent doors, ready to resist any
+interference with the performance on the part of Buckhurst's
+recruits.
+
+It was already nearly one o'clock as we threaded our way through the
+crowds at the entrance, where our band was playing gayly and thousands
+of white head-dresses fluttered in the sparkling sunshine that poured
+intermittently from a sky where great white clouds were sailing
+seaward.
+
+"Walk right up, messoors! Entry done, mesdames, see voo play!"
+shouted Byram, waving a handful of red and blue tickets. "Animals all
+on view before the performance begins! Walk right into the corridor of
+livin' marvels and defunct curiosities! Bring the little ones to see
+the elephant an' the camuel--the fleet ship of the Sairy! Don't miss
+nothing! Don't fail to contemplate le ploo magnifique spectacle in
+all Europe! Don't let nobody say you died an' never saw the only
+Flyin' Mermaid! An' don't forget the prize--ten thousand francs to the
+man, woman, or che-ild who can prove that this here Flyin' Mermaid
+ain't a fictious bein' straight from Paradise!"
+
+Speed and I made our way slowly through the crush to the stables, then
+around to the dressing-rooms, where little Grigg, in his spotted
+clown's costume, was putting the last touches of vermilion to his
+white cheeks, and Horan, draped in a mangy leopard-skin to imitate
+Hercules, sat on his two-thousand-pound dumbbell, curling his shiny
+black mustache with Mrs. Grigg's iron.
+
+"Jacqueline's dressed," cried Miss Crystal, parting the curtain of
+her dressing-room, just enough to show her pretty, excited eyes and
+nose.
+
+"All right; I won't be long," replied Speed, who was to act as
+ring-master. And he turned and looked at me as I raised the canvas
+flap which screened my dressing-room.
+
+"I think," I said, "that we had better ride over to Trecourt after
+the show--not that there's any immediate danger--"
+
+"There is no immediate danger," said Speed, "because she is here."
+
+My face began to burn; I looked at him miserably. "How do you know?"
+
+"She is there in the tent. I saw her."
+
+He came up and held his hand on my shoulder. "I'm sorry I told you,"
+he said.
+
+"Why?" I asked. "She knows what I am. Is there any reason why she
+should not be amused? I promise you she shall be!"
+
+"Then why do you speak so bitterly? Don't misconstrue her presence.
+Don't be a contemptible fool. If I have read her face--and I have
+never spoken to her, as you know--I tell you, Scarlett, that young
+girl is going through an ordeal! Do women of that kind come to shows
+like this to be amused?"
+
+"What do you mean?" I said, angrily.
+
+"I mean that she _could_ not keep away! And I tell you to be careful
+with your lions, to spare her any recklessness on your part, to finish
+as soon as you can, and get out of that cursed cage. If you don't
+you're a coward, and a selfish one at that!"
+
+His words were like a blow in the face; I stared at him, too confused
+even for anger.
+
+"Oh, you fool, you fool!" he said, in a low voice. "She cares for
+you; can't you understand?"
+
+And he turned on his heel, leaving me speechless.
+
+I do not remember dressing. When I came out into the passageway Byram
+beckoned me, and pointed at a crack in the canvas through which one
+could see the interior of the amphitheatre. A mellow light flooded the
+great tent; spots of sunshine fell on the fresh tan-bark, where long,
+luminous, dusty beams slanted from the ridge-pole athwart the golden
+gloom.
+
+Tier on tier the wooden benches rose, packed with women in brilliant
+holiday dress, with men gorgeous in silver and velvet, with children
+decked in lace and gilt chains. The air was filled with the starched
+rustle of white coiffes and stiff collarettes; a low, incessant
+clatter of sabots sounded from gallery to arena; gusts of breathless
+whispering passed like capricious breezes blowing, then died out in
+the hush which fell as our band-master, McCadger, raised his wand and
+the band burst into "Dixie."
+
+At that the great canvas flaps over the stable entrance slowly parted
+and the scarlet-draped head of Djebe, the elephant, appeared. On he
+came, amid a rising roar of approval, Speed in gorgeous robes perched
+on high, ankus raised. After him came the camel, all over tassels and
+gold net, bestridden by Kelly Eyre, wearing a costume seldom seen
+anywhere, and never in the Sahara. White horses, piebald horses, and
+cream-colored horses pranced in the camel's wake, dragging assorted
+chariots tenanted by gentlemen in togas; pretty little Mrs. Grigg, in
+habit and scarlet jacket, followed on Briza, the white mare; Horan
+came next, driving more horses; the dens of ferocious beasts creaked
+after, guarded by a phalanx of stalwart stablemen in plumes and armor;
+then Miss Crystal, driving zebras to a gilt chariot; then more men in
+togas, leading monkeys mounted on ponies; and finally Mrs. Horan
+seated on a huge egg drawn by ostriches.
+
+Once only they circled the sawdust ring; then the band stopped, the
+last of the procession disappeared, the clown came shrieking and
+tumbling out into the arena with his "Here we are again!"
+
+And the show was on.
+
+I stood in the shadow of the stable-tent, dressed in my frock-coat,
+white stock, white cords, and hunting-boots, sullen, imbittered, red
+with a false shame that better men than I have weakened under, almost
+desperate in my humiliation, almost ready to end it all there among
+those tawny, restless brutes pacing behind the bars at my elbow,
+watching me stealthily with luminous eyes.
+
+She knew what I was--but that she could come to see with her own eyes
+I could not understand, I could not forgive. Speed's senseless words
+rang in my ears--"She cares for you!" But I knew they were
+meaningless, I knew she could not care for me. What fools' paradise
+would he have me enter? What did he know of this woman whom I knew and
+understood--whom I honored for her tenderness and pity to all who
+suffered--who I knew counted me as one among a multitude of unhappy
+failures whom her kindness and sympathy might aid.
+
+Because she had, in her gracious ignorance, given me a young girl's
+impulsive friendship, was I to mistake her? What could Speed know of
+her--of her creed, her ideals, her calm, passionless desire to help
+where help was needed--anywhere--in the palace, in the faubourgs, in
+the wretched chaumieres, in the slums? It was all one to her--to this
+young girl whose tender heart, bruised by her own sad life, opened to
+all on whom the evil days had dawned.
+
+And yet she had come here--and that was cruel; and she was not cruel.
+Could she know that I had a shred of pride left--one little, ragged
+thread of pride left in me--that she should come to see me do my
+mountebank tricks to the applause of a greasy throng?
+
+No, she had not thought of that, else she would have stayed away; for
+she was kind, above all else--generous and kind.
+
+Speed passed me in ring-master's dress; there came the hollow thud of
+hoofs as Mrs. Grigg galloped into the ring on her white mare, gauze
+skirts fluttering, whip raised; and, "Hoop-la!" squealed the clown as
+his pretty little wife went careering around and around the tan-bark,
+leaping through paper-hoops, over hurdles, while the band played
+frantically and the Bretons shouted in an ecstasy of excitement.
+
+Then Grigg mounted his little trick donkey; roars of laughter greeted
+his discomfiture when Tim, the donkey, pitched him headlong and
+cantered off with a hee-haw of triumph.
+
+Miss Delany tripped past me in her sky-blue tights to hold the
+audience spellbound with her jugglery, and spin plates and throw
+glittering knives until the satiated people turned to welcome Horan
+and his "cogged" dumbbells and clubs.
+
+"Have you seen her?" whispered Speed, coming up to me, long whip
+trailing.
+
+I shook my head.
+
+He looked at me in disgust. "Here's something for you," he said,
+shortly, and thrust an envelope into my hand.
+
+In the envelope was a little card on which was written: "I ask you to
+be careful, for a friend's sake." On the other side of the card was
+engraved her name.
+
+I raised my head and looked at Speed, who began to laugh nervously.
+"That's better," he said; "you don't look like a surly brute any
+more."
+
+"Where is she?" I said, steadying my voice, which my leaping heart
+almost stifled.
+
+He drew me by the elbow and looked toward the right of the
+amphitheatre. Following the direction of his eyes, I saw her leaning
+forward, pale-faced, grave, small, gloved hands interlocked. Beside
+her sat Sylvia Elven, apparently amused at the antics of the clown.
+
+Shame filled me. Not the false shame I had felt--that vanished--but
+shame that I could have misunderstood the presence of this brave
+friend of mine, this brave, generous, tender-hearted girl, who had
+given me her friendship, who was true enough to care what might happen
+to me--and brave enough to say so.
+
+"I will be careful," I said to Speed, in a low voice. "If it were
+not for Byram I would not go on to-day--but that is a matter of honor.
+Oh, Speed," I broke out, "is she not worth dying for?"
+
+"Why not live for her?" he observed, dryly.
+
+"I will--don't misunderstand me--I know she could never even think of
+me--as I do--of her--yes, as I dare to, Speed. I dare to love her with
+all this wretched heart and soul of mine! It's all right--I think I am
+crazy to talk like this--but you are kind, Speed--you will forget
+what I said--you have forgotten it already--bless your heart--"
+
+"No, I haven't," he retorted, obstinately. "You must win her--you
+must! Shame on you for a coward if you do not speak that word which
+means life to you both!"
+
+"Speed!" I began, angrily.
+
+"Oh, go to the devil!" he snapped, and walked off to where Jacqueline
+stood glittering, her slim limbs striking fire from every silver
+scale.
+
+"All ready, little sweetheart!" he cried, reassuringly, as she raised
+her blue eyes to his and shook her elf-locks around her flushed face.
+"It's our turn now; they're uncovering the tank, and Miss Crystal is
+on her trapeze. Are you nervous?"
+
+"Not when you are by me," said Jacqueline.
+
+"I'll be there," he said, smiling. "You will see me when you are
+ready. Look! There's the governor! It's your call! Quick, my child!"
+
+"Good-bye," said Jacqueline, catching his hand in both of hers, and
+she was off and in the middle of the ring before I could get to a
+place of vantage to watch.
+
+Up into the rigging she swung, higher, higher, hanging like a
+brilliant fly in all that net-work of wire and rope, turning,
+twisting, climbing, dropping to her knees, until the people's cheers
+rose to a sustained shriek.
+
+"Ready!" quavered Miss Crystal, hanging from her own trapeze across
+the gulf.
+
+It was the first signal. Jacqueline set her trapeze swinging and hung
+by her knees, face downward.
+
+"Ready!" called Miss Crystal again, as Jacqueline's trapeze swung
+higher and higher.
+
+"Ready!" said Jacqueline, calmly.
+
+"Go!"
+
+[Illustration: "I WAS ON MY KNEES"]
+
+Like a meteor the child flashed across the space between the two
+trapezes; Miss Crystal caught her by her ankles.
+
+"Ready?" called Speed, from the ground below. He had turned quite
+pale. I saw Jacqueline, hanging head down, smile at him from her dizzy
+height.
+
+"Ready," she said, calmly.
+
+"Go!"
+
+Down, down, like a falling star, flashed Jacqueline into the shallow
+pool, then shot to the surface, shimmering like a leaping mullet,
+where she played and dived and darted, while the people screamed
+themselves hoarse, and Speed came out, ghastly and trembling,
+colliding with me like a blind man.
+
+"I wish I had never let her do it; I wish I had never brought her
+here--never seen her," he stammered. "She'll miss it some day--like
+Miss Claridge--and it will be murder--and I'll have done it! Anybody
+but that child, Scarlett, anybody else--but I can't bear to have her
+die that way--the pretty little thing!"
+
+He let go of my arm and stood back as my lion-cages came rolling out,
+drawn by four horses.
+
+"It's your turn," he said, in a dazed way. "Look out for that
+lioness."
+
+As I walked out into the arena I saw only one face. She tried to
+smile, and so did I; but a terrible, helpless sensation was already
+creeping over me--the knowledge that I was causing her distress--the
+knowledge that I was no longer sure of myself--that, with my love for
+her, my authority over these caged things had gone, never to return. I
+knew it, I recognized it, and admitted it now. Speed's words rang
+true--horribly true.
+
+I entered the cage, afraid.
+
+Almost instantly I was the centre of a snarling mass of lions; I saw
+nothing; my whip rose and fell mechanically. I stood like one
+stunned, while the tawny forms leaped right and left.
+
+Suddenly I heard a keeper say, "Look out for Empress Khatoun, sir!"
+And a moment later a cry, "Look out, sir!"
+
+Something went wrong with another lion, too, for the people were
+standing up and shouting, and the sleeve of my coat hung from the
+elbow, showing my bare shoulder. I staggered up against the bars of
+the sliding door as a lioness struck me heavily and I returned the
+blow. I remember saying, aloud: "I must keep my feet; I must not
+fall!" Then daylight grew red, and I was on my knees, with the foul
+breath of a lion in my face. A hot iron bar shot across the cage. The
+roaring of beasts and people died out in my ears; then, with a shock,
+my soul seemed to be dashed out of me into a terrific darkness.
+
+
+
+
+PART THIRD
+
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+A GUEST-CHAMBER
+
+
+A light was shining in my eyes and I was talking excitedly; that and
+the odor of brandy I remember--and something else, a steady roaring in
+my ears; then darkness, out of which came a voice, empty, meaningless,
+finally soundless.
+
+After a while I realized that I was in pain; that, at intervals,
+somebody forced morsels of ice between my lips; that the darkness
+around me had turned grayer.
+
+Time played tricks on me; centuries passed steadily, year following
+year--long years they were, too, with endless spring-tides, summers,
+autumns, winters, each with full complement of months, and every month
+crowded with days. Space, illimitable space, surrounded me--skyless,
+starless space. And through its terrific silence I heard a clock
+ticking seconds of time.
+
+Years and years later a yellow star rose and stood still before my
+open eyes; and after a long while I saw it was the flame of a candle:
+and somebody spoke my name.
+
+"I know you, Speed," I said, drowsily.
+
+"You are all right, Scarlett?"
+
+"Yes,... all right."
+
+"Does the candle-light pain you?"
+
+"No;... do they contract?"
+
+"A little.... Yes, I am sure the pupils of your eyes are contracting.
+Don't talk."
+
+"No;... then it was concussion of the brain?"
+
+"Yes;... the shock is passing.... Don't talk."
+
+Time moved on again; space slowly contracted into a symmetrical shape,
+set with little points of light; sleep and fatigue alternated with
+glimmers of reason, which finally grew into a faint but steady
+intelligence. And, very delicately, memory stirred in a slumbering
+brain.
+
+Reason and memory were mine again, frail toys for a stricken man, so
+frail I dared not, for a time, use them for my amusement--and one of
+them was broken, too--memory!--broken short at the moment when full in
+my face I had felt the hot, fetid breath of a lion.
+
+"Speed!"
+
+"Yes; I am here."
+
+"What time is it?"
+
+I heard the click of his hunting-case. "Eleven o'clock."
+
+"What day?"
+
+"Saturday."
+
+"When--" I hesitated. I was afraid.
+
+"Well?" he asked, quietly.
+
+"When was I hurt? Many days ago--many weeks?"
+
+"You were hurt at half-past three this afternoon."
+
+I tried to comprehend; I could not, and after a while I gave up my
+feeble grasp on time.
+
+"What is that roaring sound?" I asked. "Not drums? Not my lions?"
+
+"It is the sea."
+
+"So near?"
+
+"Very near."
+
+I turned my head on the white pillow. "Where is this bed? Where is
+this room?"
+
+"Shall I tell you?"
+
+I was silent, struggling with memory.
+
+"Tell me," I said. "Whose bed is this?"
+
+"It is hers."
+
+The candle-flame glimmered before my wide-open eyes once more, and--
+
+"Oh, you are all right," he muttered, then leaned heavily against the
+bedside, dropping his arms on the coverlet.
+
+"It was a close call--a close call!" he said, hoarsely. "We thought
+it was ended.... They were all over you--Empress dragged you; but they
+all crowded in too close--they blocked each other, you see;... and we
+used the irons.... Your left arm lay close to the cage door and ... we
+got you away from them, and ... it's all right now--it's all right--"
+
+He broke down, head buried in his arms. I moved my left hand across
+the sheets so that it rested on his elbow. He lay there, gulping for a
+while; I could not see him very clearly, for the muscles that
+controlled my eyes were still slightly paralyzed from the shock of the
+blow that Empress Khatoun had dealt me.
+
+"It's all very well," he stammered, with a trace of resentment in his
+quavering voice--"it's all very well for people who are used to the
+filthy beasts; but I tell you, Scarlett, it sickened me. I'm no
+coward, as men go, but I was afraid--I was terrified!"
+
+"Yet you dragged me out," I said.
+
+"Who told you that? How could you know--"
+
+"It was not necessary to tell me. You said, '_We_ got you away'; but
+I know it was you, Speed, because it was like you. Look at me! Am I
+well enough to dress?"
+
+He raised a haggard face to mine. "You know best," he said. "They
+tore your coat off, and one of them ripped your riding-boot from top
+to sole; but the blow Empress struck you is your only hurt, and she
+all but missed you at that. Had she hit you fairly--but, oh, hell! Do
+you want to get up?"
+
+I said I would in a moment,... and that is all I remember that night,
+all I remember clearly, though it seems to me that once I heard drums
+beating in the distance; and perhaps I did.
+
+Dawn was breaking when I awoke. Speed, partly dressed, lay beside me,
+sleeping heavily. I looked around at the pretty boudoir where I lay,
+at the silken curtains of the bed, at the clouds of cupids on the
+painted ceiling, flying through a haze of vermilion flecked with
+gold.
+
+Raising one hand, I touched with tentative fingers my tightly bandaged
+head, then turned over on my side.
+
+There were my torn clothes, filthy and smeared with sawdust, flung
+over a delicate, gilded chair; there sprawled my battered boots,
+soiling the polished, inlaid floor; a candle lay in a pool of hardened
+wax on a golden rococo table, and I saw where the smouldering wick had
+blistered the glazed top. And this was her room! Vandalism
+unspeakable! I turned on my snoring comrade.
+
+"Idiot, get up!" I cried, hitting him feebly.
+
+He was very angry when he found out why I had awakened him; perhaps
+the sight of my bandaged head restrained him from violence.
+
+"Look here," he said, "I've been up all night, and you might as well
+know it. If you hit me again--" He hesitated, stared around, yawned,
+and rubbed his eyes.
+
+"You're right," he said, "I must get up."
+
+He stumbled to the floor, bathed, grumbling all the while, and then,
+to my surprise, walked over to a flat trunk which stood under the
+window and which I recognized as mine.
+
+"I'll borrow some underwear," he remarked, viciously.
+
+"What's my trunk doing here?" I demanded.
+
+"Madame de Vassart had them bring it."
+
+"Had _who_ bring it?"
+
+"Horan and McCadger--before they left."
+
+"Before they left? Have they gone?"
+
+"I forgot," he said, soberly; "you don't know what's been going
+on."
+
+He began to dress, raising his head now and then to gaze out across
+the ocean towards Groix, where the cruiser once lay at anchor.
+
+"Of course you don't know that the circus has gone," he remarked.
+
+"Gone!" I echoed, astonished.
+
+"Gone to Lorient."
+
+He came and sat down on the edge of the gilded bedstead, buttoning his
+collar thoughtfully.
+
+"Buckhurst is in town again with a raft of picturesque ruffians," he
+said. "They marched in last night, drums beating, colors
+unfurled--the red rag, you know--and the first thing they did was to
+order Byram to decamp."
+
+He began to tie his cravat, with a meditative glance at the gilded
+mirror.
+
+"I was here with you. Kelly Eyre came for me--Madame de Vassart took
+my place to watch you--"
+
+A sudden heart-beat choked me.
+
+"--So I," he continued, "posted off to the tent, to find a rabble of
+communist soldiers stealing my balloon-car, ropes, bag, and all. I
+tell you I did what I could, but they said the balloon was contraband
+of war, and a military necessity; and they took it, the thieving
+whelps! Then I saw how matters were going to end, and I told the
+governor that he'd better go to Lorient as fast as he could travel
+before they stole the buttons off his shirt.
+
+"Scarlett, it was a weird sight. I never saw tents struck so quickly.
+Kelly Eyre, Horan, and I harnessed up; Grigg stood guard over the
+props with a horse-pistol. The ladies worked like Trojans, loading the
+wagons; Byram raged up and down under the bayonets of those bandits,
+cursing them as only a man who never swears can curse, invoking the
+Stars and Stripes, metaphorically placing himself, his company, his
+money-box, and his camuel under the shadow of the broad eagle of the
+United States.
+
+"Oh, those were gay times, Scarlett. And we frightened them, too,
+because nobody attempted to touch anything."
+
+Speed laughed grimly, and began to pace the floor, casting sharp
+glances at me.
+
+"Byram's people, elephant and all, struck the road a little after
+three o'clock this morning, in good order, not a tent-peg nor a
+frying-pan missing. They ought to be in Lorient by early afternoon."
+
+"Gone!" I repeated, blankly.
+
+"Gone. Curious how it hurt me to say good-bye. They're good
+people--good, kindly folk. I've grown to care for them in these few
+months ... I may go back to them ... some day ... if they want a
+balloonist ... or any kind of a thing."
+
+"You stayed to take care of me?" I said.
+
+"Partly.... You need care, especially when you don't need it." He
+began to laugh. "It's only when you're well that I worry."
+
+I lay looking at him, striving to realize the change that had occurred
+in so brief a time--trying to understand the abrupt severing of ties
+and conditions to which, already, I had become accustomed--perhaps
+attached.
+
+"They all sent their love to you," he said. "They knew you were out
+of danger--I told them there was no fracture, only a slight
+concussion. Byram came to look at you; he brought your back
+salary--all of it. I've got it."
+
+"Byram came here?"
+
+"Yes. He stood over there beside you, snivelling into his red
+bandanna. And Miss Crystal and Jacqueline stood here.... Jacqueline
+kissed you."
+
+After a moment I said: "Has Jacqueline gone with them?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+There was another pause, longer this time.
+
+"Of course," I said, "Byram knows that my usefulness as a lion-tamer
+is at an end."
+
+"Of course," said Speed, simply.
+
+I sighed.
+
+"He wants you for the horses," added Speed. "But you can do better
+than that."
+
+"I don't know,... perhaps."
+
+"Besides, they sail to-day from Lorient. The governor made money
+yesterday--enough to start again. Poor Byram! He's frantic to get back
+to America; and, oh, Scarlett, how that good old man can swear!"
+
+"Help me to sit up in bed," I said; "there--that's it! Just wedge
+those pillows behind my shoulders."
+
+"All right?"
+
+"Of course. I'm going to dress. Speed, did you say that little
+Jacqueline went with Byram?"
+
+He looked at me miserably.
+
+"Yes," he said.
+
+I was silent.
+
+"Yes," he repeated, "she went, lugging her pet cat in her arms. She
+would go; the life has fascinated her. I begged her not to--I felt I
+was disloyal to Byram, too, but what could I do? I tell you, Scarlett,
+I wish I had never seen her, never persuaded her to try that foolish
+dive. She'll miss some day--like the other one."
+
+"It's my fault more than yours," I said. "Couldn't you persuade her
+to give it up?"
+
+"I offered to educate her, to send her to school, to work for her,"
+he said. "She only looked at me out of those sea-blue eyes--you know
+how the little witch can look you through and through--and then--and
+then she walked away into the torch-glare, clasping her cat to her
+breast, and I saw her strike a fool of a soldier who pretended to stop
+her! Scarlett, she was a strange child--proud and dainty, too, with
+all her rags--you remember--a strange, sweet child--almost a woman, at
+times, and--I thought her loyal--"
+
+He walked to the window and stared moodily at the sea.
+
+"Meanwhile," I said, quietly, "I am going to get up."
+
+He gave me a look which I interpreted as, "Get up and be damned!" I
+complied--in part.
+
+"Oh, help me into these things, will you?" I said, at length; and
+instantly he was at my side, gentle and patient, lacing my shoes,
+because it made my head ache to bend over, buttoning collar and
+cravat, and slipping my coat on while I leaned against the tumbled
+bed.
+
+"Well!" I said, with a grimace, and stood up, shakily.
+
+"Well," he echoed, "here we are again, as poor little Grigg says."
+
+"With our salaries in our pockets and our possessions on our backs."
+
+"And no prospects," he added, gayly.
+
+"Not a blessed one, unless we count a prospect of trouble with
+Buckhurst."
+
+"He won't trouble us unless we interfere with him," observed Speed,
+drumming nervously on the window.
+
+"But I'm going to," I said, surprised.
+
+"Going to interfere?" he asked, wheeling to scowl at me.
+
+"Certainly."
+
+"Why? We're not in government employ. What do we care about this row?
+If these Frenchmen are tired of battering the Germans they'll batter
+each other, and we can't help it, can we?"
+
+"We can help Buckhurst's annoying Madame de Vassart."
+
+"Only by getting her to leave the country," said Speed. "She will
+understand that, too." He paused, rubbing his nose reflectively.
+"Scarlett, what do you suppose Buckhurst is up to?"
+
+"I haven't an idea," I replied. "All I know is that, in all
+probability, he came here to attempt to rob the treasure-trains--and
+that was your theory, too, you remember?"
+
+And I continued, reminding Speed that Buckhurst had collected his
+ruffianly franc company in the forest; that the day the cruiser sailed
+he had appeared in Paradise to proclaim the commune; that doubtless he
+had signalled, from the semaphore, orders for the cruiser's departure;
+that a few hours later his red battalion had marched into Paradise.
+
+"Yes, that's all logical," said Speed, "but how could Buckhurst know
+the secret-code signals which the cruiser must have received before
+she sailed? To hoist them on the semaphore, he must have had a
+code-book."
+
+I thought a moment. "Suppose Mornac is with him?"
+
+Speed fairly jumped. "That's it! That's the link we were hunting for!
+It's Mornac--it must be Mornac! He is the only man; he had access to
+everything. And now that his Emperor is a prisoner and his Empress a
+fugitive, the miserable hound has nothing to lose by the anarchy he
+once hoped to profit by. Tell me, Scarlett, does the tail wag the dog,
+after all? And which is the dog, Buckhurst or Mornac?"
+
+"I once thought it was Buckhurst," I said.
+
+"So did I, but--I don't know now. I don't know what to do, either. I
+don't know anything!"
+
+I began to walk about the room, carefully, for my knees were weak,
+though I had no headache.
+
+"It's a shame for a pair of hulking brutes like you and me to
+desecrate this bedroom," I muttered. "Mud on the floor--look at it!
+Sawdust and candle-wax over everything! What's that--all that on the
+lounge? Has a dog or a cat been rolling over it? It's plastered with
+tan-colored hairs!"
+
+"Lion's hairs from your coat," he observed, grimly.
+
+I looked at them for a moment rather soberly. They glistened like gold
+in the early sunshine.
+
+Speed opened his mouth to say something, but closed it abruptly as a
+very faint tapping sounded on our door.
+
+I opened it; Sylvia Elven stood in the hallway.
+
+"Oh," she said, in ungracious astonishment, "then you are not on the
+grave's awful verge,... are you?"
+
+"I hope you didn't expect to discover me there?" I replied,
+laughing.
+
+"Expect it? Indeed I did, monsieur,... or I shouldn't be here at
+sunrise, scratching at your door for news of you. This," she said,
+petulantly, "is enough to vex any saint!"
+
+"Any other saint," I corrected, gravely. "I admit it, mademoiselle,
+I am a nuisance; so is my comrade. We have only to express our deep
+gratitude and go."
+
+"Go? Do you think we will let you go, with all those bandits roaming
+the moors outside our windows? And you call that gratitude?"
+
+"Does Madame de Vassart desire us to stay?" I asked, trying not to
+speak too eagerly.
+
+Sylvia Elven gave me a scornful glance.
+
+"Must we implore you, monsieur, to protect us? We will, if you wish
+it. I know I'm ill-humored, but it's scarcely daybreak, and we've sat
+up all night on your account--Madame de Vassart would not allow me to
+go to bed--and if I am brusque with you, remember I was obliged to
+sleep in a chair--and I hope you feel that you have put me to very
+great inconvenience."
+
+"I feel that way ... about Madame de Vassart," I said, laughing at
+the pretty, pouting mouth and sleepy eyes of this amusingly
+exasperated young girl, who resembled a rumpled Dresden shepherdess
+more than anything else. I added that we would be glad to stay until
+the communist free-rifles took themselves off. For which she thanked
+me with an exaggerated courtesy and retired, furiously conscious that
+she had not only slept in her clothes, but that she looked it.
+
+"That was Madame de Vassart's companion, wasn't it?" asked Speed.
+
+"Yes, Sylvia Elven ... I don't know what she is--I know what she
+was--no, I don't, either. I only know what Jarras says she was."
+
+Speed raised his eyebrows. "And what was that?"
+
+"Actress, at the Odeon."
+
+"Never heard of her being at the Odeon," he said.
+
+"You heard of her as one of that group at La Trappe?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, when I was looking for Buckhurst in Morsbronn, Jarras
+telegraphed me descriptions of the people I was to arrest at La
+Trappe, and he mentioned her as Mademoiselle Sylvia Elven, lately of
+the Odeon."
+
+"That was a mistake," said Speed. "What he meant to say was that she
+was lately a resident of the Odeonsplatz. He knew that. It must have
+been a telegraphic error."
+
+"How do you know?" I asked, surprised.
+
+"Because I furnished Jarras with the data. It's in her dossier."
+
+"Odeon--Odeonsplatz," I muttered, trying to understand. "What is the
+Odeonsplatz? A square in some German city, isn't it?"
+
+"It's a square in the capital of Bavaria--Munich."
+
+"But--but she isn't a German, is she? _Is she_?" I repeated, staring
+at Speed, who was looking keenly at me, with eyes partly closed.
+
+There was a long silence.
+
+"Well, upon my soul!" I said, slowly, emphasizing every word with a
+noiseless blow on the table.
+
+"Didn't you know it? Wait! Hold on," he said, "let's go
+slowly--let's go very slowly. She is partly German by birth. That
+proves nothing. Granted that Jarras suspected her, not as a social
+agitator, but as a German agent. Granted he did not tell you what he
+suspected, but merely ordered her arrest with the others--perhaps
+under cover of Buckhurst's arrest--you know what a secret man, the
+Emperor was--how, if he wanted a man, he'd never chase him, but run in
+the opposite direction and head him off half-way around the world. So,
+granted all this, I say, what's to prove Jarras was right?"
+
+"Does her dossier prove it? You have read it."
+
+"Well, her dossier was rather incomplete. We knew that she went about
+a good deal in Paris--went to the Tuileries, too. She was married
+once. Didn't you know even _that_?"
+
+"Married!" I exclaimed.
+
+"To a Russian brute--I've forgotten his name, but I've seen him--one
+of the kind with high cheek-bones and black eyes. She got her divorce
+in England; that's on record, and we have it in her dossier. Then,
+going back still further, we know that her father was a Bavarian, a
+petty noble of some sort--baron, I believe. Her mother's name was
+Elven, a Breton peasant; it was a mesalliance--trouble of all sorts--I
+forget, but I believe her uncle brought her up. Her uncle was military
+attache of the German embassy to Paris.... You see how she slipped
+into society--and you know what society under the Empire was."
+
+"Speed," I said, "why on earth didn't you tell me all this before?"
+
+"My dear fellow, I supposed Jarras had told you; or that, if you
+didn't know it, it did not concern us at all."
+
+"But it does concern--a person I know," I said, quickly, thinking of
+poor Kelly Eyre. "And it explains a lot of things--or, rather, places
+them under a new light."
+
+"What light?"
+
+"Well, for one thing, she has consistently lied to me. For another, I
+believe her to be hand-in-glove with Karl Marx and the French
+leaders--not Buckhurst, but the real leaders of the social revolt;
+_not as a genuine disciple, but as a German agent_, with orders to
+foment disorder of any kind which might tend to embarrass and weaken
+the French government in this crisis."
+
+"You're inclined to believe that?" he asked, much interested.
+
+"Yes, I am. France is full of German agents; the Tuileries was not
+exempt--you know it as well as I. Paris swarmed with spies of every
+kind, high and low in the social scale. The embassies were nests of
+spies; every salon a breeding spot of intrigue; the foreign
+governments employed the grande dame as well as the grisette. Do you
+remember the military-balloon scandal?"
+
+"Indistinctly.... Some poor devil gave a woman government papers."
+
+"Technically they were government papers, but he considered them his
+own. Well, the woman who received those papers is down-stairs."
+
+He gave a short whistle of astonishment.
+
+"You are sure, Scarlett?"
+
+"Perfectly certain."
+
+"Then, if you are certain, that settles the question of Mademoiselle
+Elven's present occupation."
+
+I rose and began to move around the room restlessly.
+
+"But, after all," I said, "that concerns us no longer."
+
+"How can it concern two Americans out of a job?" he observed, with a
+shrug. "The whole fabric of French politics is rotten to the
+foundation. It's tottering; a shake will bring it down. Let it tumble.
+I tell you this nation needs the purification of fire. Our own country
+has just gone through it; France can do it, too. She's got to, or
+she's lost!"
+
+He looked at me earnestly. "I love the country," he said; "it's fed
+me and harbored me. But I wouldn't lift a finger to put a single patch
+on this makeshift of a government; I wouldn't stave off the crash if I
+could. And it's coming! You and I have seen something of the
+rottenness of the underpinning which props up empires. You and I,
+Scarlett, have learned a few of the shameful secrets which even an
+enemy to France would not drag out into the daylight."
+
+I had never seen him so deeply moved.
+
+"Is there hope--is there a glimmer of hope to incite anybody while
+these conditions endure?" he continued, bitterly.
+
+"No. France must suffer, France must stand alone in terrible
+humiliation, France must offer the self-sacrifice of fire and mount
+the altar herself!
+
+"Then, and only then, shall the nation, purified, reborn, rise and
+live, and build again, setting a beacon of civilized freedom high as
+the beacon we Americans are raising,... slowly yet surely raising, to
+the glory of God, Scarlett--to the glory of God. No other dedication
+can be justified in this world."
+
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+TRECOURT GARDEN
+
+
+About nine o'clock we were summoned by a Breton maid to the pretty
+breakfast-room below, and I was ashamed to go with my shabby clothes,
+bandaged head, and face the color of clay.
+
+The young countess was not present; Sylvia Elven offered us a
+supercilious welcome to a breakfast the counterpart of which I had not
+seen in years--one of those American breakfasts which even we, since
+the Paris Exposition, are beginning to discard for the simpler French
+breakfast of coffee and rolls.
+
+"This is all in your honor," observed Sylvia, turning up her nose at
+the array of poached eggs, fragrant sausages, crisp potatoes, piles of
+buttered toast, muffins, marmalade, and fruit.
+
+"It was very kind of you to think of it," said Speed.
+
+"It is Madame de Vassart's idea, not mine," she observed, looking
+across the table at me. "Will the gentleman with nine lives have
+coffee or chocolate?"
+
+The fruit consisted of grapes and those winy Breton cider-apples from
+Bannalec. We began with these in decorous silence.
+
+Speed ventured a few comments on the cultivation of fruit, of which he
+knew nothing; neither he nor his subject was encouraged.
+
+Presently, however, Sylvia glanced up at him with a malicious smile,
+saying: "I notice that you have been in the foreign division of the
+Imperial Military Police, monsieur."
+
+"Why do you think so?" asked Speed, calmly.
+
+"When you seated yourself in your chair," said Sylvia, "you made a
+gesture with your left hand as though to unhook the sabre--which was
+not there."
+
+Speed laughed. "But why the police? I might have been in the cavalry,
+mademoiselle; for that matter, I might have been an officer in any arm
+of the service. They all carry swords or sabres."
+
+"But only the military police and the gendarmerie wear aiguilettes,"
+she replied. "When you bend over your plate your fingers are ever
+unconsciously searching for those swinging, gold-tipped cords--to keep
+them out of your coffee-cup, monsieur."
+
+The muscles in Speed's lean, bronzed cheeks tightened; he looked at
+her keenly.
+
+"Might I not have been in the gendarmerie?" he asked. "How do you
+know I was not?"
+
+"Does the gendarmerie wear the sabre-tache?"
+
+"No, mademoiselle, but--"
+
+"Do the military police?"
+
+"No--that is, the foreign division did, when it existed."
+
+"You are sitting, monsieur," she said, placidly, "with your left
+foot so far under the table that it quite inadvertently presses my
+shoe-tip."
+
+Speed withdrew his leg with a jerk, asking pardon.
+
+"It is a habit perfectly pardonable in a man who is careful that his
+spur shall not scratch or tear a patent-leather sabre-tache," she
+said.
+
+I had absolutely nothing to say; we both laughed feebly, I believe.
+
+I saw temptation struggling with Speed's caution; I, too, was almost
+willing to drop a hint that might change her amusement to speculation,
+if not to alarm.
+
+So this was the woman for whose caprice Kelly Eyre had wrecked his
+prospects! Clever--oh, certainly clever. But she had made the
+inevitable slip that such clever people always make sooner or later.
+And in a bantering message to her victim she had completed the chain
+against herself--a chain of which I might have been left in absolute
+ignorance. Impulse probably did it--reasonless and perhaps malicious
+caprice--the instinct of a pretty woman to stir up memory in a
+discarded and long-forgotten victim--just to note the effect--just to
+see if there still remains one nerve, one pulse-beat to respond.
+
+"Will the pensive gentleman with nine lives have a little more
+nourishment to sustain him?" she asked.
+
+Looking up from my empty plate, I declined politely; and we followed
+her signal to rise.
+
+"There is a Mr. Kelly Eyre," she said to Speed, "connected with your
+circus. Has he gone with the others?"
+
+"Yes, mademoiselle."
+
+"Really?" she mused, amiably. "I knew him as a student in Paris,
+when he was very young--and I was younger. I should have liked to have
+seen him--once more."
+
+"Did you not see him?" I asked, abruptly.
+
+Her back was toward me; very deliberately she turned her pretty head
+and looked at me over her shoulder, studying my face a moment.
+
+"Yes, I saw him. I should have liked to have seen him--once more,"
+she said, as though she had first calculated the effect on me of a
+different reply.
+
+She led the way into that small room overlooking the garden where I
+had been twice received by Madame de Vassart. Here she took leave of
+us, abandoning us to our own designs. Mine was to find a large
+arm-chair and sit down in it, and give Speed a few instructions.
+Speed's was to prowl around Paradise for information, and, if
+possible, telegraph to Lorient for troops to catch Buckhurst
+red-handed.
+
+He left me turning over the leaves of the "Chanson de Roland," saying
+that he would return in a little while with any news he might pick up,
+and that he would do his best to catch Buckhurst in the foolish trap
+which that gentleman had set for others.
+
+Tiring of the poem, I turned my eyes toward the garden, where, in the
+sunshine, heaps of crisped leaves lay drifted along the base of the
+wall or scattered between the rows of herbs which were still ripely
+green. The apricots had lost their leaves, so had the grapevines and
+the fig-trees; but the peach-trees were in foliage; pansies and
+perpetual roses bloomed amid sere and seedy thickets of larkspurs,
+phlox, and dead delphinium.
+
+On the wall a cat sat, sunning her sleek flanks. Something about the
+animal seemed familiar to me, and after a while I made up my mind that
+this was Ange Pitou, Jacqueline's pet, abandoned by her mistress and
+now a feline derelict. Speed must have been mistaken when he told me
+that Jacqueline had taken her cat; or possibly the home-haunting
+instinct had brought the creature back, abandoning her mistress to her
+fortunes.
+
+If I had been in my own house I should have offered Ange Pitou
+hospitality; as it was, I walked out into the sunny garden and made
+courteous advances which were ignored. I watched the cat for a few
+moments, then sat down on the bench. The inertia which follows
+recovery from a shock, however light, left me with the lazy
+acquiescence of a convalescent, willing to let the world drift for an
+hour or two, contented to relax, apathetic, comfortable.
+
+Seaward the gulls sailed like white feathers floating; the rocky
+ramparts of Groix rose clear-cut against a horizon where no haze
+curtained the sea; the breakers had receded from the coast on a heavy
+ebb-tide, and I saw them in frothy outline, noiselessly churning the
+shallows beyond the outer bar.
+
+And then my reverie ended abruptly; a step on the gravel walk brought
+me to my feet.... There she stood, lovely in a fresh morning-gown
+deeply belted with turquoise-shells, her ruddy hair glistening, coiled
+low on a neck of snow.
+
+For the first time she showed embarrassment in her greeting, scarcely
+touching my hand, speaking with a new constraint in a voice which grew
+colder as she hesitated.
+
+"We were frightened; we are so glad that you were not badly hurt. I
+thought you might find it comfortable here--of course I could not know
+that you were not seriously injured."
+
+"That is fortunate for me," I said, pleasantly, "for I am afraid you
+would not have offered this shelter if you had known how little
+injured I really was."
+
+"Yes, I should have offered it--had I reason to believe you would
+have accepted. I have felt that perhaps you might think what I have
+done was unwarranted."
+
+"I think you did the most graciously unselfish thing a woman could
+do," I said, quickly. "You offered your best; and the man who took it
+cannot--dare not--express his gratitude."
+
+The emotion in my voice warned me to cease; the faintest color tinted
+her cheeks, and she looked at me with beautiful, grave eyes that
+slowly grew inscrutable, leaving me standing diffident and silent
+before her.
+
+The breeze shifted, bringing with it the hollow sea-thunder. She
+turned her head and glanced out across the ocean, hands behind her,
+fingers linked.
+
+"I have come here into your garden uninvited," I said.
+
+"Shall we sit here--a moment?" she suggested, without turning.
+
+Presently she seated herself in one corner of the bench; her gaze
+wandered over the partly blighted garden, then once more centred on
+the seaward skyline.
+
+The color of her hands, her neck, fascinated me. That flesh texture of
+snow and roses, firmly and delicately modelled, which sometimes is
+seen with red hair, I had seen once before in a picture by a Spanish
+master, but never, until now, in real life.
+
+And she was life incarnate in her wholesome beauty--a beauty of which
+I had perceived only the sad shadow at La Trappe--a sweet, healthy,
+exquisite woman, moulded, fashioned, colored by a greater Master than
+the Spanish painter dreaming of perfection centuries ago.
+
+In the sun a fragrance grew--the subtle incense from her gown--perhaps
+from her hair.
+
+"Autumn is already gone; we are close to winter," she said, under her
+breath. "See, there is nothing left--scarcely a blossom--a rose or
+two; but the first frost will scatter the petals. Look at the pinks;
+look at the dead leaves. Ah, tristesse, tristesse! The life of summer
+is too short; the life of flowers is too short; so are our lives,
+Monsieur Scarlett. Do you believe it?"
+
+"Yes--now."
+
+She was very still for a while, her head bent toward the sea. Then,
+without turning: "Have you not always believed it?"
+
+"No, madame."
+
+"Then ... why do you believe it ... now?"
+
+"Because, since we have become friends, life seems pitiably short for
+such a friendship."
+
+She smiled without moving.
+
+"That is a ... very beautiful ... compliment, monsieur."
+
+"It owes its beauty to its truth, madame."
+
+"And that reply is illogical," she said, turning to look at me with
+brilliant eyes and a gay smile which emphasized the sensitive mouth's
+faint droop. "Illogical, because truth is not always beautiful. As
+example: you were very near to death yesterday. That is the truth, but
+it is not beautiful at all."
+
+"Ah, madame, it is you who are illogical," I said, laughing.
+
+"I?" she cried. "Prove it!"
+
+But I would not, spite of her challenge and bright mockery.
+
+In that flash all of our comradeship returned, bringing with it
+something new, which I dared not think was intimacy.
+
+Yet constraint fell away like a curtain between us, and though she
+dominated, and I was afraid lest I overstep limits which I myself had
+set, the charm of her careless confidence, her pretty, undissembled
+caprices, her pleasure in a delicately intimate badinage, gave me
+something of a self-reliance, a freedom that I had not known in a
+woman's presence for many years.
+
+"We brought you here because we thought it was good for you," she
+said, reverting maliciously to the theme that had at first embarrassed
+her. "We were perfectly certain that you have always been unfit to
+take care of yourself. Now we have the proofs."
+
+"Mademoiselle Elven said that you harbored us only because you were
+afraid of those bandits who have arrived in Paradise," I observed.
+
+"Afraid!" she said, scornfully. "Oh, you are making fun of me now.
+Indeed, when Mr. Buckhurst came last night I had my men conduct him to
+the outer gate!"
+
+"Did he come last night?" I asked, troubled.
+
+"Yes." She shrugged her pretty shoulders.
+
+"Alone?"
+
+"That unspeakable creature, Mornac, was with him. I had no idea he
+was here; had you?"
+
+I was silent. Did Mornac mean trouble for me? Yet how could he, shorn
+now of all authority?
+
+The thought seemed to occur to her, too, and she looked up quickly,
+asking if I had anything to fear.
+
+"Only for you," I said.
+
+"For me? Why? I am not afraid of such men. I have servants on whom I
+can call to disembarrass me of such people." She hesitated; the memory
+of her deception, of what she had suffered at Buckhurst's hands,
+brought a glint of anger into her beautiful eyes.
+
+"My innocence shames me," she said. "I merited what I received in
+such company. It was you who saved me from myself."
+
+"A noble mind thinks nobly," I said. "Theirs is the shame, not
+yours, that you could not understand treachery--that you never can
+understand it. As for me, I was an accident, which warned you in time
+that all the world was not as good and true as you desired to believe
+it."
+
+She sat looking at me curiously. "I wonder," she said, "why it is
+that you do not know your own value?"
+
+"My value--to whom?"
+
+"To ... everybody--to the world--to people."
+
+"Am I of any value to you, madame?"
+
+The pulsing moments passed and she did not answer, and I bit my lip
+and waited. At last she said, coolly: "A man must appraise himself.
+If he chooses, he is valuable. But values are comparative, and depend
+on individual taste.... Yes, you are of some value to me,... or I
+should not be here with you,... or I should not find it my pleasure to
+be here--or I should not trust you, come to you with my petty
+troubles, ask your experience to help me, perhaps protect me."
+
+She bent her head with adorable diffidence. "Monsieur Scarlett, I
+have never before had a friend who thought first of me and last of
+himself."
+
+I leaned on the back of the bench, resting my bandaged forehead on my
+hand.
+
+She looked up after a moment, and her face grew serious.
+
+"Are you suffering?" she asked. "Your face is white as my sleeve."
+
+"I feel curiously tired," I said, smiling.
+
+"Then you must have some tea, and I will brew it myself. You shall
+not object! No--it is useless, because I am determined. And you shall
+lie down in the little tea-room, where I found you that day when you
+first came to Trecourt."
+
+"I shall be very happy to do anything--if you are there."
+
+"Even drink tea when you abhor it? Then I certainly ought to reward
+you with my presence at the rite.... Are you dizzy? You are terribly
+pale.... Would you lean on my arm?"
+
+I was not dizzy, but I did so; and if such deceit is not pardonable,
+there is no justice in this world or in the next.
+
+The tea was hot and harmless; I lay thinking while she sat in the
+sunny window-corner, nibbling biscuit and marmalade, and watching me
+gravely.
+
+"My appetite is dreadful in these days," she said; "age increases
+it; I have just had my chocolate, yet here am I, eating like a
+school-girl.... I have a strange idea that I am exceedingly young,...
+that I am just beginning to live. That tired, thin, shabby girl you
+saw at La Trappe was certainly not I.... And long before that, before
+I knew you, there was another impersonal, half--awakened creature, who
+watched the world surging and receding around her, who grew tired even
+of violets and bonbons, tired of the companionship of the indifferent,
+hurt by the intimacy of the unfriendly; and I cannot believe that she
+was I.... Can you?"
+
+"I can believe it; I once saw you then," I said.
+
+She looked up quickly. "Where?"
+
+"In Paris."
+
+"When?"
+
+"The day that they received the news from Mexico. You sat in your
+carriage before the gates of the war office."
+
+"I remember," she said, staring at me. Then a slight shudder passed
+over her.
+
+Presently she said: "Did you recognize me afterward at La Trappe?"
+
+"Yes,... you had grown more beautiful."
+
+She colored and bent her head.
+
+"You remembered me all that time?... But why didn't you--didn't
+you--" She laughed nervously. "Why didn't we know each other in those
+years? Truly, Monsieur Scarlett, I needed a friend then, if ever;... a
+friend who thought first of me and last of himself."
+
+I did not answer.
+
+"Fancy," she continued, "your passing me so long ago,... and I
+totally unconscious, sitting there in my carriage,... never dreaming
+of this friendship which I ... care for so much!... Do you remember at
+La Trappe what I told you, there on the staircase?--how sometimes the
+impulse used to come to me when I saw a kindly face in the street to
+cry out, 'Be friends with me!' Do you remember?... It is strange that
+I did not feel that impulse when you passed me that day in Paris--feel
+it even though I did not see you--for I sorely needed kindness then,
+kindness and wisdom; and both passed by, at my elbow,... and I did not
+know." She bent her head, smiling with an effort. "You should have
+thrown yourself astride the horse and galloped away with me.... They
+did those things once, Monsieur Scarlett--on this very spot, too, in
+the days of the Saxon pirates."
+
+The whirring monotone of the spinning-wheel suddenly filled the house;
+Sylvia was singing at her wheel:
+
+ "Woe to the maids of Paradise!
+ Yvonne!
+ Twice have the Saxons landed; twice!
+ Yvonne!
+ Yet shall Paradise see them thrice,
+ Yvonne! Yvonne! Marivonik!"
+
+"The prophecy of that Breton spinning song is being fulfilled," I
+said. "For the third time we Saxons have come to Paradise, you see."
+
+"But this time our Saxons are not very formidable," she said, raising
+her beautiful gray eyes; "and the gwerz says, 'Woe to the maids of
+Paradise!' Do you intend to bring woe upon us maids of Paradise--do
+you come to carry us off, monsieur?"
+
+"If you will go with--me," I said, smiling.
+
+"All of us?"
+
+"Only one, madame."
+
+She started to speak, then her eyes fell. She laughed uncertainly.
+"Which one among us, if you please--mizilour skler ha brillant deuz
+ar fidelite?"
+
+"Met na varwin Ket Kontant, ma na varwan fidel," I said, slowly, as
+the words of the song came back to me. "I shall choose only the
+fairest and loveliest, madame. You know it is always that way in the
+story." My voice was not perfectly steady, nor was hers when she
+smiled and wished me happiness and a long life with the maid of
+Paradise I had chosen, even though I took her by force.
+
+Then constraint crept in between us, and I was grimly weighing the
+friendship this woman had given me--weighing it in the balance against
+a single hope.
+
+Once she looked across at me with questioning eyes in which I thought
+I read dawning disappointment. It almost terrified me.... I could not
+lose her confidence,... I could not, and go through life without
+it.... But I could live a hopeless life to its end with that
+confidence.... And I must do so,... and be content.
+
+"I suppose," said I, thinking aloud, "that I had better go to
+England."
+
+"When?" she asked, without raising her head.
+
+"In a day or two. I can find employment there, I think."
+
+"Is it necessary that you find employment ... so soon?"
+
+"Yes," I said, with a meaningless laugh, "I fear it is."
+
+"What will you do?"
+
+"Oh, the army--horses--something of that kind. Riding-master,
+perhaps--perhaps Scotland Yard. I may not be able to pick and
+choose.... If I ever save enough money for the voyage, perhaps you
+would let me come, once in a long while, to pay my respects, madame?"
+
+"Yes,... come, if you wish."
+
+She said no more, nor did I. Presently Sylvia appeared with a peasant
+woman, and the young countess went away, followed by the housekeeper
+with her keys at her girdle.
+
+I rose and walked to the window; then, nerveless and depressed, I went
+out into the garden again to smoke a cigar.
+
+The cat had disappeared; I traversed the garden, passed through the
+side wicket, and found myself on the cliffs. Almost immediately I was
+aware of a young girl, a child, seated on the rocks, her chin propped
+on her hands, the sea-wind blowing her curly elf-locks across her
+cheeks and eyes. A bundle tied in a handkerchief lay beside her; a cat
+dozed in her lap, its sleek fur stirring in the wind.
+
+"Jacqueline!" I said, gently.
+
+She raised her head; the movement awakened the cat, who stood up in
+her lap, stretching and yawning vigorously.
+
+"I thought you were to sail from Lorient to-day?"
+
+The cat stopped purring from her knees; the child rose, pushing back
+her hair from her eyes with both hands.
+
+"Where is Speed?" she asked, drowsily.
+
+"Did you want to see him, Jacqueline?"
+
+"That is why I returned."
+
+"To see Speed?"
+
+"Parbleu."
+
+"And you are going to let the others sail without you?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And give up the circus forever, Jacqueline?"
+
+"Y-es."
+
+"Just because you want to see Speed?"
+
+"Only for that."
+
+She stood rubbing her eyes with her small fists, as though just
+awakened.
+
+"Oui," she said, without emotion, "c'est comme ca, m'sieu. Where
+the heart is, happiness lies. I left the others at the city gate; I
+said, 'Voyons, let us be reasonable, gentlemen. I am happy in your
+circus; I am happy with Speed; I can be contented without your circus,
+but I cannot be contented without Speed. Voila!'... and then I went."
+
+"You walked back all the way from Lorient?"
+
+"Bien sur! I have no carriage--I, Jacqueline." She stretched her slim
+figure, raised her arms slowly, and yawned. "Pardon," she murmured,
+"I have slept in the gorse--badly."
+
+"Come into the garden," I said; "we can talk while you rest."
+
+She thanked me tranquilly, picked up her bundle, and followed me with
+a slight limp. The cat, tail up, came behind.
+
+The young countess was standing at the window as we approached in
+solemn single file along the path, and when she caught sight of us she
+opened the door and stepped out on the tiny porch.
+
+"Why, this is our little Jacqueline," she said, quickly. "They have
+taken your father for the conscription, have they not, my child? And
+now you are homeless!"
+
+"I think so, madame."
+
+"Then you will stay with me until he returns, won't you, little
+one?"
+
+There was a moment's pause; Jacqueline made a grave gesture. "This is
+my cat, madame--Ange Pitou."
+
+The countess stared at the cat, then broke out into the prettiest peal
+of laughter. "Of course you must bring your cat! My invitation is
+also for Ange Pitou, you understand."
+
+"Then we thank you, and permit ourselves to accept, madame," said
+Jacqueline. "We are very glad because we are quite hungry, and we
+have thorns from the gorse in our feet--" She broke off with a joyous
+little cry: "There is Speed!" And Speed, entering the garden
+hurriedly, stopped short in his tracks.
+
+The child ran to him and threw both arms around his neck. "Oh, Speed!
+Speed!" she stammered, over and over again. "I was too lonely; I will
+do what you wish; I will be instructed in the graces of
+education--truly I will. I am glad to come back--and I am so tired,
+Speed. I will never go away from you again.... Oh, Speed, I am
+contented!... Do you love me?"
+
+"Dearly, little sweetheart," he said, huskily, trying to steady his
+voice. "There! Madame the countess is waiting. All will be well now."
+He turned, smiling, toward the young countess, and lifted his hat,
+then stepped back and fixed me with a blank look of dismay, which said
+perfectly plainly that he had unpleasant news to communicate. The
+countess, I think, saw that look, too, for she gave me an almost
+imperceptible nod and took Jacqueline's hand in hers.
+
+"If there are thorns in your feet we must find them," she said,
+sweetly. "Will you come, Jacqueline?"
+
+"Yes, madame," said the child, with an adoring smile at Speed, who
+bent and kissed her upturned face as she passed.
+
+They went into the house, the countess holding Jacqueline's
+thorn-scratched hand, the cat following, perfectly self-possessed, to
+the porch, where she halted and sat down, surveying the landscape with
+dignified indifference.
+
+"Well," said I, turning to Speed, "what new deviltry is going on in
+Paradise now?"
+
+"Preparations for train-wrecking, I should say," he replied, bluntly.
+"They are tinkering with the trestle. Buckhurst's ragamuffins have
+just seized the railroad station at Rose-Sainte-Anne, where the main
+line crosses, you know, near the ravine at Lammerin. I was sure there
+was something extraordinary going to happen, so I went down to the
+river, hailed Jeanne Rolland, the passeuse, and had her ferry me over
+to Bois-Gilbert. Then I made for the telegraph, gave the operator ten
+francs to let me work the keys, and called up the arsenal at Lorient.
+But it was no use, Scarlett, the governor of Lorient can't spare a
+soldier--not a single gendarme. It seems that Uhlans have been
+signalled north of Quimper, and Lorient is frantic, and the garrison
+is preparing to stand siege."
+
+"You mean," I said, indignantly, "that they're not going to try to
+catch Buckhurst and Mornac?"
+
+"That's what I mean; they're scared as rabbits over these rumors of
+Uhlans in the west and north."
+
+"Well," said I, disgusted, "it appears to me that Buckhurst is going
+to get off scot-free this time--and Mornac, too! Did you know that
+Mornac was here?"
+
+"Know it? I saw him an hour ago, marshalling a new company of
+malcontents in the square--a bad lot, Scarlett--deserters from
+Chanzy's army, from Bourbaki, from Garibaldi--a hundred or more line
+soldiers, dragoons without horses, francs-tireurs, Garibaldians, even
+a Turco, from Heaven knows where--bad soldiers who disgrace
+France--marauders, cowardly, skulking mobiles--a sweet lot, Scarlett,
+to be let loose in Madame de Vassart's vicinity."
+
+"I think so, too," I said, seriously.
+
+"And I earnestly agree with you," muttered Speed. "That's all _I_
+have to report, except that your friend, Robert the Lizard, is out
+yonder flat on his belly under a gorse-bush, and he wants to see
+you."
+
+"The Lizard!" I exclaimed. "Come on, Speed. Where is he?"
+
+"Yonder, clothed in somebody's line uniform. He's one of them.
+Scarlett, do you trust him? He has a rifle."
+
+"Yes, yes," I said, impatiently. "Come on, man! It's all right; the
+fellow is watching Buckhurst for me." And I gave Speed a nervous push
+toward the moors. We started, Speed ostentatiously placing his
+revolver in his side-pocket so that he could shoot through his coat if
+necessary. I walked beside him, closely scanning the stretch of open
+moor for a sign of life, knowing all the while that it is easier to
+catch moon-beams in a net than to find a poacher in the bracken. But
+Speed had marked him down as he might mark a squatting quail, and
+suddenly we flushed him, rifle clapped to his shoulder.
+
+"None of that, my friend," growled Speed; but the poacher at sight of
+me had already lowered the weapon.
+
+I greeted him frankly, offering my hand; he took it, then his hard
+fist fell away and he touched his cap.
+
+"I have done what you wanted," he said, sullenly. "I have the
+company's rolls--here they are." He dragged from his baggy trousers
+pockets a mass of filthy papers, closely covered with smeared writing.
+"Here is the money, too," he said, fishing in the other pocket; and,
+to my astonishment, he produced a flattened, soiled mass of
+bank-notes. "Count it," he added, calmly.
+
+"What money is that?" I asked, taking it reluctantly.
+
+"Didn't you warn me to get that box--the steel box that Tric-Trac sat
+down on when he saw me?"
+
+"Is that money from the box?" I exclaimed.
+
+"Yes, m'sieu. I could not bring the box, and there had been enough
+blood shed over it already. Besides, when Buckhurst broke it open
+there was only a bit of iron for the scrap-heap left."
+
+I touched Speed's arm to call his attention; the poacher shrugged his
+shoulders and continued: "Tric-Trac made no ceremony with me; he
+told me that he and Buckhurst had settled this Dr. Delmont, and the
+other--the professor--Tavernier."
+
+"Murdered them?" muttered Speed.
+
+"Dame!--the coup du Pere Francois is murder, I suppose."
+
+Speed turned to me. "That's the argot for strangling," he said,
+grimly.
+
+"Go on," I motioned to the poacher. "How did you get the money?"
+
+"Oh, pour ca--in my turn I turned sonneur," he replied, with a savage
+smile.
+
+A _sonneur_, in thieves' slang, is a creature of the footpad type who,
+tripping his victim flat, seizes him by the shoulders and beats his
+head against the pavement until he renders him unconscious--if he
+doesn't kill him.
+
+"It was pay-day," continued the Lizard. "Buckhurst opened the box
+and I heard him--he hammered it open with a cold chisel. I was
+standing guard on the forest's edge; I crept back, hearing the
+hammering and the little bell ringing the Angelus of Tric-Trac. It was
+close to dusk; by the time he got into the box it was dark in the
+woods, and it was easy to jump on his back and strike--not very hard,
+m'sieu--but, I tell you, Buckhurst lay for two days with eyes like a
+sick owl's! He knew one of his own men had done it. He never said a
+word, but I know he thinks it was Tric-Trac.... And when he is
+ready--bon soir, Tric-Trac!"
+
+He drew his right hand across his corded throat with a horridly
+suggestive motion. Speed watched him narrowly.
+
+I asked the poacher why Buckhurst had come to Paradise, and why his
+banditti had seized the railroad at Rose-Sainte-Anne.
+
+"Ah," cried the Lizard, with a ferocious leer, "that is the kernel
+under the limpet's tent! And I have uncovered it--I, Robert Garenne,
+bon sang de Jesu!"
+
+He stretched out his powerful arm toward the sea. "Where is that
+cruiser, m'sieu? Gone? Yes, but who sent her off? Buckhurst, with his
+new signal-book! Where? In chase of a sea-swallow, or a frigate
+(bird). Who knows? Listen, messieurs! We are to wreck the train for
+Brest to-night. Do you comprehend?"
+
+"Where?" I asked, quietly.
+
+"Just where the trestle at Lammerin crosses the ravine below the
+house of Josephine Tanguy."
+
+Speed looked around at me. "It's the treasure-train from Lorient.
+They're probably sending the crown diamonds back to Brest in view of
+the Uhlans being seen near Quimper."
+
+"On a false order?"
+
+"I believe so. I believe that Buckhurst sent the cruiser to Brest,
+and now he's started the treasure-trains back to Brest in a panic."
+
+"That is the truth," said the Lizard; "Tric-Trac told me. They have
+the code-book of Mornac." His eyes began to light up with that
+terrible anger as the name of his blood enemy fell from his lips; his
+nose twitched; his upper lip wrinkled into a snarl.
+
+I thought quietly for a moment, then asked the poacher whether there
+was a guard at the semaphore of Saint-Yssel.
+
+"Yes, the soldier Rolland, who says he understands the telegraph--a
+sot from Morlaix." He hesitated and looked across the open moor toward
+Paradise. "I must go," he muttered; "I am on guard yonder."
+
+I offered him my hand again; he took it, looking me sincerely in the
+eyes.
+
+"Let your private wrongs wait a little longer," I said. "I think we
+can catch Buckhurst and Mornac alive. Do you promise?"
+
+"Y-es," he replied.
+
+"Strike, then, like a Breton!"
+
+We struck palms heavily. Then he turned to Speed and motioned him to
+retire.
+
+Speed walked slowly toward a half-buried bowlder and sat down out of
+ear-shot.
+
+"For your sake," said the poacher, clutching my hand in a tightening
+grip--"for your sake I have let Mornac go--let him pass me at
+arm's-length, and did not strike. You have dealt openly by me--and
+justly. No man can say I betrayed friendship. But I swear to you that
+if you miss him this time, I shall not miss--I, Robert the Lizard!"
+
+"You mean to kill Mornac?" I asked.
+
+His eyes blazed.
+
+"Ami," he said, "I once spoke of '_a little red deer_,' and you half
+understood me, for you are wise in strange ways, as I am."
+
+"I remember," I said.
+
+His strong fingers closed tighter on my hand. "Woman--or doe--it's
+all one now; and I am out of prison--the prison _he_ sent me to! Do
+you understand that he wronged me--me, the soldier Garenne, in
+garrison at Vincennes; he, the officer, the aristocrat?"
+
+He choked, crushing my hand in a spasmodic grip. "Ami, the little red
+deer was beautiful--to me. He took her--the doe--a silly maid of
+Paradise--and I was in irons, m'sieu, for three years."
+
+He glared at vacancy, tears falling from his staring eyes.
+
+"Your wife?" I asked, quietly.
+
+"Yes, ami."
+
+He dropped my numbed fingers and rubbed his eyes with the back of his
+big hand.
+
+"Then Jacqueline is not your little daughter?" I asked, gravely.
+
+"Hers--not mine. That has been the most terrible of all for me--since
+she died--died so young, too, m'sieu--and all alone--in Paris. If he
+had not done that--if he had been kind to her. And she was only a
+child, ami, yet he left her."
+
+All the ferocity in his eyes was gone; he raised a vacant, grief-lined
+visage to meet mine, and stood stupidly, heavy hands hanging.
+
+Then, shoulders sloping, he shambled off into the thicket, trailing
+his battered rifle.
+
+When he was very far away I motioned to Speed.
+
+"I think," said I, "that we had better try to do something at the
+semaphore if we are going to stop that train in time."
+
+
+
+
+XX
+
+THE SEMAPHORE
+
+
+The telegraph station at the semaphore was a little, square, stone
+hut, roofed with slate, perched high on the cliffs. A sun-scorched,
+wooden signal-tower rose in front of it; behind it a line of telegraph
+poles stretched away into perspective across the moors. Beyond the
+horizon somewhere lay the war-port of Lorient, with its arsenal, armed
+redoubts, and heavy bastions; beyond that was war.
+
+While we plodded on, hip deep, through gorse and thorn and heath, we
+cautiously watched a spot of red moving to and fro in front of the
+station; and as we drew nearer we could see the sentry very
+distinctly, rifle slung muzzle down, slouching his beat in the
+sunshine.
+
+He was a slovenly specimen, doubtless a deserter from one of the three
+provincial armies now forming for the hopeless dash at Belfort and the
+German eastern communications.
+
+When Speed and I emerged from the golden gorse into plain view the
+sentinel stopped in his tracks, shoved his big, red hands into his
+trousers pockets, and regarded us sulkily.
+
+"What are you going to do with this gentleman?" whispered Speed.
+
+"Reason with him, first," I said; "a louis is worth a dozen
+kicks."
+
+The soldier left his post as we started toward him, and advanced,
+blinking in the strong sunshine, meeting us half-way.
+
+"Now, bourgeois," he said, shaking his unkempt head, "this won't do,
+you know. Orders are to keep off. And," he added, in a bantering tone,
+"I'm here to enforce them. Allons! En route, mes amis!"
+
+"Are you the soldier Rolland?" I asked.
+
+He admitted that he was with prompt profanity, adding that if we
+didn't like his name we had only to tell him so and he would arrange
+the matter.
+
+I told him that we approved not only his name but his personal
+appearance; indeed, so great was our admiration for him that we had
+come clear across the Saint-Yssel moor expressly to pay our
+compliments to him in the shape of a hundred-franc note. I drew it
+from the soiled roll the Lizard had intrusted to me, and displayed it
+for the sentinel's inspection.
+
+"Is that for me?" he demanded, unconvinced, plainly suspicious of
+being ridiculed.
+
+"Under certain conditions," I said, "these five louis are for you."
+
+The soldier winked. "I know what you want; you want to go in yonder
+and use the telegraph. What the devil," he burst out, "do all you
+bourgeois want with that telegraph in there?"
+
+"Has anybody else asked to use it?" I inquired, disturbed.
+
+"Anybody else?" he mimicked. "Well, I think so; there's somebody in
+there now--here, give your hundred francs or I tell you nothing, you
+understand!"
+
+I handed him the soiled note. He scanned it with the inborn distrust
+of the true malefactor, turned it over and over, and finally,
+pronouncing it "en regle," shoved it cheerfully into the lining of
+his red forage cap.
+
+"A hundred more if you answer my questions truthfully," I said,
+amiably.
+
+"'Cre cochon!" he blurted out; "fire at will, comrade! I'll sell you
+the whole cursed semaphore for a hundred more! What can I do for you,
+captain?"
+
+"Who is in that hut?"
+
+"A lady--she comes often--she gives ten francs each time. Zut!--what
+is ten francs when a gentleman gives a hundred! She pays me for my
+complaisance--bon! Place aux dames! You pay me better--bon! I'm yours,
+gentlemen. War is war, but money pulls the trigger!"
+
+The miserable creature cocked his forage-cap with a toothless smirk
+and twisted his scant mustache.
+
+"Who is this lady who pays you ten francs?" I asked.
+
+"I do not know her name--but," he added, with an offensive leer,
+"she's worth looking over by gentlemen like you. Do you want to see
+her? She's in there click-clicking away on the key with her pretty
+little fingers--bon sang! A morsel for a king, gentlemen."
+
+"Wait here," I said, disgusted, and walked toward the stone station.
+The treacherous cur came running after me. "There's a side door," he
+whispered; "step in there behind the partition and take a look at
+her. She'll be done directly: she never stays more than fifteen
+minutes. Then you can use the telegraph at your pleasure, captain."
+
+The side door was partly open; I stepped in noiselessly and found
+myself in a small, dusky closet, partitioned from the telegraph
+office. Immediately the rapid clicking of the Morse instrument came to
+my ears, and mechanically I read the message by the sound as it
+rattled on under the fingers of an expert:
+
+"--Must have already found out that the signals were not authorized
+by the government. Before the _Fer-de-Lance_ returns to her station
+the German cruiser ought to intercept her off Groix. Did you arrange
+for this?"
+
+There was a moment's silence, then back came rattling the reply in the
+Morse code, but in German:
+
+"Yes, all is arranged. The _Augusta_ took a French merchant vessel
+off Pont Aven yesterday. The _Augusta_ ought to pass Groix this
+evening. You are to burn three white lights from Point Paradise if a
+landing-party is needed. It rests with you entirely."
+
+Another silence, then the operator in the next room began:
+
+"You say that Lorient is alarmed by rumors of Uhlans, and therefore
+sends the treasure-train back to Brest. The train, you assure me,
+carries the diamonds of the crown, bar-silver, gold, the Venus of
+Milo, and ten battle-flags from the Invalides. Am I correct?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"The insurgents here, under an individual in our pay, one John
+Buckhurst, are preparing to wreck the train at the Lammerin trestle.
+
+"If the _Augusta_ can reach Point Paradise to-night, a landing-party
+could easily scatter these insurgents, seize the treasures, and
+re-embark in safety.
+
+"There is, you declare, nothing to fear from Lorient; the only thing,
+then, to be dreaded is the appearance of the _Fer-de-Lance_ off Groix.
+She is not now in sight; I will notify you if she appears. If she does
+not come I will burn three white lights in triangle on Paradise
+headland."
+
+A short pause, then:
+
+"Are there any Prussian cavalry near enough to help us?"
+
+And the answer:
+
+"Prussian dragoons are scouting toward Bannalec. I will send a
+messenger to them if I can. This is all. Be careful. Good-bye."
+
+"Good-bye," clicked the instrument in the next room. There was a
+rustle of skirts, a tap of small shoes on the stone floor. I leaned
+forward and looked through the little partition window; Sylvia Elven
+stood by the table, quietly drawing on her gloves. Her face was
+flushed and thoughtful.
+
+Slowly she walked toward the door, hesitated, turned, hurried back to
+the instrument, and set the switch. Then, without seating herself, she
+leaned over and gave the station call, three _S's_.
+
+"I forgot to say that the two Yankee officers of military police,
+Scarlett and Speed, are a harmless pair. You have nothing to fear from
+them. Good-bye."
+
+And the reply:
+
+"Watch them all the same. Be careful, madame, they are Yankees.
+Good-bye."
+
+When she had gone, closing the outer door behind her, I sprang to the
+key, switched on, rattled out the three S's and got my man, probably
+before he had taken three steps from his table.
+
+"I forgot to say," I telegraphed, using a light, rapid touch to
+imitate Sylvia's--"I forgot to say that, in case the treasure-train
+is held back to-night, the Augusta must run for the English Channel."
+
+"What's that?" came back the jerky reply.
+
+I repeated.
+
+"Donnerwetter!" rattled the wires. "The entire French iron-clad
+fleet is looking for her."
+
+"And I hope they catch her," I telegraphed.
+
+"Are you crazy?" came the frantic reply. "Who are you?"
+
+"A Yankee, idiot!" I replied. "Run for your life, you hopeless
+ass!"
+
+There was, of course, no reply, though I sent a few jocular remarks
+flying after what must have been the most horrified German spy south
+of Metz.
+
+Then, at a venture, I set the switch on the arsenal line, got a quick
+reply, and succeeded in alarming them sufficiently, I think, for in a
+few moments I was telegraphing directly to the governor of Lorient,
+and the wires grew hot with an interchange of observations, which
+resulted in my running to the locker, tumbling out all the signal
+bunting, cones, and balls, sorting five flags, two red cones, and a
+ball, and hastening out to the semaphore.
+
+Speed and the soldier Rolland saw me set the cones, hoist away, break
+out the flags on the halyards, and finally drop the white arm of the
+semaphore.
+
+I had set the signal for the _Fer-de-Lance_ to land in force and wipe
+Buckhurst and his grotesque crew from the face of the earth.
+
+"Rolland," I said, "here is another hundred francs. Watch that
+halyard and guard it. To-night you will string seven of those little
+lamps on this other halyard, light them, hoist them, and then go up
+that tower and light the three red lamps on the left."
+
+"'Tendu," he said, promptly.
+
+"If you do it I will give you two hundred francs to-morrow. Is it a
+bargain?"
+
+The soldier broke out into a torrent of promises which I cut short.
+
+"That lady will never come here again, I think. If she does, she must
+not touch those halyards. Do you hear? If she offers you money,
+remember I will double it. But, Rolland, if you lie to _me_ I will
+have you killed as the Bretons kill pigs; you understand how that is
+done?"
+
+He said that he understood, and followed us, fawning and whining his
+cowardly promises of fidelity until we ordered the wretch back to the
+post which he had already twice betrayed, and would certainly betray
+again if the opportunity offered.
+
+Walking fast over the springy heath, I told Speed briefly what I had
+done--that the treasure-train would not now leave Lorient, that as
+soon as the _Fer-de-Lance_ came in sight of the semaphore Buckhurst's
+game must come to an end.
+
+Far ahead of us we saw the flutter of a light dress on the moor;
+Sylvia Elven, the spy, was going home; and from the distance, across
+the yellow-flowered gorse, her gay song floated back to us:
+
+ "Those who die for a maid
+ Are paid;
+ Those who die for a creed
+ God-speed;
+ Those who die for their own dear land
+ Shall stand forever on God's right hand!--"
+
+"A spy!" muttered Speed.
+
+"I think," said I, "that she had better leave Paradise at once. Oh,
+the little fool, to risk all for a caprice--for a word to the poor
+fellow she ruined! Vanity does it every time, Speed."
+
+"I don't understand what you mean," he said.
+
+"No, and I can't explain," I replied, thinking of Kelly Eyre. "But
+Sylvia Elven is running a fearful risk here. Mornac knows her record.
+Buckhurst would betray her in a moment if he thought it might save his
+own skin. She ought to leave before the _Fer-de-Lance_ sights the
+semaphore and reads the signal to land in force."
+
+"Then you'll have to tell her," he said, gloomily.
+
+"I suppose so," I replied, not at all pleased. For the prospect of
+humiliating her, of proving to this woman that I was not as stupid as
+she believed me, gave me no pleasure. Rather was I sorry for her,
+sorry for the truly pitiable condition in which she must now find
+herself.
+
+As we reached the gates of Trecourt, dusty and tired from our moorland
+tramp, I turned and looked back. My signal was still set; the white
+arm of the semaphore glistened like silver against a brilliant sky of
+sapphire. Seaward I could see no sign of the _Fer-de-Lance_.
+
+"The guns I heard at sea must have been fired from the German cruiser
+_Augusta_," I suggested to Speed. "She's been hovering off the coast,
+catching French merchant craft. I wish to goodness the _Fer-de-Lance_
+would come in and give her a drubbing."
+
+"Oh, rubbish!" he said. "What the deuce do we care?"
+
+"It's human to take sides in this war, isn't it?" I insisted.
+
+"Considering the fashion in which France has treated us individually,
+it seems to me that we may as well take the German side," he said.
+
+"Are you going to?" I asked.
+
+He hesitated. "Oh, hang it all, no! There's something about France
+that holds us poor devils--I don't know what. Barring England, she's
+the only human nation in the whole snarling pack. Here's to her--damn
+her impudence! If she wants me she can have me--empire, kingdom, or
+republic. Vive anything--as long as it's French!"
+
+I was laughing when we entered the court; Jacqueline, her big, furry
+cat in her arms, came to the door and greeted Speed with:
+
+"You have been away a very long time, and the thorns are all out of
+my arms and my legs, and I have been desiring to see you. Come into
+the house and read--shall we?"
+
+Speed turned to me with an explanatory smile. "I've been reading the
+'Idyls' aloud to her in English," he said, rather shyly. "She seems
+to like them; it's the noble music that attracts her; she can't
+understand ten words."
+
+"I can understand nearly twenty," she said, flushing painfully.
+
+Speed, who had no thought of hurting her, colored up, too.
+
+"You don't comprehend, little one," he said, quickly. "It was in
+praise, not in blame, that I spoke."
+
+"I knew it--I am silly," she said, with quick tears trembling in her
+eyes. "You know I adore you, Speed. Forgive me."
+
+She turned away into the house, saying that she would get the book.
+
+"Look here, Speed," I said, troubled, "Jacqueline is very much like
+the traditional maid of romance, which I never believed existed--all
+unspoiled, frankly human, innocently daring, utterly ignorant of
+convention. She's only a child now, but another year or two will bring
+something else to her."
+
+"Don't you suppose I've thought of that?" he said, frowning.
+
+"I hope you have."
+
+"Well, I have. When I find enough to do to keep soul and body
+friendly I'm going to send her to school, if that old ruffian, her
+father, allows it."
+
+"I think he will," I said, gravely; "but after that?"
+
+"After what?"
+
+"After she's educated and--unhappy?"
+
+"She isn't any too happy now," he retorted.
+
+"Granted. But after you have spent all your money on her, what
+then?"
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"I mean that you'll have no child to deal with, but a woman in full
+bloom, a woman fairly aquiver with life and intelligence, a
+high-strung, sensitive, fine-grained creature, whose educated
+ignorance will not be educated innocence, remember that! And I tell
+you, Speed, it's the heaviest responsibility a man can assume."
+
+"I know it," he replied.
+
+"Then it's all right, if you do know it," I said, cheerfully. "All I
+can say is, I am thankful she isn't to spend her life in the circus."
+
+"Or meet death there," he added. "It's not to our credit that she
+escapes it."
+
+Jacqueline came dancing back to the porch, cat under one arm, book
+under the other, so frankly happy, so charmingly grateful for Speed's
+society, that the tragedy of the lonely child touched me very deeply.
+I strove to discover any trace of the bar sinister in her, but could
+not, though now I understood, from her parentage, how it was possible
+for a poacher's child to have such finely sculptured hands and feet.
+Perhaps her dark, silky lashes and hair were Mornac's, but if this was
+so, I trusted that there the aristocratic blood had spent its force in
+the frail body of this child of chance.
+
+I went into the house, leaving them seated on the porch, heads
+together, while in a low monotone Speed read the deathless "Morte
+d'Arthur."
+
+Daylight was waning.
+
+Out of the west a clear, greenish sky, tinged with saffron tints,
+promised a sea-wind. But the mild land-breeze was still blowing and
+the ebb-tide flowing as I entered the corridor and glanced at the
+corner where the spinning-wheel stood. Sylvia sat beside it, reading
+in the Lutheran Bible by the failing light.
+
+She raised her dreamy eyes as I passed; I had never seen her piquantly
+expressive face so grave.
+
+"May I speak to you alone a moment, after dinner?" I asked.
+
+"If you wish," she replied.
+
+I bowed and started on, but she called me back.
+
+"Did you know that Monsieur Eyre is here?"
+
+"Kelly Eyre?"
+
+"Oui, monsieur. He returns with an order from the governor of Lorient
+for the balloon."
+
+I was astonished, and asked where Eyre had gone.
+
+"He is in your room," she said, "loading your revolver. I hope you
+will not permit him to go alone to Paradise."
+
+"I'll see about that," I muttered, and hurried up the stairs and down
+the hallway to my bedchamber.
+
+He sprang to the door as I entered, giving me both hands in boyish
+greeting, saying how delighted they all were to know that my injury
+had proved so slight.
+
+"That balloon robbery worried me," he continued. "I knew that Speed
+depended on his balloon for a living; so as soon as we entered Lorient
+I went to our consul, and he and I made such a row that the governor
+of Lorient gave me an order for the balloon. Here it is, Mr.
+Scarlett."
+
+His heightened color and excitement, his nervous impetuosity, were not
+characteristic of this quiet and rather indifferent young countryman
+of mine.
+
+I looked at him keenly but pleasantly.
+
+"You are going to load my revolver, and go over to Paradise and take
+that balloon from these bandits?" I asked, smiling.
+
+"An order is all right, but it is the more formal when backed by a
+bullet," he said.
+
+"Do you mean to tell me that you were preparing to go over into that
+hornet's nest alone?"
+
+He shrugged his shoulders with a reckless laugh.
+
+"Give me my revolver," I said, coldly.
+
+His face fell. "Let me take it, Mr. Scarlett," he pleaded; but I
+refused, and made him hand me the weapon.
+
+"Now," I said, sternly, "I want to know what the devil you mean by
+attempting suicide? Do you suppose that those ruffians care a straw
+for you and your order? Kelly, what's the matter with you? Is life as
+unattractive as all that?"
+
+His flushed and sullen face darkened.
+
+"If you want to risk your life," I said, "you have plenty of chances
+in your profession. Did you ever hear of an aged aeronaut? Kelly, go
+back to America and break your neck like a gentleman."
+
+He darted a menacing glance at me, but there was nothing of irony in
+my sober visage.
+
+"You appear here," I said, "after the others have sailed from
+Lorient. Why? To do Speed this generous favor? Yes--and to do yourself
+the pleasure of ending an embittered life under the eyes of the woman
+who ruined you."
+
+The boy flinched as though I had struck him in the face. For a moment
+I expected a blow; his hands clinched convulsively, and he focussed me
+with blazing eyes.
+
+"Don't," I said, quietly. "I am trying to be your friend; I am
+trying to save you from yourself, Kelly. Don't throw away your
+life--as I have done. Life is a good thing, Kelly, a good thing. Can
+we not be friends though I tell you the truth?"
+
+The color throbbed and throbbed in his face. There was a chair near
+him; he groped for it, and sat down heavily.
+
+"Life is a good thing," I said again, "but, Kelly, truth is better.
+And I must tell you the--well, something of the truth--as much as you
+need know ... now. My friend, _she is not worth it_."
+
+"Do you think that makes any difference?" he said, harshly. "Let me
+alone, Scarlett. I know!... _I know_, I tell you!"
+
+"Do you mean to tell me that you know she deliberately betrayed you?"
+I demanded.
+
+"Yes, I know it--I tell you I know it!"
+
+"And ... you love her?"
+
+"Yes." He dropped his haggard face on his arms a moment, then sat
+bolt upright. "Truth is better than life," he said, slowly. "I lied
+to you and to myself when I came back. I did come to get Speed's
+balloon, but I came ... for her sake,... to be near her,... to see her
+once more before I--"
+
+"Yes, I understand, Kelly."
+
+He winced and leaned wearily back.
+
+"You are right," he said; "I wanted to end it,... I am tired."
+
+I sat thinking for a moment; the light in the room faded to a glimmer
+on the panes.
+
+"Kelly," I said, "there remains another way to risk your neck, and,
+I think, a nobler way. There is in this house a woman who is running a
+terrible risk--a German spy whose operations have been discovered.
+This woman believes that she has in her pay the communist leader of
+the revolt, a man called Buckhurst. She is in error. And she must
+leave this house to-night."
+
+Eyre's face had paled. He bent forward, clasped hands between his
+knees, eyes fastened on me.
+
+"There will be trouble here to-night--or, in all probability, within
+the next twenty-four hours. I expect to see Buckhurst a prisoner. And
+when that happens it will go hard with Mademoiselle Elven, for he will
+turn on her to save himself.... And you know what that means;... a
+blank wall, Kelly, and a firing-squad. There is but one sex for
+spies."
+
+A deadly fear was stamped on his bloodless face. I saw it, tense and
+quivering, in the gray light of the window.
+
+"She must leave to-night, Kelly. She must try to cross into Spain.
+Will you help her?"
+
+He nodded, striving to say "yes."
+
+"You know your own risk?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Her company is death for you both if you are taken."
+
+He stood up very straight. In what strange forms comes happiness to
+man!
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+LIKE HER ANCESTORS
+
+
+A sense of insecurity, of impending trouble, seemed to weigh upon us
+all that evening--a physical depression, which the sea-wind brought
+with its flying scud, wetting the window-panes like fine rain.
+
+At intervals from across the moors came the deadened rolling of
+insurgent drums, and in the sky a ruddy reflection of a fire
+brightened and waned as the fog thickened or blew inland--an ominous
+sign of disorder, possibly even a reflection from that unseen war
+raging somewhere beyond the obscured horizon.
+
+It may have been this indefinable foreboding that drew our little
+company into a temporary intimacy; it may have been the immense
+loneliness of the sea, thundering in thickening darkness, that stilled
+our voices to whispers.
+
+Eyre, ill at ease, walked from window to window, looking at the
+luminous tints on the ragged edges of the clouds; Sylvia, over her
+heavy embroidery, lifted her head gravely at moments, to glance after
+him when he halted listless, preoccupied, staring at Speed and
+Jacqueline, who were drawing pictures of Arthur and his knights by the
+lamp-lit table.
+
+I leaned in the embrasure of the southern window, gazing at my lighted
+lanterns, which dangled from the halyards at Saint-Yssel. The soldier
+Rolland had so far kept his word--three red lamps glimmered through a
+driving mist; the white lanterns hung above, faintly shining.
+
+Full in the firelight of the room sat the young Countess, lost in
+reverie, hands clasping the gilt arms of her chair. At her feet dozed
+Ange Pitou.
+
+The dignity of a parvenu cat admitted for the first time to unknown
+luxury is a lesson. I said this to the young Countess, who smiled
+dreamily, watching the play of color over the drift-wood fire. A
+ship's plank was burning there, tufted with golden-green flames.
+Presently a blaze of purest carmine threw a deeper light into the
+room.
+
+"I wonder," she said, "what people sailed in that ship--and when?
+Did they perish on this coast when their ship perished? A drift-wood
+fire is beautiful, but a little sad, too." She looked up pensively
+over her shoulder. "Will you bring a chair to the fire?" she asked.
+"We are burning part of a great ship--for our pleasure, monsieur.
+Tell me what ship it was; tell me a story to amuse me--not a
+melancholy one, if you please."
+
+I drew a chair to the blaze; the drift-wood burned gold and violet,
+with scarcely a whisper of its velvet flames.
+
+"I am afraid my story is not going to be very cheerful," I said,
+"and I am also afraid that I must ask you to listen to it."
+
+She met my eyes with composure, leaned a little toward me, and
+waited.
+
+And so, sitting there in the tinted glare, I told her of the death of
+Delmont and of Tavernier, and of Buckhurst's share in the miserable
+work.
+
+I spoke in a whisper scarcely louder than the rustle of the flames,
+watching the horror growing in her face.
+
+I told her that the money she had intrusted to them for the Red Cross
+was in my possession, and would be forwarded at the first chance; that
+I hoped to bring Buckhurst to justice that very night.
+
+"Madame, I am paining you," I said; "but I am going to cause you
+even greater unhappiness."
+
+"Tell me what is necessary," she said, forming the words with
+tightened lips.
+
+"Then I must tell you that it is necessary for Mademoiselle Elven to
+leave Trecourt to-night."
+
+She looked at me as though she had not heard.
+
+"It is absolutely necessary," I repeated. "She must go secretly. She
+must leave her effects; she must go in peasant's dress, on foot."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"It is better that I do not tell you, madame."
+
+"Tell me. It is my right to know."
+
+"Not now; later, if you insist."
+
+The young Countess passed one hand over her eyes as though dazed.
+
+"Does Sylvia know this?" she asked, in a shocked voice.
+
+"Not yet."
+
+"And you are going to tell her?"
+
+"Yes, madame."
+
+"This is dreadful," she muttered.... "If I did not know you,... if I
+did not trust you so perfectly,... trust you with all my heart!... Oh,
+are you certain she must go? It frightens me; it is so strange! I have
+grown fond of her.... And now you say that she must go. I cannot
+understand--I cannot."
+
+"No, you cannot understand," I repeated, gently; "but she can. It is
+a serious matter for Mademoiselle Elven; it could not easily be more
+serious. It is even perhaps a question of life or death, madame."
+
+"In Heaven's name, help her, then!" she said, scarcely controlling
+the alarm that brought a pitiful break in her voice.
+
+"I am trying to," I said. "And now I must consult Mademoiselle
+Elven. Will you help me?"
+
+"What can I do?" she asked, piteously.
+
+"Stand by that window. Look, madame, can you see the lights on the
+semaphore?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Count them aloud."
+
+She counted the white lights for me, then the red ones.
+
+"Now," I said, "if those lights change in number or color or
+position, come instantly to me. I shall be with Mademoiselle Elven in
+the little tea-room. But," I added, "I do not expect any change in
+the lights; it is only a precaution."
+
+I left her in the shadow of the curtains, and passed through the room
+to Sylvia's side. She looked up quietly from her embroidery frame,
+then, dropping the tinted silks and needles on the cloth, rose and
+walked beside me past Eyre, who stood up as we came abreast of him.
+
+Sylvia paused. "Monsieur Eyre," she said, "I have a question to ask
+you ... some day," and passed on with a smile and a slight inclination
+of her head, leaving Eyre looking after her with heavy eyes.
+
+When we entered the little tea-room she passed on to the lounge and
+seated herself on the padded arm; I turned, closed the door, and
+walked straight toward her.
+
+She glanced up at me curiously; something in my face appeared to sober
+her, for the amused smile on her lips faded before I spoke.
+
+"What is it?" she asked.
+
+"I am sorry to tell you," I said--"sorry from my heart. You are not
+very friendly to me, and that makes it harder for me to say what I
+have to say."
+
+She was watching me intently out of her pretty, intelligent eyes.
+
+"What do you mean?" she asked, guardedly.
+
+"I mean that you cannot stay here," I said. "And you know why."
+
+The color flooded her face, and she stood up, confronting me,
+exasperated, defiant.
+
+"Will you explain this insult?" she asked, hotly.
+
+"Yes. You are a German spy," I said, under my breath.
+
+There was no color in her face now--nothing but a glitter in her blue
+eyes and a glint from the small, white teeth biting her lower lip.
+
+"French troops will land here to-night or to-morrow," I went on,
+calmly. "You will see how dangerous your situation is certain to
+become when Buckhurst is taken, and when it is understood _what use
+you have made of the semaphore_."
+
+She winced, then straightened and bent her steady gaze on me. Her
+courage was admirable.
+
+"I thank you for telling me," she said, simply. "Have I a chance to
+reach the Spanish frontier?"
+
+"I think you have," I replied. "Kelly Eyre is going with you
+when--"
+
+"He? No, no, he must not! Does he know what I am?" she broke in,
+impetuously.
+
+"Yes, mademoiselle; and he knows what happens to spies."
+
+"Did he offer to go?" she asked, incredulously.
+
+"Mademoiselle, he insists."
+
+Her lip began to tremble. She turned toward the window, where the
+sea-fog flew past in the rising wind, and stared out across the
+immeasurable blackness of the ocean.
+
+Without turning her head she said: "Does he know that it may mean his
+death?"
+
+"He has suffered worse for your sake!" I said, bitterly.
+
+"What?" she flashed out, confronting me in an instant.
+
+"You must know that," I said--"three years of hell--prison--utter
+ruin! Do you dare deny you have been ignorant of this?"
+
+For a space she stood there, struck speechless; then, "Call him!" she
+cried. "Call him, I tell you! Bring him here--I want him here--here
+before us both!" She sprang to the door, but I blocked her way.
+
+"I will not have Madame de Vassart know what you did to him!" I said.
+"If you want Kelly Eyre, I will call him." And I stepped into the
+hallway.
+
+Eyre, passing the long stone corridor, looked up as I beckoned; and
+when he entered the tea-room, Sylvia, white as a ghost, met him face
+to face.
+
+"Monsieur," she said, harshly, "why did you not come to that
+book-store?"
+
+He was silent. His face was answer enough--a terrible answer.
+
+"Monsieur Eyre, speak to me! Is it true? Did they--did you not know
+that I made an error--that I _did_ go on Monday at the same hour?"
+
+His haggard face lighted up; she saw it, and caught his hands in
+hers.
+
+"Did you think I knew?" she stammered. "Did you think I could do
+that? They told me at the _usine_ that you had gone away--I thought
+you had forgotten--that you did not care--"
+
+"Care!" he groaned, and bowed his head, crushing her hands over his
+face.
+
+Then she broke down, breathless with terror and grief.
+
+"I was not a spy then--truly I was not, Kelly. There was no harm in
+me--I only--only asked for the sketches because--because--I cared for
+you. I have them now; no soul save myself has ever seen them--even
+afterward, when I drifted into intrigue at the Embassy--when everybody
+knew that Bismarck meant to force war--everybody except the French
+people--I never showed those little sketches! They were--were mine!
+Kelly, they were all I had left when you went away--to a
+fortress!--and I did not know!--I did not know!"
+
+"Hush!" he groaned. "It is all right--it is all right now."
+
+"Do you believe me?"
+
+"Yes, yes. Don't cry--don't be unhappy--now."
+
+She raised her head and fumbled in her corsage with shaking fingers,
+and drew from her bosom a packet of papers.
+
+"Here are the sketches," she sobbed; "they have cost you dear! Now
+leave me--hate me! Let them come and take me--I do not want to live
+any more. Oh, what punishment on earth!"
+
+Her suffering was unendurable to the man who had suffered through her;
+he turned on me, quivering in every limb.
+
+"We must start," he said, hoarsely. "Give me your revolver."
+
+I drew it from my hip-pocket and passed it to him.
+
+"Scarlett," he began, "if we don't reach--"
+
+A quick rapping at the door silenced him; the young Countess stood in
+the hallway, bright-eyed, but composed, asking for me.
+
+"The red and the white lights are gone," she said. "There are four
+green lights on the tower and four blue lights on the halyards."
+
+I turned to Eyre. "This is interesting," I said, grimly. "I set
+signals for the _Fer-de-Lance_ to land in force. Somebody has changed
+them. You had better get ready to go."
+
+Sylvia had shrunk away from Eyre. The Countess looked at her blankly,
+then at me.
+
+"Madame," I said, "there is little enough of happiness in the
+world--so little that when it comes it should be welcomed, even by
+those who may not share in it."
+
+And I bent nearer and whispered the truth.
+
+Then I went to Sylvia, who stood there tremulous, pallid.
+
+"You serve your country at a greater risk than do the soldiers of
+your King," I said. "There is no courage like that which discounts a
+sordid, unhonored death. You have my respect, mademoiselle."
+
+"Sylvia!" murmured the young Countess, incredulously; "you a
+spy?--here--under my roof?"
+
+Sylvia unconsciously stretched out one hand toward her.
+
+Eyre stepped to her side, with an angry glance at Madame de Vassart.
+
+"I--I love you, madame," whispered Sylvia. "I only place my own
+country first. Can you forgive me?"
+
+The Countess stood as though stunned; Eyre passed her slowly,
+supporting Sylvia to the door.
+
+"Madame," I said, "will you speak to her? Your countries, not your
+hearts, are at war. She did her duty."
+
+"A spy!" repeated the Countess, in a dull voice. "A spy! And she
+brings this--this shame on me!"
+
+Sylvia turned, standing unsteadily. For a long time they looked at
+each other in silence, their eyes wet with tears. Then Eyre lifted
+Sylvia's hand and kissed it, and led her away, closing the door
+behind.
+
+The Countess still stood in the centre of the room, transfixed, rigid,
+staring through her tears at the closed door. With a deep-drawn breath
+she straightened her shoulders; her head drooped; she covered her face
+with clasped hands.
+
+Standing there, did she remember those who, one by one, had betrayed
+her? Those who first whispered to her that love of country was a
+narrow creed; those who taught her to abhor violence, and then failed
+at the test--Bazard, firing to kill, going down to death under the
+merciless lance of an Uhlan; Buckhurst, guilty of every crime that
+attracted him; and now Sylvia, her friend, false to the salt she had
+eaten, false to the roof above her, false, utterly false to all save
+the land of her nativity.
+
+And she, Eline de Trecourt, a soldier's daughter and a Frenchwoman,
+had been used as a shield by those who were striking her own
+mother-land--the country she once had denied; the country whose
+frontiers she knew not in her zeal for limitless brotherhood; the
+blackened, wasted country she had seen at Strasbourg; the land for
+which the cuirassiers of Morsbronn had died!
+
+"What have I done?" she cried, brokenly--"what have I done that this
+shame should come upon me?"
+
+"You have done nothing," I said, "neither for good nor evil in this
+crisis. But Sylvia has; Sylvia the spy. That a man should give up his
+life for a friend is good; that a woman offer hers for her country is
+better. What has it cost her? The friendship of the woman she
+worships--you, madame! It has cost her that already, and the price may
+include her life and the life of the man she loves. She has done her
+duty; the sacrifice is still burning; I pray it may spare her and
+spare him."
+
+I walked to the door and laid my hand on the brass knob.
+
+"The world is merciless to failures," I said. "Yet even a successful
+spy is scarcely tolerated among the Philistines; a captured spy is a
+horror for friends to forget and for enemies to destroy in righteous
+indignation. Madame, I know, for I have served your country in Algiers
+as a spy,... not from patriotism, for I am an alien, but because I was
+fitted for it in my line of duty. Had I been caught I should have
+looked for nothing but contempt from France; from the Kabyle, for
+neither admiration nor mercy. I tell you this that you may understand
+my respect for this woman, whose motives are worthy of it."
+
+The Countess looked at me scornfully. "It is well," she said, "for
+those who understand and tolerate treachery to condone it. It is well
+that the accused be judged by their peers. We of Trecourt know only
+one tongue. But that is the language of truth, monsieur. All else is
+foreign."
+
+"Where did the nobility learn this tongue--to our exclusion?" I
+asked, bluntly.
+
+"When our forefathers faced the tribunals!" she flashed out. "Did
+you ever hear of a spy among us? Did you ever hear of a lie among
+us?"
+
+"You have been taught history by your peers, madame," I said, with a
+bow; "I have been taught history by mine."
+
+"The sorry romance!" she said, bitterly. "It has brought me to
+this!"
+
+"It has brought others to their senses," I said, sharply.
+
+"To their knees, you mean!"
+
+"Yes--to their knees at last."
+
+"To the guillotine--yes!"
+
+"No, madame, to pray for their native land--too late!"
+
+"I think," she said, "that we are not fitted to understand each
+other."
+
+"It remains," I said, "for me to thank you for your kindness to us
+all, and for your generosity to me in my time of need.... It is quite
+useless for me to dream of repaying it.... I shall never forget it....
+I ask leave to make my adieux, madame."
+
+She flushed to her temples, but did not answer.
+
+As I stood looking at her, a vivid flare of light flashed through the
+window behind me, crimsoning the walls, playing over the ceiling with
+an infernal radiance. At the same instant the gate outside crashed
+open, a hubbub of voices swelled into a roar; then the outer doors
+were flung back and a score of men sprang into the hallway, soldiers
+with the red torch-light dancing on rifle-barrels and bayonets.
+
+And before them, revolver swinging in his slender hand, strode
+Buckhurst, a red sash tied across his breast, his colorless eyes like
+diamonds.
+
+Speed and Jacqueline came hurrying through the hall to where I stood;
+Buckhurst's smile was awful as his eyes flashed from Speed to me.
+
+Behind him, close to his shoulder, the torch-light fell on Mornac's
+smooth, false face, stretched now into a ferocious grimace; behind him
+crowded the soldiers of the commune, rifles slung, craning their
+unshaven faces to catch a glimpse of us.
+
+"Demi-battalion, halt!" shouted an officer, and flung up his naked
+sabre.
+
+"Halt," repeated Buckhurst, quietly.
+
+Madame de Vassart's servants had come running from kitchen and stable
+at the first alarm, and now stood huddled in the court-yard,
+bewildered, cowed by the bayonets which had checked them.
+
+"Buckhurst," I said, "what the devil do you mean by this foolery?"
+and I started for him, shouldering my way among his grotesque escort.
+
+For an instant I looked into his deadly eyes; then he silently
+motioned me back; a dozen bayonets were levelled, forcing me to
+retire, inch by inch, until I felt Speed's grip on my arm.
+
+"That fellow means mischief," he whispered. "Have you a pistol?"
+
+"I gave mine to Eyre," I said, under my breath. "If he means us
+harm, don't resist or they may take revenge on the Countess. Speed,
+keep her in the room there! Don't let her come out."
+
+But the Countess de Vassart was already in the hall, facing Buckhurst
+with perfect composure.
+
+Twice she ordered him to leave; he looked up from his whispered
+consultation with Mornac and coolly motioned her to be silent.
+
+Once she spoke to Mornac, quietly demanding a reason for the outrage,
+and Mornac silenced her with a brutal gesture.
+
+"Madame," I said, "it is I they want. I beg you to retire."
+
+"You are my guest," she said. "My place is here."
+
+"Your place is where I please to put you!" broke in Mornac; and to
+Buckhurst: "I tell you she's as guilty as the others. Let me attend
+to this and make a clean sweep!"
+
+"Citizen Mornac will endeavor to restrain his zeal," observed
+Buckhurst, with a sneer. And then, as I looked at this slender, pallid
+man, I understood who was the dominant power behind the curtain; and
+so did Speed, for I felt him press my elbow significantly.
+
+He turned and addressed us, suavely, bowing with a horrid, mock
+deference to the Countess:
+
+"In the name of the commune! The ci-devant Countess de Vassart is
+accused of sheltering the individual Scarlett, late inspector of
+Imperial Police; the individual Speed, ex-inspector of Imperial
+Gendarmes; the individual Eyre, under general suspicion; the woman
+called Sylvia Elven, a German spy. As war-delegate of the commune, I
+am here to accuse!"
+
+There was a silence, then a low, angry murmur from the soldiers, which
+grew louder until Buckhurst turned on them. He did not utter a word,
+but the sullen roar died out, a bayonet rattled, then all was still in
+the dancing torch-light.
+
+"I accuse," continued Buckhurst, in a passionless voice, "the
+individual Scarlett of treachery to the commune; of using the
+telegraph for treacherous ends; of hoisting signals with the purpose
+of attracting government troops to destroy us. I accuse the individual
+Speed of aiding his companion in using the telegraph to stop the
+government train, thus depriving the commune of the funds which
+rightfully belong to it--the treasures wrung from wretched peasants by
+the aristocrats of an accursed monarchy and a thrice-accursed
+empire!"
+
+A roaring cheer burst from the excited soldiers, drowning the voice of
+Buckhurst.
+
+"Silence!" shouted Mornac, savagely. And as the angry voices were
+stilled, one by one, above the banging of rifle-stocks and the rattle
+of bayonets, Buckhurst's calm voice rose in a sinister monotone.
+
+"I accuse the woman Sylvia Elven of communication with Prussian
+agents; of attempted corruption of soldiers under my command. I accuse
+the citoyenne Eline Trecourt, lately known as the Countess de Vassart,
+of aiding, encouraging, and abetting these enemies of France!"
+
+He waited until the short, fierce yell of approval had died away.
+Then:
+
+"Call the soldier Rolland!" he said.
+
+My heart began to hammer in my throat. "I believe it's going hard
+with us," I muttered to Speed.
+
+"Listen," he motioned.
+
+I listened to the wretched creature Rolland while he told what had
+happened at the semaphore. In his eagerness he pushed close to where I
+stood, menacing me with every gesture, cursing and lashing himself
+into a rage, ignoring all pretence of respect and discipline for his
+own superiors.
+
+"What are you waiting for?" he shouted, insolently, turning on
+Buckhurst. "I tell the truth; and if this man can afford to pay
+hundreds of francs for a telegram, he must be rich enough to pluck, I
+tell you!"
+
+"You say he bribed you?" asked Buckhurst, gently.
+
+"Yes; I've said it twenty times, haven't I?"
+
+"And you took the bribes?"
+
+"Parbleu!"
+
+"And you thought if you admitted it and denounced the man who bribed
+you that you would help divide a few millions with us, you rogue?"
+suggested Buckhurst, admiringly.
+
+The wretch laughed outright.
+
+"And you believe that you deserve well of the commune?" smiled
+Buckhurst.
+
+The soldier grinned and opened his mouth to answer, and Buckhurst shot
+him through the face; and, as he fell, shot him again, standing
+wreathed in the smoke of his own weapon.
+
+The deafening racket of the revolver, the smoke, the spectacle of the
+dusty, inert thing on the floor over which Buckhurst stood and shot,
+seemed to stun us all.
+
+"I think," said Buckhurst, in a pleasantly persuasive voice, "that
+there will be no more bribery in this battalion." He deliberately
+opened the smoking weapon; the spent shells dropped one by one from
+the cylinder, clinking on the stone floor.
+
+"No--no more bribery," he mused, touching the dead man with the
+carefully polished toe of his shoe. "Because," he added, reloading
+his revolver, "I do not like it."
+
+He turned quietly to Mornac and ordered the corpse to be buried, and
+Mornac, plainly unnerved at the murderous act of his superior,
+repeated the order, cursing his men to cover the quaver in his voice.
+
+"As for you," observed Buckhurst, glancing up at us where we stood
+speechless together, "you will be judged and sentenced when this
+drum-head court decides. Go into that room!"
+
+The Countess did not move.
+
+Speed touched her arm; she looked up quietly, smiled, and stepped
+across the threshold. Speed followed; Jacqueline slipped in beside
+him, and then I turned on Buckhurst, who had just ordered his soldiers
+to surround the house outside.
+
+"As a matter of fact," I said, when the last armed ruffian had
+departed, "I am the only person in this house who has interfered with
+your affairs. The others have done nothing to harm you."
+
+"The court will decide that," he replied, balancing his revolver in
+his palm.
+
+I eyed him for an instant. "Do you mean harm to this unfortunate
+woman?" I asked.
+
+"My friend," he replied, in a low voice, "you have very stupidly
+upset plans that have cost me months to perfect. You have, by stopping
+that train, robbed me of something less than twenty millions of
+francs. I have my labor for my pains; I have this mob of fools on my
+hands; I may lose my life through this whim of yours; and if I don't,
+I have it all to begin again. And you ask me what I am going to do!"
+
+His eyes glittered.
+
+"If I strike her I strike you. Ask yourself whether or not I will
+strike."
+
+All the blood seemed to leave my heart; I straightened up with an
+effort.
+
+"There are some murders," I said, "that even you must recoil at."
+
+"I don't think you appreciate me," he replied, with a deathly smile.
+
+He motioned toward the door with levelled weapon. I turned and entered
+the tea-room, and he locked the door from the outside.
+
+The Countess, seated on the sofa, looked up as I appeared. She was
+terribly pale, but she smiled as my heavy eyes met hers.
+
+"Is it to be farce or tragedy, monsieur?" she asked, without a tremor
+in her clear voice.
+
+I could not have uttered a word to save my life. Speed, pacing the
+room, turned to read my face; and I think he read it, for he stopped
+short in his tracks. Jacqueline, watching him with blue, inscrutable
+eyes, turned sharply toward the window and peered out into the
+darkness.
+
+Beyond the wall of the garden the fog, made luminous by the torches of
+the insurgents, surrounded the house with a circle of bright, ruddy
+vapor.
+
+Speed came slowly across the room with me.
+
+"Do they mean to shoot us?" he asked, bluntly.
+
+"Messieurs," said the Countess, with a faint smile, "your whispers
+are no compliment to my race. Pray honor me by plain speaking. Are we
+to die?"
+
+We stood absolutely speechless before her.
+
+"Ah, Monsieur Scarlett," she said, gravely, "do you also fail me ...
+at the end?... You, too--even you?... Must I tell you that we of
+Trecourt fear nothing in this world?"
+
+She made a little gesture, exquisitely imperious.
+
+I stepped toward her; she waited for me to seat myself beside her.
+
+"Are we to die?" she asked.
+
+"Yes, madame."
+
+"Thank you," she said, softly.
+
+I looked up. My head was swimming so that I could scarcely see her,
+scarcely perceive the deep, steady tenderness in her clear eyes.
+
+"Do you not understand?" she asked. "You are my friend. I wished to
+know my fate from you."
+
+"Madame," I said, hoarsely, "how can you call me friend when you
+know to what I have brought you?"
+
+"You have brought me to know myself," she said, simply. "Why should
+I not be grateful? Why do you look at me so sadly, Monsieur Scarlett?
+Truly, you must know that my life has been long enough to prove its
+uselessness."
+
+"It is not true!" I cried, stung by remorse for all I had said.
+"Such women as you are the hope of France! Such women as you are the
+hope of the world! Ah, that you should consider the bitterness and
+folly of such a man as I am--that you should consider and listen to
+the sorry wisdom of a homeless mountebank--a wandering fool--a
+preacher of empty platitudes, who has brought you to this with his
+cursed meddling!"
+
+"You taught me truth," she said, calmly; "you make the last days of
+my life the only ones worth living. I said to you but an hour
+since--when I was angry--that we were unfitted to comprehend each
+other. It is not true. We are fitted for that. I had rather die with
+you than live without the friendship which I believe--which I know--is
+mine. Monsieur Scarlett, it is not love. If it were, I could not say
+this to you--even in death's presence. It is something better;
+something untroubled, confident, serene.... You see it is not love....
+And perhaps it has no name.... For I have never before known such
+happiness, such peace, as I know now, here with you, talking of our
+death. If we could live,... you would go away.... I should be
+alone.... And I have been alone all my life,... and I am tired. You
+see I have nothing to regret in a death that brings me to you
+again.... Do you regret life?"
+
+"Not now," I said.
+
+"You are kind to say so. I do believe--yes, I know that you truly
+care for me.... Do you?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then it will not be hard.... Perhaps not even very painful."
+
+The key turning in the door startled us. Buckhurst entered, and
+through the hallway I saw his dishevelled soldiers running, flinging
+open doors, tearing, trampling, pillaging, wrecking everything in
+their path.
+
+"Your business will be attended to in the garden at dawn," he
+observed, blinking about the room, for the bright lamp-light dazzled
+him.
+
+Speed, who had been standing by the window with Jacqueline, wheeled
+sharply, took a few steps into the room, then sank into a chair,
+clasping his lank hands between his knees.
+
+The Countess did not even glance up as the sentence was pronounced;
+she looked at me and laid her left hand on mine, smiling, as though
+waiting for the moment to resume an interrupted conversation.
+
+"Do you hear?" demanded Buckhurst, raising his voice.
+
+There was no answer for a moment; then Jacqueline stepped from the
+window and said: "Am I free to go?"
+
+"You!" said Buckhurst, contemptuously; "who in hell are you?"
+
+"I am Jacqueline."
+
+"Really," sneered Buckhurst.
+
+He went away, slamming and locking the door; and I heard Mornac
+complaining that the signals had gone out on the semaphore and that
+there was more treachery abroad.
+
+"Get me a horse!" said Buckhurst. "There are plenty of them in the
+stables. Mornac, you stay here; I'll ride over to the semaphore. Gut
+this house and fire it after you've finished that business in the
+garden to-morrow morning."
+
+"Where are you going?" demanded Mornac's angry voice. "Do you expect
+me to stay here while you start for Paris?"
+
+"You have your orders," said Buckhurst, menacingly.
+
+"Oh, have I? What are they? To stay here when the country is
+roused--stay here and perhaps be shelled by that damned cruiser out
+there--"
+
+His voice was stifled as though a hand had clutched his throat; there
+came the swift sound of a struggle, the banging of scabbards and
+spurs, the scuffle of heavy boots.
+
+"Are you mad?" burst out Mornac's strangled voice.
+
+"Are you?" breathed Buckhurst. "Silence, you fool. Do you obey
+orders or not?"
+
+Their voices receded. Speed sprang to the door to listen, then ran
+back to the window.
+
+"Scarlett," he whispered, "there are the lights of a vessel at
+anchor off Groix."
+
+I was beside him in an instant. "It's the cruiser," I said. "Oh,
+Speed, for a chance to signal!"
+
+We looked at each other desperately.
+
+"We could set the room afire," he said; "they might land to see what
+had happened."
+
+"And find us all shot."
+
+Jacqueline, standing beside Speed, said, quietly: "I could swim it.
+Wait. Raise the window a little."
+
+"You cannot dive from that cliff!" I said.
+
+She cautiously unlocked the window and peered out into the dark
+garden.
+
+"The cliff falls sheer from the wall yonder," she whispered. "I
+shall try to drop. I learned much in the circus. I am not afraid,
+Speed. I shall drop into the sea."
+
+"To your death," I said.
+
+"Possibly, m'sieu. It is a good death, however. I am not afraid."
+
+"Close the window," muttered Speed. "They'd shoot her from the wall,
+anyway."
+
+Again the child gravely asked permission to try.
+
+"No," said Speed, harshly, and turned away. But in that instant
+Jacqueline flung open the window and vaulted into the garden. Before I
+could realize what had happened she was only a glimmering spot in the
+darkness. Then Speed and I followed her, running swiftly toward the
+foot of the garden, but we were too late; a slim, white shape rose
+from the top of the wall and leaped blindly out through the ruddy
+torch glare into the blackness beyond.
+
+We heard a soldier's startled cry, a commotion, curses, and astonished
+exclamations from the other side of the wall.
+
+"It was something, I tell you!" roared a soldier. "Something that
+jumped over the cliff!"
+
+"It was an owl, idiot!" retorted his comrade.
+
+"I tell you I saw it!" protested the other, in a shaking voice.
+
+"Then you saw a witch of Ker-Ys," bawled another. "Look out for your
+skin in the first battle. It's death to see such things."
+
+I looked at Speed. He stood wide-eyed, staring at vacancy.
+
+"Could she do it?" I asked, horrified.
+
+"God knows," he whispered.
+
+Soldiers were beginning to clamber up the garden wall from the
+outside; torches were raised to investigate. As we shrank back
+into the shadow of the shrubbery I stumbled over something
+soft--Jacqueline's clothes, lying in a circle as she had stepped out
+of them.
+
+Speed took them. I followed him, creeping back to the window, where we
+entered in time to avoid discovery by a wretch who had succeeded in
+mounting the wall, torch in hand.
+
+One or two soldiers climbed over and dropped into the garden, prowling
+around, prodding the bushes with their bayonets, even coming to press
+their dirty faces and hands against our window.
+
+"They're all here!" sang out one. "It was an owl, I tell you!" And
+he menaced us with his rifle in pantomime and retired, calling his
+companions to follow.
+
+"Where is Jacqueline?" asked the Countess, looking anxiously at the
+little blue skirt on Speed's knees. "Have they harmed that child?"
+
+I told her.
+
+A beautiful light grew in her eyes as she listened. "Did I not warn
+you that we Bretons know how to die?" she said.
+
+I looked dully at Speed, who sat by the window, brooding over the
+little woollen skirt on his knees, stroking it, touching the torn hem,
+and at last folding it with unaccustomed and shaky hands.
+
+There were noises outside our door, loud voices, hammering, the sound
+of furniture being dragged over stone floors, and I scarcely noticed
+it when our door was opened again.
+
+Then somebody called out our names; a file of half-drunken soldiers
+grounded arms in the passageway with a bang that brought us to our
+feet, as Mornac, flushed with wine, entered unsteadily, drawn sword in
+hand.
+
+"I'm damned if I stay here any longer," he broke out, angrily. "I'll
+see whether my rascals can't shoot straight by torch-light. Here, you!
+Scarlett, I mean! And you, Speed; and you, too, madame; patter your
+prayers, for you'll get no priest. Lieutenant, withdraw the guard at
+the wall. Here, captain, march the battalion back to Paradise and take
+the servants!"
+
+A second later the drums began to beat, but Mornac, furious, silenced
+them.
+
+"They can hear you at sea!" he shouted. "Do you want a boat-load of
+marines at your heels? Strike out those torches! Four will do for the
+garden. March!"
+
+The shuffling tread of the insurgent infantry echoed across the gravel
+court-yard; torches behind the walls were extinguished; blackness
+enveloped the cliffs.
+
+"Well," broke out Speed, hoarsely, "good-bye, Scarlett."
+
+He held out his hand.
+
+"Good-bye," I said, stunned.
+
+I dropped my hand as two soldiers placed themselves on either side of
+him.
+
+"Well, good-bye," he repeated, aimlessly; and then, remembering, he
+went to the Countess and offered his hand.
+
+"I am so sorry for you," she said, with a pallid smile. "You have
+much to live for. But you must not feel lonely, monsieur; you will be
+with us--we shall be close to you."
+
+She turned to me, and her hands fell to her side.
+
+"Are you contented?" she asked.
+
+"Yes," I answered.
+
+"I, too," she said, sweetly, and offered her hands.
+
+I held them very tightly. "You say," I whispered, "that it is
+not--love. But you do not speak for me. I love you."
+
+A bright blush spread over brow and neck.
+
+"So--it was love--after all," she said, under her breath. "God be
+with us to-day--I love you."
+
+"March!" cried Mornac, as two soldiers took station beside me.
+
+"I beg you will be gentle with this lady," I said, angrily, as two
+more soldiers pushed up beside the young Countess and laid their hands
+on her shoulders.
+
+"Who the devil are you giving orders to?" shouted Mornac, savagely.
+"March!"
+
+Speed passed out first; I followed; the Countess came behind me.
+
+"Courage," I stammered, looking back at her as we stumbled out into
+the torch-lit garden.
+
+She smiled adorably. Her forefathers had mounted the guillotine
+smiling.
+
+Mornac pointed to the garden wall near the bench where we had sat
+together. A soldier dressed like a Turco lifted a torch and set it in
+the flower-bed under the wall, illuminating the spot where we were to
+stand. As this soldier turned to come back I saw his face.
+
+"Salah Ben-Ahmed!" I cried, hoarsely. "Do Marabouts do this
+butcher's work?"
+
+The Turco stared at me as though stunned.
+
+"Salah Ben-Ahmed is a disgraced soldier!" I said, in a ringing
+voice.
+
+"It's a lie!" he shouted, in Arabic--"it's a lie, O my inspector!
+Speak! Have these men tricked me? Are you not Prussians?"
+
+"Silence! Silence!" bawled Mornac. "Turco, fall in! Fall in, I say!
+What! You menace me?" he snarled, cocking his revolver.
+
+Then a man darted out of the red shadows of the torch-light and fell
+upon Mornac with a knife, and dragged him down and rolled on him,
+stabbing him through and through, while the mutilated wretch screamed
+and screamed until his soul struggled out through the flame-shot
+darkness and fled to its last dreadful abode.
+
+The Lizard rose, shaking his fagot knife; they fell upon him, clubbing
+and stabbing with stock and bayonet, but he swung his smeared and
+sticky blade, clearing a circle around him. And I think he could have
+cut his way free had not Tric-Trac shot him in the back of the head.
+
+Then a frightful tumult broke loose. Three of the torches were knocked
+to the ground and trampled out as the insurgents, doubly drunken with
+wine and the taste of blood, seized me and tried to force me against
+the wall; but the Turco, with his shrill, wolf-like battle yelp,
+attacked them, sabre-bayonet in hand. Speed, too, had wrested a rifle
+from a half-stupefied ruffian, and now stood at bay before the
+Countess; I saw him wielding his heavy weapon like a flail; then in
+the darkness Tric-Trac shot at me, so close that the powder-flame
+scorched my leg. He dropped his rifle to spring for my throat,
+knocking me flat, and, crouching on me, strove to strangle me; and I
+heard him whining with eagerness while I twisted and writhed to free
+my windpipe from his thin fingers.
+
+At last I tore him from my body and struggled to my feet. He, too, was
+on his legs with a bound, running, doubling, dodging; and at his heels
+I saw a dozen sailors, broadaxes glittering, chasing him from tree to
+shrub.
+
+"Speed!" I shouted--"the sailors from the _Fer-de-Lance_!"
+
+The curtains of the house were on fire; through the hallway poured the
+insurgent soldiery, stampeding in frantic flight across the court out
+into the moors; and the marines, swarming along the cliffs, shot at
+them as they ran, and laughed savagely when a man fell into the gorse,
+kicking like a wounded rabbit.
+
+Speed marked their flight, advancing coolly, pistol flashing; the
+Turco, Ben-Ahmed, dark arms naked to the shoulder, bounded behind the
+frightened wretches, cornering, hunting them through flower-beds and
+bushes, stealthily, keenly, now creeping among the shadows, now
+springing like a panther on his prey, until his blue jacket reeked and
+his elbows dripped.
+
+I had picked up a rifle with a broken bayonet; the Countess, clasping
+my left arm, stood swaying in the rifle-smoke, eyes closed; and, when
+a horrid screeching arose from the depths of the garden where they
+were destroying Tric-Trac, she fell to shuddering, hiding her face on
+my shoulder.
+
+Suddenly Speed appeared, carrying a drenched little figure, partly
+wrapped in a sailor's pea-jacket, slim limbs drooping, blue with
+cold.
+
+"Put out that fire in there," he said, hoarsely; "we must get her
+into bed. Hurry, for God's sake, Scarlett! There's nobody in the
+house!"
+
+"Jacqueline! Jacqueline! brave little Bretonne," murmured the
+Countess, bending forward and gathering the unconscious child into her
+strong, young arms.
+
+Through the dim dawn, through smoke and fading torch-light, we carried
+Jacqueline into the house, now lighted up with an infernal red from
+the burning dining-room.
+
+"The house is stone; we can keep the flames to one room if we work
+hard," I said. A sailor stood by the door wiping the stained blade of
+his broadaxe, and I called on him to aid us.
+
+A fresh company of sailors passed on the double, rifles trailing,
+their officer shouting encouragement, And as we came in view of the
+semaphore, I saw the signal tower on fire from base to top.
+
+The gray moorland was all flickering with flashes where the bulk of
+the insurgent infantry began firing in retreat; the marines' fusillade
+broke out from Paradise village; rifle after rifle cracked along the
+river-bank. Suddenly the deep report of a cannon came echoing landward
+from the sea; a shell, with lighted fuse trailing sparks, flew over us
+with a rushing whistle and exploded on the moors.
+
+All this I saw from the house where I stood with Speed and a sailor,
+buried in smoke, chopping out blazing woodwork, tearing the burning
+curtains from the windows. The marines fired steadily from the windows
+above us.
+
+"They want the Red Terror!" laughed the sailors. "They shall have
+it!"
+
+"Hunt them out! Hunt them out!" cried an officer, briskly. "Fire!"
+rang out a voice, and the volley broke crashing, followed by the
+clear, penetrating boatswain's whistle sounding the assault.
+
+Blackened, scorched, almost suffocated, I staggered back to the
+tea-room, where the Countess stood clasping Jacqueline, huddled in a
+blanket, and smoothing the child's wet curls away from a face as white
+as death.
+
+Together we carried her back through the smoking hallway, up the
+stairs to my bedroom, and laid her in the bed.
+
+The child opened her eyes as we drew the blankets.
+
+"Where is Speed?" she asked, dreamily.
+
+A moment later he came in, and she turned her head languidly and
+smiled.
+
+"Jacqueline! Jacqueline!" he whispered, bending close above her.
+
+"Do you love me, Speed?"
+
+"Ah, Jacqueline," he stammered, "more than you can understand."
+
+Suddenly a step sounded on the stairs, a rifle-stock grounded,
+clanging, and a sonorous voice rang out:
+
+"Salute, O my brother of the toug! The enemies of France are dead!"
+
+And in the silence around him Salah Ben-Ahmed the Marabout recited the
+fatha, bearing witness to the eternal unity of God.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Late that night the light cavalry from Lorient rode into Paradise. At
+dawn the colonel, established in the mayory, from whence its foolish
+occupant had fled, sent for Speed and me, and when we reported he drew
+from his heavy dolman our commissions, restoring us to rank and pay in
+the regiment _de marche_ which he commanded.
+
+At sunrise I had bade good-bye to the sweetest woman on earth; at noon
+we were miles to the westward, riding like demons on Buckhurst's heavy
+trail.
+
+I am not sure that we ever saw him again, though once, weeks later,
+Speed and I and a dozen hussars gave chase to a mounted man near St.
+Brieuc, and that man might have been Buckhurst. He led us a
+magnificent chase straight to the coast, where we rode plump into a
+covey of Prussian hussars, who were standing on their saddles, hacking
+away at the telegraph-wires with their heavy, curved sabres.
+
+That was our first and last sight of the enemy in either Prussian or
+communistic guise, though in the long, terrible days and nights of
+that winter of '71, when three French armies froze, and the white
+death, not the Prussians, ended all for France, rumors of insurrection
+came to us from the starving capital, and we heard of the red flag
+flying on the Hotel-de-Ville, and the rising of the carbineers under
+Flourens; and some spoke of the leader of the insurrection and called
+him John Buckhurst.
+
+That Buckhurst could have penetrated Paris neither Speed nor I
+believed; but, as all now know, we were wrong, though the testimony
+concerning his death[A] at the hands of his terrible colleague,
+Mortier, was not in evidence until a young ruffian, known as "The
+Mouse," confessed before he expiated his crimes on Sartory Plain in
+1872.
+
+Thus, for three blank, bitter months, freezing and starving, the 1st
+Regiment _de marche_ of Lorient Hussars stood guard at Brest over the
+diamonds of the crown of France.
+
+-----
+
+[A] This affair is dealt with in _Ashes of Empire_.
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+THE SECRET
+
+
+The news of the collapse of the army of the East found our wretchedly
+clothed and half-starved hussars still patrolling the environs of
+Brest from Belair to the Pont Tournant, and from the banks of the
+Elorn clear around the ramparts to Lannion Bay, where the ice-sheathed
+iron-clads lay with banked fires off the Port Militaire, and the
+goulet guard-boats patrolled the Port de Commerce from the Passe de
+l'Ouest to the hook on the Digue and clear around to Cap Espagnol.
+
+All Brest, from the battlements of the Chateau of St. Martin, in
+Belair, was on watch, so wrought up was the governor over the attempt
+on the treasure-train. For three months our troopers scarcely left
+their saddles, except to be taken to the hospital in Recouvrance.
+
+The rigor of the constant alert wore us to shadows; rockets from the
+goulet, the tocsin, the warning boom of a gun from the castle, found
+us spurring our jaded horses through ice and snow to scour the
+landward banlieue and purge it of a dreaded revolt. The names of Marx,
+of Flourens, of Buckhurst, were constantly repeated; news of troubles
+at Bordeaux, rumors of the red flag at Marseilles, only served to
+increase the rigid system of patrol, which brought death to those in
+the trenches as well as to our sleet-soaked videttes.
+
+Suddenly the nightmare ended with a telegram. Paris had surrendered.
+
+Immediately the craze to go beset us all; our improvised squadrons
+became clamoring mobs of peasants, wild to go home. Deserters left us
+every night; they shot some in full flight; some were shot after
+drum-head seances in which Speed and I voted in vain for acquittal.
+But affairs grew worse; our men neglected their horses; bands of
+fugitives robbed the suburbs, roving about, pillaging, murdering, even
+burning the wretched hovels where nothing save the four walls remained
+even for the miserable inmates.
+
+Our hussars were sent on patrol again, but they deserted with horses
+and arms in scores, until, when we rode into the Rue du Bois d'Amour,
+scarce a squadron clattered into the smoky gateway, and the infantry
+of the line across the street jeered and cursed us from their
+barracks.
+
+On the last day of February our regiment was disbanded, and the
+officers ordered to hold themselves in readiness to recruit the debris
+of a dragoon regiment, one squadron of which at once took possession
+of our miserable barracks.
+
+On the first day of March, by papers from London, we learned that the
+war was at an end, and that the preliminary treaty of Sunday, the
+26th, had been signed at Versailles.
+
+The same mail brought to me an astonishing offer from Cairo, to assist
+in the reorganization and accept a commission in the Egyptian military
+police. Speed and I, shivering in our ragged uniforms by the barrack
+stove, discussed the matter over a loaf of bread and a few sardines,
+until we fell asleep in our greasy chairs and dreamed of hot sunshine,
+and of palms, and of a crimson sunset against which a colossal basking
+monster, half woman, half lion, crouched, wallowing to her stone
+breasts in a hot sea of sand.
+
+When I awoke in the black morning hours I knew that I should go. All
+the roaming instinct in me was roused. I, a nomad, had stayed too long
+in one stale place; I must be moving on. A feverish longing seized me;
+inertia became unbearable; the restless sea called me louder and
+louder, thundering on the breakwater; the gulls, wheeling above the
+arsenal at dawn, screamed a challenge.
+
+Leave of absence, and permission to travel pending acceptance of my
+resignation, I asked for and obtained before the stable trumpets awoke
+my comrade from his heavy slumber by the barrack stove.
+
+I made my packet--not much--a few threadbare garments folded around
+her letters, one to mark each miserable day that had passed since I
+spurred my horse out of Trecourt on the track of the wickedest man I
+ever knew.
+
+Speed awoke with the trumpets, and stared at me where I knelt before
+the stove in my civilian clothes, strapping up my little packet.
+
+"Oh," he said, briefly, "I knew you were going."
+
+"So did I," I replied. "Will you ride to Trecourt with me? I have
+two weeks' permission for you."
+
+He had no clothing but the uniform he wore, and no baggage except a
+razor, a shirt, a tooth-brush, and a bundle of letters, all written on
+Madame de Vassart's crested paper, but not signed by her.
+
+We bolted our breakfast of soup and black bread, and bawled for our
+horses, almost crazed with impatience, now that the moment had come at
+last.
+
+"Good-bye!" shouted the shivering dragoon officers, wistfully, as we
+wheeled our horses and spurred, clattering, towards the black gates.
+"Good-bye and good luck! We drink to those you love, comrades!"
+
+"And they shall drink to you! Good-bye! Good-bye!" we cried, till the
+salt sea-wind tore the words from our teeth and bowed our heads as we
+galloped through the suburbs and out into the icy high-road, where,
+above us, the telegraph-wires sang their whirring dirge, and the wind
+in the gorse whistled, and the distant forest sounded and resounded
+with the gale's wailing.
+
+On, on, hammering the flinty road with steel-shod hoofs, racing with
+the racing clouds, thundering across the pontoon, where benumbed
+soldiers huddled to stare, then bounding forward through the narrow
+lanes of hamlets, where pinched faces peered out at us from hovels,
+and gaunt dogs fled from us into the frozen hedge.
+
+Far ahead we caught sight of the smoke of a locomotive.
+
+"Landerneau!" gasped Speed. "Ride hard, Scarlett!"
+
+The station-master saw us and halted the moving train at a frantic
+signal from Speed, whose uniform was to be reckoned with by all
+station-masters, and ten minutes later we stood swaying in a
+cattle-car, huddled close to our horses to keep warm, while the
+locomotive tore eastward, whistling frantically, and an ocean of black
+smoke poured past, swarming with sparks. Crossing the Aune trestle
+with a ripping roar, the train rushed through Chateaulin, south, then
+east, then south.
+
+Toward noon, Speed, clinging to the stall-bars, called out to me that
+he could see Quimper, and in a few moments we rolled into the station,
+dropped two cars, and steamed out again into the beautiful Breton
+country, where the winter wheat was green as new grass and the gorse
+glimmered, and the clear streams rushed seaward between their thickets
+of golden willows and green briers, already flushing with the promise
+of new buds.
+
+Rosporden we passed at full speed; scarcely a patch of melting snow
+remained at Bannalec; and when we steamed slowly into Quimperle, the
+Laita ran crystal-clear as a summer stream, and I saw the faint blue
+of violets on the southern slope of the beech-woods.
+
+Some gendarmes aided us to disembark our horses, and a sub-officer
+respectfully offered us hospitality at the barracks across the square;
+but we were in our saddles the moment our horses' hoofs struck the
+pavement, galloping for Paradise, with a sweet, keen wind blowing,
+hinting already of the sea.
+
+This was that same road which led me into Paradise on that autumn day
+which seemed years and years ago. The forests were leafless but
+beautiful; the blackthorns already promised their scented snow to
+follow the last melting drift which still glimmered among the trees in
+deep woodland gullies. A violet here and there looked up at us with
+blue eyes; in sheltered spots, fresh, reddish sprouts pricked the
+moist earth, here a whorl of delicate green, there a tender spike,
+guarding some imprisoned loveliness; buds on the beeches were
+brightening under a new varnish; naked thickets, no longer dead gray,
+softened into harmonies of pink and gold and palest purple.
+
+Once, halting at a bridge, above the quick music of the stream we
+heard an English robin singing all alone.
+
+"I never longed for spring as I do now," broke out Speed. "The
+horror of this black winter has scarred me forever--the deathly
+whiteness, month after month; the freezing filth of that ghastly city;
+the sea, all slime and ice!"
+
+"Gallop," I said, shuddering. "I can smell the moors of Paradise
+already. The winds will cleanse us."
+
+We spoke no more; and at last the road turned to the east, down among
+the trees, and we were traversing the square of Paradise village,
+where white-capped women turned to look after us, and children stared
+at us from their playground around the fountain, and the sleek magpies
+fluttered out of our path as we galloped over the bridge and breasted
+the sweet, strong moor wind, spicy with bay and gorse.
+
+Speed flung out his arm, pointing. "The circus camp was there," he
+said. "They have ploughed the clover under."
+
+A moment later I saw the tower of Trecourt, touched with a ray of
+sunshine, and the sea beyond, glittering under a clearing sky.
+
+As we dismounted in the court-yard the sun flashed out from the
+fringes of a huge, snowy cloud.
+
+"There is Jacqueline!" cried Speed, tossing his bridle to me in his
+excitement, and left me planted there until a servant came from the
+stable.
+
+Then I followed, every nerve quivering, almost dreading to set foot
+within, lest happiness awake me and I find myself in the freezing
+barracks once more, my brief dream ended.
+
+In the hallway a curious blindness came over me. I heard Jacqueline
+call my name, and I felt her hands in mine, but scarcely saw her; then
+she slipped away from me, and I found myself seated in the little
+tea-room, listening to the dull, double beat of my own heart,
+trembling at distant sounds in the house--waiting, endlessly waiting.
+
+After a while a glimmer of common-sense returned to me. I squared my
+shoulders and breathed deeply, then rose and walked to the window.
+
+The twigs on the peach-trees had turned wine-color; around the roots
+of the larkspurs delicate little palmated leaves clustered; crocus
+spikes pricked the grass everywhere, and the tall, polished shoots of
+the peonies glistened, glowing crimson in the sun. A heavy cat sunned
+its sleek flanks on the wall, brilliant eyes half closed, tail tucked
+under. Ange Pitou had grown very fat in three months.
+
+A step at the door, and I wheeled, trembling. But it was only a Breton
+maid, who bore some letters on a salver of silver.
+
+"For me?" I asked.
+
+"If you please," she said, demurely.
+
+Two letters, and I knew the writing on one. The first I read
+standing:
+
+ "Buffalo, N. Y., Feb. 3, 1871.
+
+ "Mr. Scarlett, Dear Sir and Friend,--Trusting you're
+ well I am pleased to admit the same, the blind Goddess
+ having smiled on me and the circus since we quit that
+ damn terra firma for a more peeceful climb.
+
+ "We are enjoying winter quarters near to the majestic
+ phenomena of Niagara, fodder is cheap and vittles
+ bountiful.
+
+ "Would be pleased to have you entertain idees of
+ joining us, and the same to Mr. Speed--you can take the
+ horses. I have a lion man from Jersey City. We open in
+ Charleston S. C. next week no more of La continong for
+ me, _savvy voo_! home is good enough for me. That
+ little Jacqueline left me I got a girl and am training
+ her but she ain't Jacqueline. Annimals are well Mrs.
+ Grigg sends her love and is joined by all especially
+ the ladies and others too numerous to mention. Hoping
+ to hear from you soon about the horses I remain yours
+ truly and courteously,
+
+ "H. Byram Esq."
+
+The second letter I opened carelessly, smiling a little:
+
+ "New York, Feb. 1, 1871.
+
+ "Dear Mr. Scarlett,--We were married yesterday. We have
+ life before us, but are not afraid. I shall never
+ forget you; my wife can never forget the woman you
+ love. We have both passed through hell--but _we have
+ passed through alive_. And we pray for the happiness of
+ you and yours.
+
+ "Kelly Eyre."
+
+Sobered, I laid this letter beside the first, turned thoughtfully away
+into the room, then stood stock-still.
+
+The Countess de Vassart stood in the doorway, a smile trembling on her
+lips. In her gray eyes I read hope; and I took her hands in mine. She
+stood silent with bent head, exquisite in her silent shyness; and I
+told her I loved her, and that I asked for her love; that I had found
+employment in Egypt, and that it was sufficient to justify my asking
+her to wed me.
+
+"As for my name," I said, "you know that is not the name I bear;
+yet, knowing that, you have given me your love. You read my dossier in
+Paris; you know _why_ I am alone, without kin, without a family,
+without a home. Yet you believe that I am not tainted with dishonor.
+And I am not. Listen, this is what happened; this is why I gave up
+all; and ... this is my name!" ...
+
+And I bent my head and whispered the truth for the first time in my
+life to any living creature.
+
+When I had ended I stood still, waiting, head still bowed beside
+hers.
+
+She laid her hand on my hot face and slowly drew it close beside
+hers.
+
+"What shall I promise you?" she whispered.
+
+"Yourself, Eline."
+
+"Take me.... Is that all?"
+
+"Your love."
+
+She turned in my arms and clasped her hands behind my head, pressing
+her mouth to mine.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MAIDS OF PARADISE***
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