It would be very difficult indeed to say why--at Blakeney's lightly spoken
words--an immediate silence should have fallen upon all those present.
All the actors in the little drawing-room drama, who had played their
respective parts so unerringly up to now, had paused a while, just as if an
invisible curtain had come down, marking the end of a scene, and the
interval during which the players might recover strength and energy to
resume their roles. The Prince of Wales as foremost spectator said
nothing for the moment, and beyond the doorway, the audience there
assembled seemed suddenly to be holding its breath, waiting--eager,
expectant, palpitation--for what would follow now.
Only here and there the gentle frou-frou of a silk skirt, the rhythmic
flutter of a fan, broke those few seconds' deadly, stony silence.
Yet it was all simple enough. A fracas between two ladies, the gentlemen
interposing, a few words of angry expostulation, then the inevitable
suggestion of Belgium or of some other country where the childish and
barbarous custom of settling such matters with a couple of swords had
not been as yet systematically stamped out.
The whole scene--with but slight variations--had occurred scores of times
in London drawing-rooms, English gentlemen had scores of times
crossed the Channel for the purpose of settling similar quarrels in
continental fashion.
Why should the present situation appear so abnormal? Sir Percy
Blakeney--an accomplished gentleman--was past master in the art of
fence, and looked more than a match in strength and dexterity for the
meagre, sable-clad little opponent who had so summarily challenged him
to cross over to France, in order to fight a duel.
But somehow everyone had a feeling at this moment that this proposed
duel would be unlike any other combat every fought between two
antagonists. Perhaps it was the white, absolutely stony and unexpressive
face of Marguerite which suggested a latent tragedy: perhaps it was the
look of unmistakable horror in Juliette's eyes, or that of triumph in those
of Chauvelin, or even that certain something in His Royal Highness' face,
which seemed to imply that the Prince, careless man of the world as he
was, would have given much to prevent this particular meeting from
taking place.
Be that as it may, there is no doubt that a certain wave of electrical
excitement swept over the little crowd assembled there, the while the
chief actor in the little drama, the inimitable dandy, Sir Percy Blakeney
himself, appeared deeply engrossed in removing a speck of powder from
the wide black satin ribbon which held his gold-rimmed eye-glass.
"Gentlemen!" said His Royal Highness suddenly, "we are forgetting the
ladies. My lord Hastings," he added, turning to one of the gentlemen
who stood close to him, "I pray you to remedy this unpardonable neglect.
Men's quarrels are not fit for ladies' dainty ears."
Sir Percy looked up from his absorbing occupation. His eyes met those
of his wife; she was like a marble statue, hardly conscious of what was
going on round her. But he, who knew every emotion which swayed that
ardent and passionate nature, guessed that beneath that stony calm there
lay a mad, almost unconquerable impulse: and that was to shout to all
these puppets here, the truth, the awful, the unanswerable truth, to tell
them what this challenge really meant; a trap wherein one man consumed
with hatred and desire for revenge hoped to entice a brave and fearless
foe into a death-dealing snare.
Full well did Percy Blakeney guess that for the space of one second his
most cherished secret hovered upon his wife's lips, one turn of the
balance of Fate, one breath from the mouth of an unseen sprite, and
Marguerite was ready to shout:
"Do not allow this monstrous thing to be! The Scarlet Pimpernel, whom
you all admire for his bravery, and love for his daring, stands before you
now, face to face with his deadliest enemy, who is here to lure him to his
doom!"
For that momentous second therefore Percy Blakeney held his wife's gaze
with the magnetism of his own; all there was in him of love, of entreaty,
of trust, and of command went out to her through that look with which
he kept her eyes riveted upon his face.
Then he saw the rigidity of her attitude relax. She closed her eyes in
order to shut out the whole world from her suffering soul. She seemed to
be gathering all the mental force of which her brain was capable, for one
great effort of self-control. Then she took Juliette's hand in hers, and
turned to go out of the room; the gentlemen bowed as she swept past
them, her rich silken gown making a soft hush-sh-sh as she went. She
nodded to some, curtseyed to the Prince, and had at the last moment the
supreme courage and pride to turn her head once more towards her
husband, in order to reassure him finally that his secret was as safe with
her now, in this hour of danger, as it had been in the time of triumph.
She smiled and passed out of his sight, preceded by Desiree Candeille,
who, escorted by one of the gentlemen, had become singularly silent and
subdued.
In the little room now there only remained a few men. Sir Andrew
Ffoulkes had taken the precaution of closing the door after the ladies had
gone.
Then His Royal Highness turned once more to Monsieur Chauvelin and
said with an obvious show of indifference:
"Faith, Monsieur! meseems we are all enacting a farce, which can have
no final act. I vow that I cannot allow my friend Blakeney to go over to
France at your bidding. Your government now will not allow my father's
subjects to land on your shores without a special passport, and then only
for a specific purpose."
"La, your Royal Highness," interposed Sir Percy, "I pray you have no
fear for me on that score. My engaging friend here has--an I mistake not-
-a passport ready for me in the pocket of his sable-hued coat, and as we
are hoping effectually to spit one another over there ... gadzooks! but
there's the specific purpose. ... Is it not true, sir," he added, turning once
more to Chauvelin, "that in the pocket of that exquisitely cut coat of
yours, you have a passport --name in blank perhaps--which you had
specially designed for me?"
It was so carelessly, so pleasantly said, that no one save Chauvelin
guessed the real import of Sir Percy's words. Chauvelin, of course, knew
their inner meaning: he understood that Blakeney wished to convey to
him the fact that he was well aware that the whole scene to-night had
been prearranged, and that it was willingly and with eyes wide open that
he walked into the trap which the revolutionary patriot had so carefully
laid for him.
"The passport will be forthcoming in due course, sir," retorted Chauvelin
evasively, "when our seconds have arranged all formalities."
"Seconds be demmed, sir," rejoined Sir Percy placidly, "you do not
propose, I trust, that we travel a whole caravan to France."
"Time, place and conditions must be settled, Sir Percy," replied
Chauvelin; "you are too accomplished a cavalier, I feel sure, to wish to
arrange such formalities yourself."
"Nay! neither you nor I, Monsieur ... er ... Chauvelin," quoth Sir Percy
blandly, "could, I own, settle such things with persistent good-humour;
and good-humour in such cases is the most important of all formalities.
Is it not so?"
"As for seconds? Perish the thought. One second only, I entreat, and
that one a lady--the most adorable--the most detestable-- the most true--
the most fickle amidst all her charming sex. ... Do you agree, sir?"
"Three throws of the dice, Monsieur. ... Time ... Place ... Conditions, you
said--three throws and the winner names them. ... Do you agree?"
Chauvelin hesitated. Sir Percy's bantering mood did not quite fit in with
his own elaborate plans, moreover the ex-ambassador feared a pitfall of
some sort, and did not quite like to trust to this arbitration of the dice-
box.
He turned, quite involuntarily, in appeal to the Prince of Wales and the
other gentlemen present.
But the Englishman of those days was a born gambler. He lived with the
dice-box in one pocket and a pack of cards in the other. The Prince
himself was no exception to this rule, and the first gentleman in England
was the most avowed worshipper of Hazard in the land.
In the midst of so hostile a crowd, Chauvelin felt it unwise to resist.
Moreover, one second's reflection had already assured him that this
throwing of the dice could not seriously interfere with the success of his
plans. If the meeting took place at all--and Sir Percy now had gone too
far to draw back--then of necessity it would have to take place in France.
The question of time and conditions of the fight, which at best would be
only a farce--only a means to an end--could not be of paramount
importance.
Therefore he shrugged his shoulders with well-marked indifference, and
said lightly:
There was a small table in the centre of the room with a settee and two or
three chairs arranged close to it. Around this table now an eager little
group had congregated: the Prince of Wales in the forefront, unwilling to
interfere, scarce knowing what madcap plans were floating through
Blakeney's adventurous brain, but excited in spite of himself at this
momentous game of hazard the issues of which seemed so nebulous, so
vaguely fraught with dangers. Close to him were Sir Andrew Ffoulkes,
Lord Anthony Dewhurst, Lord Grenville and perhaps a half score
gentlemen, young men about town mostly, gay and giddy butterflies of
fashion, who did not even attempt to seek in this strange game of chance
any hidden meaning save that it was one of Blakeney's irresponsible
pranks.
And in the centre of the compact group, Sir Percy Blakeney in his
gorgeous suit of shimmering white satin, one knee bent upon a chair, and
leaning with easy grace--dice-box in hand--across the small gilt-legged
table; beside him ex-Ambassador Chauvelin, standing with arms folded
behind his back, watching every movement of his brilliant adversary like
some dark-plumaged hawk hovering near a bird of paradise.
He took up a dice-box which one of the gentlemen handed to him and the
two men threw.
"'Tis mine, Monsieur," said Blakeney carelessly, "mine to name the place
where shall occur this historic encounter, 'twixt the busiest man in France
and the most idle fop that e'er disgraced these three kingdoms. ... Just for
the sake of argument, sir, what place would you suggest?"
"Oh! the exact spot is immaterial, Sir Percy," replied Chauvelin coldly,
"the whole of France stands at your disposal."
"Aye! I thought as much, but could not be quite sure of such boundless
hospitality," retorted Blakeney imperturbably.
"Too far from the coast, sir. I might be sea-sick crossing over the
Channel, and glad to get the business over as soon as possible. ... No, not
Paris, sir--rather let us say Boulogne. ... Pretty little place, Boulogne ...
do you not think so ...?"
"Then Boulogne it is .. the ramparts, an you will, on the south side of the
town."
"As you please," rejoined Chauvelin drily. "Shall we throw again?"
A murmur of merriment had accompanied this brief colloquy between the
adversaries, and Blakeney's bland sallies were received with shouts of
laughter. Now the dice rattled again and once more the two men threw.
"'Tis yours this time, Monsieur Chauvelin," said Blakeney, after a rapid
glance at the dice. "See how evenly Chance favours us both. Mine, the
choice of place ... admirably done you'll confess. ... Now yours the choice
of time. I wait upon your pleasure, sir. ... The southern ramparts at
Boulogne--when?"
"The fourth day from this, sir, at the hour when the Cathedral bell chimes
the evening Angelus," came Chauvelin's ready reply.
"Nay! but methought that your demmed government had abolished
Cathedrals, and bells and chimes. ... The people of France have now to
go to hell their own way ... for the way to heaven has been barred by the
National Convention. ... Is that not so? ... Methought the Angelus was
forbidden to be rung."
"Not at Boulogne, I think, Sir Percy," retorted Chauvelin drily, "and I'll
pledge you my word that the evening Angelus shall be rung that night."
"But why four days after this? Why not two or three?"
"I might have asked, why the southern ramparts, Sir Percy; why not the
western? I chose the fourth day--does it not suit you?" asked Chauvelin
ironically.
"Suit me! Why, sir, nothing could suit me better," rejoined Blakeney
with his pleasant laugh. "Zounds! but I call it marvellous ... demmed
marvellous ... I wonder now," he added blandly, "what made you think of
the Angelus?"
Everyone laughed at this, a little irrelevantly perhaps.
"Ah!" continued Blakeney gaily, "I remember now. ... Faith! to think that
I was nigh forgetting that when last you and I met, sir, you had just taken
or were about to take Holy Orders. ... Ah! how well the thought of the
Angelus fits in with your clerical garb. ... I recollect that the latter was
mightily becoming to you, sir ..."
"Shall we proceed to settle the conditions of the fight, Sir Percy?" said
Chauvelin, interrupting the flow of his antagonist's gibes, and trying to
disguise his irritation beneath a mask of impassive reserve.
"The choice of weapons you mean," here interposed His Royal Highness,
"but I thought that swords had already been decided on."
"Quite so, your Highness," assented Blakeney, "but there are various
little matters in connection with this momentous encounter which are of
vast importance. ... Am I not right, Monsieur? ... Gentlemen, I appeal to
you. ... Faith! one never knows ... my engaging opponent here might
desire that I should fight him in green socks, and I that he should wear a
scarlet flower in his coat."
"Why not, Monsieur? It would look so well in your buttonhole, against
the black of the clerical coat, which I understand you sometime affect in
France ... and when it is withered and quite dead you would find that it
would leave an overpowering odour in your nostrils, far stronger than
that of incense."
There was general laughter after this. The hatred which every member of
the French revolutionary government--including, of course, ex-
Ambassador Chauvelin--bore to the national hero was well known.
"The conditions then, Sir Percy," said Chauvelin, without seeming to
notice the taunt conveyed in Blakeney's last words. "Shall we throw
again?"
For the third and last time the two opponents rattled the dice-box and
threw. Chauvelin was now absolutely unmoved. These minor details
quite failed to interest him. What mattered the conditions of the fight
which was only intended as a bait with which to lure his enemy in the
open? The hour and place were decided on and Sir Percy would not fail
to come. Chauvelin knew enough of his opponent's boldly adventurous
spirit not to feel in the least doubtful on that point. Even now, as he
gazed with grudging admiration at the massive, well-knit figure of his
arch-enemy, noted the thin nervy hands and square jaw, the low, broad
forehead and deep-set, half-veiled eyes, he knew that in this matter
wherein Percy Blakeney was obviously playing with his very life, the only
emotion that really swayed him at this moment was his passionate love of
adventure.
Yes! Sir Percy would be on the southern ramparts of Boulogne one hour
after sunset on the day named, trusting, no doubt, in his usual marvellous
good-fortune, his own presence of mind and his great physical and mental
strength, to escape from the trap into which he was so ready to walk.
That remained beyond a doubt! Therefore what mattered details?
But even at this moment, Chauvelin had already resolved on one great
thing: namely, that on that eventful day, nothing whatever should be left
to Chance; he would meet his cunning enemy not only with cunning, but
also with power, and if the entire force of the republican army then
available in the north of France had to be requisitioned for the purpose,
the ramparts of Boulogne would be surrounded and no chance of escape
left for the daring Scarlet Pimpernel.
His wave of meditation, however, was here abruptly stemmed by
Blakeney's pleasant voice.
"Lud! Monsieur Chauvelin," he said, "I fear me your luck has deserted
you. Chance, as you see, has turned to me once more."
"Then it is for you, Sir Percy," rejoined the Frenchman, "to name the
conditions under which we are to fight."
"Ah! that is so, is it not, Monsieur?" quoth Sir Percy lightly. "By my
faith! I'll not plague you with formalities. ... We'll fight with our coats on
if it be cold, in our shirtsleeves if it be sultry. ... I'll not demand either
green socks or scarlet ornaments. I'll even try and be serious for the
space of two minutes, sir, and confine my whole attention--the product of
my infinitesimal brain--to thinking out some pleasant detail for this duel,
which might be acceptable to you. Thus, sir, the thought of weapons
springs to my mind. ... Swords you said, I think. Sir! I will e'en restrict
my choice of conditions to that of the actual weapons with which we are
to fight. ... Ffoulkes, I pray you," he added, turning to his friend, "the pair
of swords which lie across the top of my desk at this moment. ...
"We'll not ask a menial to fetch them, eh, Monsieur?" he continued gaily,
as Sir Andrew Ffoulkes at a sign from him had quickly left the room.
"What need to bruit our pleasant quarrel abroad? You will like the
weapons, sir, and you shall have your own choice from the pair. ... You
are a fine fencer, I feel sure ... and you shall decide if a scratch or two or
a more serious wound shall be sufficient to avenge Mademoiselle
Candeille's wounded vanity."
Whilst he prattled so gaily on, there was dead silence among all those
present. The Prince had his shrewd eyes steadily fixed upon him,
obviously wondering what this seemingly irresponsible adventurer held at
the back of his mind. There is no doubt that everyone felt oppressed, and
that a strange murmur of anticipatory excitement went round the little
room, when, a few seconds later, Sir Andrew Ffoulkes returned, with
two sheathed swords in his hand.
Blakeney took them from his friend and placed them on the little table in
front of ex-Ambassador Chauvelin. The spectators strained their necks
to look at the two weapons. They were exactly similar one to the other:
both encased in plain black leather sheaths, with steel ferrules polished to
shine like silver; the handles too were of plain steel, with just the grip
fashioned in a twisted basket pattern of the same highly-tempered metal.
"What think you of these weapons, Monsieur?" asked Blakeney, who
was carelessly leaning against the back of a chair.
Chauvelin took up one of the two swords and slowly drew it from out its
scabbard, carefully examining the brilliant, narrow steel blade as he did
so.
"A little old-fashioned in style and make, Sir Percy," he said, closely
imitating his opponent's easy demeanour, "a trifle heavier, perhaps, than
we in France have been accustomed to lately, but, nevertheless, a
beautifully tempered piece of steel."
"Of a truth there's not much the matter with the tempering, Monsieur,"
quoth Blakeney, "the blades were fashioned at Toledo just two hundred
years ago."
"Ah! here I see an inscription," said Chauvelin, holding the sword close
to his eyes, the better to see the minute letters engraved in the steel.
"The name of the original owner. I myself bought them--when I travelled
in Italy--from one of his descendants."
"Lorenzo Giovanni Cenci," said Chauvelin, spelling the Italian names
quite slowly.
"The greatest blackguard that ever trod this earth. You, no doubt,
Monsieur, know his history better than we do. Rapine, theft, murder,
nothing came amiss to Signor Lorenzo ... neither the deadly drug in the
cup nor the poisoned dagger."
He had spoken lightly, carelessly, with that same tone of easy banter
which he had not forsaken throughout the evening, and the same drawly
manner which was habitual to him. But at these last words of his,
Chauvelin gave a visible start, and then abruptly replaced the sword--
which he had been examining--upon the table.
He threw a quick, suspicious glance at Blakeney, who, leaning back
against the chair and one knee resting on the cushioned seat, was idly
toying with the other blade, the exact pair to the one which the ex-
ambassador had so suddenly put down.
"Well, Monsieur," quoth Sir Percy after a slight pause, and meeting with
a swift glance of lazy irony his opponent's fixed gaze. "Are you satisfied
with the weapons? Which of the two shall be yours, and which mine?"
"Of a truth, Sir Percy ..." murmured Chauvelin, still hesitating.
"Nay, Monsieur," interrupted Blakeney with pleasant bonhomie, "I know
what you would say ... of a truth, there is no choice between this pair of
perfect twins: one is as exquisite as the other. ... And yet you must take
one and I the other ... this or that, whichever you prefer. ... You shall
take it home with you to-night and practise thrusting at a haystack or at a
bobbin, as you please. .. The sword is yours to command until you have
used it against my unworthy person ... yours until you bring it out four
days hence--on the southern ramparts of Boulogne, when the cathedral
bells chime the evening Angelus; then you shall cross it against its
faithless twin. ... There, Monsieur--they are of equal length ... of equal
strength and temper ... a perfect pair ... Yet I pray you choose."
He took up both the swords in his hands and carefully balancing them by
the extreme tip of their steel-bound scabbards, he held them out towards
the Frenchman. Chauvelin's eyes were fixed upon him, and he from his
towering height was looking down at the little sable-clad figure before
him.
The Terrorist seemed uncertain what to do. Though he was one of those
men whom by the force of their intellect, the strength of their enthusiasm,
the power of their cruelty, had built a new anarchical France, had
overturned a throne and murdered a king, yet now, face to face with this
affected fop, this lazy and debonnair adventurer, he hesitated--trying in
vain to read what was going on behind that low, smooth forehead or
within the depth of those lazy, blue eyes.
He would have given several years of his life at this moment for one short
glimpse into the innermost brain cells of this daring mind, to see the man
start, quiver but for the fraction of a second, betray himself by a tremor
of the eyelid. What counterplan was lurking in Percy Blakeney's head, as
he offered to his opponent the two swords which had once belonged to
Lorenzo Cenci?
Did any thought of foul play, of dark and deadly poisonings linger in the
fastidious mind of this accomplished gentleman?
Chauvelin tried to chide himself for such fears. It seemed madness even
to think of Italian poisons, of the Cencis or the Borgias in the midst of
this brilliantly lighted English drawing-room.
But because he was above all a diplomatist, a fencer with words and with
looks, the envoy of France determined to know, to probe and to read.
He forced himself once more to careless laughter and nonchalance of
manner and schooled his lips to smile up with gentle irony at the good-
humoured face of his arch-enemy.
He tapped one of the swords with his long pointed finger.
"Is this the one you choose, sir?" asked Blakeney.
"Nay! which do you advise, Sir Percy," replied Chauvelin lightly. "Which
of those two blades think you is most like to hold after two hundred
years the poison of the Cenci?"
But Blakeney neither started nor winced. He broke into a laugh, his own
usual pleasant laugh, half shy and somewhat inane, then said in tones of
lively astonishment:
"Zounds! sir, but you are full of surprises. ... Faith! I never would have
thought of that. ...Marvellous, I call it ... demmed marvellous. ... What
say you, gentlemen? ... Your Royal Highness, what think you? ... Is not
my engaging friend here of a most original turn of mind. ... Will you have
this sword or that, Monsieur? ... Nay, I must insist--else we shall weary
our friends if we hesitate too long. ... This one then, sir, since you have
chosen it," he continued, as Chauvelin finally took one of the swords in
his hand. "And now for a bowl of punch. ... Nay, Monsieur, 'twas
demmed smart what you said just now ... I must insist on your joining us
in a bowl. ... Such wit as yours, Monsieur, must need whetting at times.
... I pray you repeat that same sally again ..."
Then finally turning to the Prince and to his friends, he added:
"And after that bowl, gentlemen, shall we rejoin the ladies?"