Through all, it will have been noticed, Mademoiselle had not
spoken to me, nor said one word, good or bad. She had played her
part grimly, had taken defeat in silence if with tears, had tried
neither prayer nor defence nor apology. And the fact that the
fight was now over, and the scene left behind, made no difference
in her conduct. She kept her face studiously turned from me, and
affected to ignore my presence. I caught my horse feeding by the
roadside, a furlong forward, and mounted and fell into place
behind the two, as in the morning. And just as we had plodded on
then in silence we plodded on now; almost as if nothing had
happened; while I wondered at the unfathomable ways of women, and
marvelled that she could take part in such an incident and remain
unchanged.
Yet, though she strove to hide it, it had made a change in her.
Though her mask served her well it could not entirely hide her
emotions; and by-and-by I marked that her head drooped, that she
rode listlessly, that the lines of her figure were altered. I
noticed that she had flung away, or furtively dropped, her
riding-whip; and I began to understand that, far from the fight
having set me in my former place, to the old hatred of me were
now added shame and vexation on her own account; shame that she
had so lowered herself, even to save her brother, vexation that
defeat had been her only reward.
Of this I saw a sign at Lectoure, where the inn had but one
common room and we must all dine in company. I secured for them
a table by the fire, and leaving them standing by it, retired
myself to a smaller one near the door. There were no other
guests; which made the separation between us more marked. M. de
Cocheforet seemed to feel this. He shrugged his shoulders and
looked across the room at me with a smile half sad half comical.
But Mademoiselle was implacable. She had taken off her mask, and
her face was like stone. Once, only once during the meal, I saw
a change come over her. She coloured, I suppose at her thoughts,
until her face flamed from brow to chin. I watched the blush
spread and spread; and then she slowly and proudly turned her
shoulder to me and looked through the window at the shabby
street.
I suppose that she and her brother had both built on this
attempt, which must have been arranged at Auch. For when we went
on in the afternoon, I marked a change in them. They rode like
people resigned to the worst. The grey realities of the
position, the dreary future began to hang like a mist before
their eyes, began to tinge the landscape with sadness, robbed
even the sunset of its colours. With each hour Monsieur's
spirits flagged and his speech became less frequent; until
presently when the light was nearly gone and the dusk was round
us the brother and sister rode hand in hand, silent, gloomy, one
at least of them weeping. The cold shadow of the Cardinal, of
Paris, of the scaffold fell on them, and chilled them. As the
mountains which they had known all their lives sank and faded
behind us, and we entered on the wide, low valley of the Garonne,
their hopes sank and faded also--sank to the dead level of
despair. Surrounded by guards, a mark for curious glances, with
pride for a companion, M. de Cocheforet could have borne himself
bravely; doubtless would bear himself bravely still when the end
came. But almost alone, moving forward through the grey evening
to a prison, with so many measured days before him, and nothing
to exhilarate or anger--in this condition it was little wonder if
he felt, and betrayed that he felt, the blood run slow in his
veins; if he thought more of the weeping wife and ruined home
which he had left behind him than of the cause in which he had
spent himself.
But God knows, they had no monopoly of gloom. I felt almost as
sad myself. Long before sunset the flush of triumph, the heat of
battle, which had warmed my heart at noon, were gone, giving
place to a chill dissatisfaction, a nausea, a despondency such as
I have known follow a long night at the tables. Hitherto there
had been difficulties to be overcome, risks to be run, doubts
about the end. Now the end was certain and very near; so near
that it filled all the prospect. One hour of triumph I might
have, and would have, and I hugged the thought of it as a gambler
hugs his last stake, planning the place and time and mode, and
trying to occupy myself wholly with it. But the price? Alas!
that too would intrude itself, and more frequently as the evening
waned; so that as I marked this or that thing by the road, which
I could recall passing on my journey south with thoughts so
different, with plans that now seemed so very, very old, I asked
myself grimly if this were really I; if this were Gil de Berault,
known at Zaton's, premier joueur, or some Don Quichotte from
Castille, tilting at windmills and taking barbers' bowls for
gold.
We reached Agen very late that evening, after groping our way
through a by-road near the river, set with holes and willow-
stools and frog-spawn--a place no better than a slough; so that
after it the great fires and lights at the Blue Maid seemed like
a glimpse of a new world, and in a twinkling put something of
life and spirits into two at least of us. There was queer talk
round the hearth here, of doings in Paris, of a stir against the
Cardinal with the Queen-mother at bottom, and of grounded
expectations that something might this time come of it. But the
landlord pooh-poohed the idea; and I more than agreed with him.
Even M. de Cocheforet, who was at first inclined to build on it,
gave up hope when he heard that it came only by way of Montauban;
whence--since its reduction the year before--all sort of canards
against the Cardinal were always on the wing.
'They kill him about once a month,' our host said with a grin.
'Sometimes it is Monsieur is to prove a match for him, sometimes
Cesar Monsieur--the Duke of Vendome, you understand--and
sometimes the Queen-mother. But since M. de Chalais and the
Marshal made a mess of it and paid forfeit, I pin my faith to his
Eminence--that is his new title, they tell me.'
'Perfectly. Since the Languedoc business came to an end, all
goes well,' he answered.
Mademoiselle had retired on our arrival, so that her brother and
I were for an hour or two this evening thrown together. I left
him at liberty to separate himself from me if he pleased, but he
did not use the opportunity. A kind of comradeship, rendered
piquant by our peculiar relations, had begun to spring up between
us. He seemed to take an odd pleasure in my company, more than
once rallied me on my post of jailor, would ask humorously if he
might do this or that; and once even inquired what I should do if
he broke his parole.
'Or take it this way,' he continued flippantly, 'Suppose I had
struck you in the back this evening in that cursed swamp by the
river, M. de Berault? What then! Pardieu, I am astonished at
myself that I did not do it. I could have been in Montauban
within twenty-four hours, and found fifty hiding-places and no
one the wiser.'
He made a wry face. 'Yes,' he said, 'I am afraid that I must
have stabbed her too, to preserve my self-respect. You are
right.' And he fell into a reverie which held him for a few
minutes. Then I found him looking at me with a kind of frank
perplexity that invited question.
'Yes, two men. One, the man who captured me; the other, the man
who let my friend go free to-day.'
'It surprised you that I let him go? That was prudence, M. de
Cocheforet,' I replied. 'I am an old gambler. I know when the
stakes are too high for me. The man who caught a lion in his
wolf-pit had no great catch.'
'No, that is true,' he answered smiling, 'And yet--I find two men
in your skin.'
'I daresay that there are two in most men's skins,' I answered
with a sigh. 'But not always together. Sometimes one is there,
and sometimes the other.'
'How does the one like taking up the other's work?' he asked
keenly.
I shrugged my shoulders. 'That is as may be,' I said. 'You do
not take an estate without the debts.'
He did not answer for a moment, and I fancied that his thoughts
had reverted to his own case. But on a sudden he looked at me
again. 'Will you answer a question, M. de Berault?' he said
winningly.
'Then what on earth induced you to do it? Heavens! man,' he
continued bluntly, and speaking with greater freedom than he had
before used, 'Nature never intended you for a tipstaff. What was
it then?'
I rose. It was very late, and the room was empty, the fire low.
'I will tell you--to-morrow,' I said. 'I shall have something to
say to you then, of which that will be part.'
He looked at me in great astonishment, and with a little
suspicion. But I called for a light, and by going at once to
bed, cut short his questions. In the morning we did not meet
until it was time to start.
Those who know the south road to Agen, and how the vineyards rise
in terraces north of the town, one level of red earth above
another, green in summer, but in late autumn bare and stony, may
remember a particular place where the road, two leagues from the
town, runs up a steep hill. At the top of the hill four roads
meet; and there, plain to be seen against the sky, is a finger-
post indicating which way leads to Bordeaux, and which to old
tiled Montauban, and which to Perigueux.
This hill had impressed me greatly on my journey south; perhaps
because I had enjoyed from it my first extended view of the
Garonne Valley, and had there felt myself on the verge of the
south country where my mission lay. It had taken root in my
memory, so that I had come to look upon its bare rounded head,
with the guide-post and the four roads, as the first outpost of
Paris, as the first sign of return to the old life.
Now for two days I had been looking forward to seeing it again,
That long stretch of road would do admirably for something I had
in my mind. That sign-post, with the roads pointing north,
south, east, and west--could there be a better place for meetings
and partings?
We came to the bottom of the ascent about an hour before noon, M.
de Cocheforet, Mademoiselle, and I. We had reversed the order of
yesterday, and I rode ahead; they came after at their leisure.
Now, at the foot of the hill I stopped, and letting Mademoiselle
pass on, detained M. de Cocheforet by a gesture.
'Pardon me, one moment,' I said. 'I want to ask a favour.'
He looked at me somewhat fretfully; with a gleam of wildness in
his eyes that betrayed how the iron was, little by little, eating
into his heart. He had started after breakfast as gaily as a
bridegroom, but gradually he had sunk below himself; and now he
had much ado to curb his impatience.
'Yes,' I replied, without blenching, though his face grew dark.
'For the matter of that, you can be within call all the time, if
you please. But I have a reason for wishing to ride a little way
with her.'
'Then you can tell it to me,' he retorted suspiciously.
'Mademoiselle, I will answer for it, has no desire to--'
'See me or speak to me? No,' I said. 'I can understand that.
Yet I want to speak to her.'
'Very well, you can speak in my presence,' he answered rudely.
'If that be all, let us ride on and join her.' And he made a
movement as if to do so.
'That will not do, M. de Cocheforet,' I said firmly, stopping him
with my hand. 'Let me beg you to be more complaisant. It is a
small thing I ask, a very small thing; but I swear to you that if
Mademoiselle does not grant it, she will repent it all her life.'
He looked at me, his face growing darker and darker.
'Fine words,' he said, with a sneer. 'Yet I fancy I understand
them.' And then with a passionate oath he broke out. 'But I
will not have it! I have not been blind, M. de Berault, and I
understand. But I will not have it. I will have no such Judas
bargain made. Pardieu! Do you think I could suffer it and show
my face again?'
'I don't know what you mean,' I said, restraining myself with
difficulty. I could have struck the fool.
'But I know what you mean,' he replied, in a tone of suppressed
rage. 'You would have her sell herself; sell herself to you to
save me. And you would have me stand by and see the thing done.
No, sir, never; never, though I go to the wheel. I will die a
gentleman, if I have lived a fool.'
'I think that you will do the one as certainly as you have done
the other,' I retorted in my exasperation. And yet I admired
him.
'Oh, I am not quite a fool!' he cried, scowling at me. 'I have
used my eyes.'
'Then be good enough to favour me with your ears!' I answered
drily. 'For just a moment. And listen when I say that no such
bargain has ever crossed my mind. You were kind enough to think
well of me last night, M. de Cocheforet. Why should the mention
of Mademoiselle in a moment change your opinion? I wish simply
to speak to her. I have nothing to ask from her, nothing to
expect from her, either favour or anything else. What I say she
will doubtless tell you. Ciel man! what harm can I do to her,
in the road in your sight?'
He looked at me sullenly, his face still flushed, his eyes
suspicious.
'What do you want to say to her?' he asked jealously. He was
quite unlike himself. His airy nonchalance, his careless gaiety
were gone.
'You know what I do not want to say to her, M. de Cocheforet,' I
answered. 'That should be enough.'
He glowered at me a moment, still ill content. Then, without a
word, be made me a gesture to go to her.
She had halted a score of paces away; wondering, doubtless, what
was on foot. I rode towards her. She wore her mask, so that I
missed the expression of her face as I approached; but the manner
in which she turned her horse's head uncompromisingly towards her
brother and looked past me was full of meaning. I felt the
ground suddenly cut from under me. I saluted her, trembling.
'Mademoiselle,' I said, 'will you grant me the privilege of your
company for a few minutes as we ride?'
'To what purpose?' she answered; surely, in the coldest voice in
which a woman ever spoke to a man.
'That I may explain to you a great many things you do not
understand,' I murmured.
'I prefer to be in the dark,' she replied. And her manner was
more cruel than her words.
'But, Mademoiselle,' I pleaded--I would not be discouraged--'you
told me one day, not so long ago, that you would never judge me
hastily again.'
'Facts judge you, not I,' she answered icily. 'I am not
sufficiently on a level with you to be able to judge you--I thank
God.'
I shivered though the sun was on me, and the hollow where we
stood was warm.
'Still, once before you thought the same,' I exclaimed after a
pause, 'and afterwards you found that you had been wrong. It may
be so again, Mademoiselle.'
'No,' I cried. 'It is not impossible. It is you who are
impossible. It is you who are heartless, Mademoiselle. I have
done much in the last three days to make things lighter for you,
much to make things more easy; now I ask you to do something in
return which can cost you nothing.'
'Nothing?' she answered slowly--and she looked at me; and her
eyes and her voice cut me as if they had been knives. 'Nothing?
Do you think, Monsieur, it costs me nothing to lose my self-
respect, as I do with every word I speak to you? Do you think it
costs me nothing to be here when I feel every look you cast upon
me an insult, every breath I take in your presence a
contamination? Nothing, Monsieur?' she continued with bitter
irony. 'Nay, something! But something which I could not hope to
make clear to you.'
I sat for a moment confounded, quivering with pain. It had been
one thing to feel that she hated and scorned me, to know that the
trust and confidence which she had begun to place in me were
transformed to loathing. It was another to listen to her hard,
pitiless words, to change colour under the lash of her gibing
tongue. For a moment I could not find voice to answer her. Then
I pointed to M. de Cocheforet.
'Do you love him?' I said hoarsely, roughly. The gibing tone
had passed from her voice to mine.
'Because if you do you will let me tell my tale. Say no, but
once more, Mademoiselle--I am only human--and I go. And you will
repent it all your life.'
I had done better had I taken that tone from the beginning. She
winced, her head dropped, she seemed to grow smaller. All in a
moment, as it were, her pride collapsed.
'Then we will ride on, if you please,' I said keeping the
advantage I had gained. 'You need not fear. Your brother will
follow.'
I caught hold of her rein and turned her horse, and she suffered
it without demur; and in a moment we were pacing side by side,
with the long straight road before us. At the end where it
topped the hill, I could see the finger-post, two faint black
lines against the sky. When we reached that--involuntarily I
checked my horse and made it move more slowly.
'Well, sir?' she said impatiently. And her figure shook as with
cold.
'It is a tale I desire to tell you, Mademoiselle,' I answered.
'Perhaps I may seem to begin a long way off, but before I end I
promise to interest you. Two months ago there was living in
Paris a man--perhaps a bad man--at any rate, by common report a
hard man; a man with a peculiar reputation.'
She turned on me suddenly, her eyes gleaming through her mask.
'Oh, Monsieur, spare me this!' she said, quietly scornful. 'I
will take it for granted.'
'Very well,' I replied steadfastly. 'Good or bad, he one day, in
defiance of the Cardinal's edict against duelling, fought with a
young Englishman behind St Jacques' Church. The Englishman had
influence, the person of whom I speak had none, and an
indifferent name; he was arrested, thrown into the Chatelet, cast
for death, left for days to face death. At last an offer was
made to him. If he would seek out and deliver up another man, an
outlaw with a price upon his head, he should himself go free.'
I paused and drew a deep breath. Then I continued, looking not
at her, but into the distance, and speaking slowly.
'Mademoiselle, it seems easy now to say what course he should
have chosen. It seems hard now to find excuses for him. But
there was one thing which I plead for him. The task he was asked
to undertake was a dangerous one. He risked, he knew that he
must risk, and the event proved him to be right, his life against
the life of this unknown man. And one thing more; time was
before him. The outlaw might be taken by another, might be
killed, might die, might--But there, Mademoiselle, we know what
answer this person made. He took the baser course, and on his
honour, on his parole, with money supplied to him, he went free;
free on the condition that he delivered up this other man.'
I paused again, but I did not dare to look at her; and after a
moment of silence I resumed.
'Some portion of the second half of the story you know,
Mademoiselle; but not all. Suffice it that this man came down to
a remote village, and there at risk, but, Heaven knows, basely
enough, found his way into his victim's home. Once there,
however, his heart began to fail him. Had he found the house
garrisoned by men, he might have pressed to his end with little
remorse. But he found there only two helpless loyal women; and I
say again that from the first hour of his entrance he sickened at
the work which he had in hand, the work which ill-fortune had
laid upon him. Still he pursued it. He had given his word; and
if there was one tradition of his race which this man had never
broken, it was that of fidelity to his side--to the man who paid
him. But he pursued it with only half his mind, in great misery,
if you will believe me; sometimes in agonies of shame.
Gradually, however, almost against his will, the drama worked
itself out before him, until he needed only one thing.
I looked at Mademoiselle, trembling. But her head was averted:
I could gather nothing from the outlines of her form; and I went
on.
'Do not misunderstand me,' I said in a lower voice. 'Do not
misunderstand what I am going to say next. This is no love-
story; and can have no ending such as romancers love to set to
their tales. But I am bound to mention, Mademoiselle, that this
man who had lived almost all his life about inns and eating-
houses and at the gaming-tables met here for the first time for
years a good woman, and learned by the light of her loyalty and
devotion to see what his life had been, and what was the real
nature of the work he was doing. I think--nay, I know,' I
continued, 'that it added a hundredfold to his misery that when
he learned at last the secret he had come to surprise, he learned
it from her lips, and in such a way that, had he felt no shame,
Hell could have been no place for him. But in one thing I hope
she misjudged him. She thought, and had reason to think, that
the moment he knew her secret he went out, not even closing the
door, and used it. But the truth was that while her words were
still in his ears news came to him that others had the secret;
and had he not gone out on the instant and done what he did, and
forestalled them, M. de Cocheforet would have been taken, but by
others.'
Mademoiselle broke her long silence so suddenly that her horse
sprang forward.
'Been taken by others?' I exclaimed, startled out of my false
composure.
'Oh, yes, yes!' she answered with a passionate gesture. 'Why
did you not tell me? Why did you not confess to me, sir, even at
the last moment? But, no more! No more!' she continued in a
piteous voice; and she tried to urge her horse forward. 'I have
heard enough. You are racking my heart, M. de Berault. Some day
I will ask God to give me strength to forgive you.'
'I will hear no more,' she answered in a voice she vainly strove
to render steady. 'To what end? Can I say more than I have
said? Or did you think that I could forgive you now--with him
behind us going to his death? Oh, no, no!' she continued.
'Leave me! I implore you to leave me, sir. I am not well.'
She drooped over her horse's neck as she spoke, and began to weep
so passionately that the tears ran down her cheeks under her
mask, and fell and sparkled like dew on the mane; while her sobs
shook her so that I thought she must fall. I stretched out my
hand instinctively to give her help, but she shrank from me.
'No!' she gasped, between her sobs. 'Do not touch me. There is
too much between us.'
'Yet there must be one thing more between us,' I answered firmly.
'You must listen to me a little longer whether you will or no,
Mademoiselle: for the love you bear to your brother. There is
one course still open to me by which I may redeem my honour; and
it has been in my mind for some time back to take that course.
'To-day, I am thankful to say, I can take it cheerfully, if not
without regret; with a steadfast heart, if no light one.
Mademoiselle,' I continued earnestly, feeling none of the
triumph, none of the vanity, none of the elation I had foreseen,
but only simple joy in the joy I could give her, 'I thank God
that it is still in my power to undo what I have done: that it
is still in my power to go back to him who sent me, and telling
him that I have changed my mind, and will bear my own burdens, to
pay the penalty.'
We were within a hundred paces of the top and the finger-post.
She cried out wildly that she did not understand. 'What is it
you--you--have just said?' she murmured. 'I cannot hear.' And
she began to fumble with the ribbon of her mask.
'Only this, Mademoiselle,' I answered gently. 'I give your
brother back his word, his parole. From this moment he is free
to go whither he pleases. Here, where we stand, four roads meet.
That to the right goes to Montauban, where you have doubtless
friends, and can lie hid for a time. Or that to the left leads
to Bordeaux, where you can take ship if you please. And in a
word, Mademoiselle,' I continued, ending a little feebly, 'I hope
that your troubles are now over.'
She turned her face to me--we had both come to a standstill--and
plucked at the fastenings of her mask. But her trembling fingers
had knotted the string, and in a moment she dropped her hand with
a cry of despair. 'But you? You?' she wailed in a voice so
changed that I should not have known it for hers. 'What will you
do? I do not understand, Monsieur.'
'There is a third road,' I answered. 'It leads to Paris. That
is my road, Mademoiselle. We part here.'
'Because from to-day I would fain begin to be honourable,' I
answered in a low voice. 'Because I dare not be generous at
another's cost. I must go back whence I came.'
She tried feverishly to raise her mask with her hand.
'I am not well,' she stammered. 'I cannot breathe.'
And she began to sway so violently in her saddle that I sprang
down, and, running round her horse's head, was just in time to
catch her as she fell. She was not quite unconscious then, for
as I supported her, she cried out,--
'Do not touch me! Do not touch me! You kill me with shame!'
But as she spoke she clung to me; and I made no mistake. Those
words made me happy. I carried her to the bank, my heart on
fire, and laid her against it just as M. de Cocheforet rode up.
He sprang from his horse, his eyes blazing, 'What is this?' he
cried. 'What have you been saying to her, man?'
'She will tell you,' I answered drily, my composure returning
under his eye. 'Amongst other things, that you are free. From
this moment, M. de Cocheforet, I give you back your parole, and I
take my own honour. Farewell.'
He cried out something as I mounted, but I did not stay to heed
or answer. I dashed the spurs into my horse, and rode away past
the cross-roads, past the finger-post; away with the level upland
stretching before me, dry, bare, almost treeless; and behind me,
all I loved. Once, when I had gone a hundred yards, I looked
back and saw him standing upright against the sky, staring after
me across her body. And again a minute later I looked back.
This time saw only the slender wooden cross, and below it a dark
blurred mass.