 24 The news. The grey January day was falling drowsy and dull into the arms of night. Marguerite, sitting in the dusk beside the fire in her small boudoir, shivered a little as she drew her scarf close around her shoulders. Towards the butler ended with the lamp. The room looked peculiarly cheery now, with the delicate white panelling of the wall glowing under the soft kiss of the flickering firelight and the steadier glow of the rose-shaded lamp. "'Has the currier not arrived yet, Edwards?' asked Marguerite, fixing the impassive face of the well-drilled servant with her large purple-rimmed eyes. "'Not yet, M'lady,' he replied placidly. "'It is his day, is it not? Yes, M'lady. And the forenoon is his time. But there have been heavy rains, and the roads must be rare muddy. He must have been delayed, M'lady.' "'Yes, I suppose so,' she said listlessly. "'That will do, Edwards. No, don't close the shutters. I'll ring presently.'" The man went out of the room as automatically as he had come. He closed the door behind him, and Marguerite was once more alone. She picked up the book which she had fingered idly before the light gave out. She tried once more to fix her attention on this tale of love and adventure, written by Mr. Fielding, but she had lost the thread of the story, and there was a mist between her eyes and the printed pages. With an impatient gesture she threw down the book and passed her hand across her eyes, then seemed astonished to find that her hand was wet. She rose and went to the window. The air outside had been singularly mild all day. The thaw was persisting, and a south wind came across the channel. From France. Marguerite threw open the casement and sat down on the wide sill, leaning her head against the window frame and gazing out into the fast-gathering gloom. From far away at the foot of the gently sloping lawns, the river murmured softly in the night. In the borders to the right and left a few snowdrops still showed like tiny white specks through the surrounding darkness. Winter had begun the process of slowly shedding its mantle, coquettin' with spring who still lingered in the land of infinity. Gradually the shadows drew closer and closer. The reeds and rushes on the riverbank were the first to sink into their embrace. Then the big cedars on the lawn, majestic and defiant, but yielding still unconquered to the power of night. The tiny stars of snowdrop blossoms vanished one by one, and at last the cool gray ribbon of the river's surface was wrapped under the mantle of evening. Only the south wind lingered on, sowing gently in the drowsy reeds, whispering among the branches of the cedars and gently stirring the tender corollas of the sleeping snowdrops. Marguerite seemed to open out her lungs to its breath. It had come all the way from France, and on its wings had brought something of Percy, a murmur as if he had spoken, a memory that was as intangible as a dream. She shivered again, though of a truth it was not cold. The courier's delay had completely unsettled her nerves. Twice a week he came especially from Dover, and always he brought some message, some token which Percy had contrived to send from Paris. They were like tiny scraps of dry bread thrown to a starving woman. But they did just help to keep her heart alive—that poor, aching, disappointed heart that so longed for enduring happiness which you could never get. The man whom she loved with all her soul, her mind and her body, did not belong to her. He belonged to suffering humanity over there in terror-stricken France, where the cries of the innocent, the persecuted, the wretched, called louder to him than she in her love could do. He had been away three months now, during which time her starving heart had fed on its memories, and the happiness of a brief visit from him six weeks ago when, quite unexpectedly, he had appeared before her, home between two desperate adventures that had given life and freedom to a number of innocent people, and nearly cost him his, and she had lain in his arms in a swoon of perfect happiness. But he had gone away again as suddenly as he had come, and for six weeks now she had lived partly in anticipation of the courier with messages from him, and partly on the fitful joy engendered by these messages. Today she had not even that, and the disappointment seemed just now more than she could bear. She felt unaccountably restless, and could she but have analysed her feelings, had she dared so to do, she would have realised that the weight which oppressed her heart so that she could hardly breathe was one of vague, yet dark foreboding. She closed the window and returned to a seat by the fire, taking up her book with the strong resolution not to allow her nerves to get the better of her. But it was difficult to pin one's attention down to the adventures of Martha Tom Jones, when one's mind was fully engrossed with those of Supercie Blakeney. The sound of carriage-wheels on the graveled forecourt in the front of the house suddenly awakened her drowsy senses. She threw down the book, and with trembling hands clutched the arms of her chair, straining her ears to listen. A carriage at this hour, and on this damp winter's evening? She wracked her mind, wondering who it could be. Lady Folks was in London, she knew. Sir Andrew, of course, was in Paris. His Royal Highness, ever a faithful visitor, would surely not venture out to Richmond in this inclement weather, and the courier always came on horseback. There was a murmur of voices, that of Edwards, mechanical and placid, could be heard quite distinctly saying, I am sure that her ladyship will be at home for you, my lady, but I'll go and ascertain. Marguerite ran to the door, and with joyful eagerness tore it open. Suzan! she called, my little Suzan! I thought you were in London. Come up quickly. In the Boudoir, yes. Oh! what good fortune had brought you! Suzan flew into her arms, holding the friend whom she loved so well close and closer to her heart, trying to hide her face, which was wet with tears in the folds of Marguerite's kerchief. Come inside, my darling," said Marguerite. Why, how cold your little hands are! She was on the point of turning back to her Boudoir, drawing Lady Folks by the hand, when suddenly she caught sight of Sir Andrew, who stood at her little distance from her at the top of the stairs. Sir Andrew, she exclaimed with unstinted gladness. Then she paused. The cry of welcome died on her lips, leaving them dry and parted. She suddenly felt as if some fearful talons had gripped her heart, and were tearing at it with sharp, long nails. The blood flew from her cheeks and from her limbs, leaving her with a sense of icy numbness. She backed into the room, still holding Suzan's hand, and drawing her in with her. Sir Andrew followed them, then closed the door behind him. At last the word escaped Marguerite's parched lips. Pussy! Something has happened to him. Is he dead? No, no! exclaimed Sir Andrew quickly. Suzan put her loving arms round her friend and drew her down into the chair by the fire. She knelt at her feet on the hearth-rug, and pressed her own burning lips on Marguerite's icy cold hands. Sir Andrew stood silently by, a world of loving friendship, of heartbroken sorrow in his eyes. There was silence in the pretty, white-paneled room for a while. Marguerite sat with her eyes closed, bringing the whole armory of her will-power to bear her up outwardly now. Tell me—she said at last—and her voice was toneless and dull, like one that came from the depths of a grave. Tell me—exactly—everything. Don't be afraid. I can bear it. Don't be afraid." Sir Andrew remained standing, with bowed head, and one hand resting on the table. In a firm, clear voice, he told her the events of the past few days as they were known to him. All that he tried to hide was our monster's obedience, which, in his heart, he felt was the primary cause of the catastrophe. He told of the rescue of the dove found from the temple, the midnight drive in the coal-cart, the meeting with Hastings and Tony in the evening. He only gave vague explanations of Armand's stay in Paris, which caused Percy to go back to the city, even at the moment when his most daring plan had been so successfully carried through. Armand, I understand, has fallen in love with a beautiful woman in Paris, Lady Blakeney. He said, seeing that a strange, puzzled look had appeared in Marguerite's pale face. She was arrested the day before the rescue of the dove found from the temple. Armand could not join us. He felt that he could not leave her. I am sure that you will understand. Then, as she made no comment, he resumed his narrative. I had been ordered to go back to Lavillette's, and there to resume my duties as a labourer in the daytime, and to wait for Percy during the night. The fact that I had received no message from him for two days had made me somewhat worried. But I have such faith in him, such belief in his good luck and his ingenuity, that I would not allow myself to be really anxious. Then, on the third day, I heard the news. What news? asked Marguerite mechanically. That the Englishman who was known as the Scarlett Pimpinel had been captured in a house in the Roudel à Croix-Blanche, and had been imprisoned in the Conciergerie. The Roudel à Croix-Blanche? Where is that? In the Montmartre-Quarters. Armand lodged there. Percy, I imagine, was working to get him away, and those brutes captured him. Having heard the news, Sir Andrew, what did you do? I went into Paris and ascertained its truth. And there is no doubt of it? Alas! none. I went to the house in the Roudel à Croix-Blanche. Armand had disappeared. I succeeded in inducing the Concierge to talk. She seems to have been devoted to her lodger. Amidst tears, she told me some of the details of the capture. Can you bear to hear them, Lady Blakeney? Yes. Tell me everything. Don't be afraid," she reiterated, with the same dull monotony. It appears that early on the Tuesday morning the son of the Concierge, a lad about fifteen, was sent off by her lodger with a message to number nine Rue Saint-Germain-L'Aux-Croix. That was the house where Percy was staying all last week, where he kept disguises and so on for us all, and where some of our meetings were held. Percy evidently expected that Armand would try and communicate with him at that address, for when the lad arrived in front of the house, he was accosted, so he says. By a big, rough workman who browbeat him into giving up the lodger's letter, and finally pressed a piece of gold into his hand. The workman was Blakeney, of course. I imagine that Armand, at the time that he wrote the letter, must have been under the belief that Mademoiselle Lange was still in prison. He could not know, then, that Blakeney had already got her into comparative safety. In the letter he must have spoken of the terrible plight in which he stood, and also of his fears for the woman he loved. Percy was not the man to leave a comrade in the lurch. He would not be the man whom we all love and admire, whose word we all obey, for whose sake we would gladly all of us give our life. He would not be that man, if he did not brave even certain dangers in order to be of help to those who call on him. Armand called, and Percy went to him. He must have known that Armand was being spied upon, for Armand, alas, was already a marked man, and the watchdogs of those infernal committees were already on his heels. Whether these sleuth-hounds had followed the son of the concierge and seen him give the letter to the workman in the Rue Saint-Germain-Lux-Roi, or whether the concierge in the Rue de la Croix-Blanche was nothing but a spy of Herons, or again, whether the Committee of General Security kept a company of soldiers in constant alert in that house, we shall, of course, never know. All that I do know is that Percy entered that fatal house at half-past ten, and that a quarter of an hour later the concierge saw some of the soldiers descending the stairs, carrying a heavy burden. She peeped out of her lodge, and by the light of the corridor she saw that the heavy burden was the body of a man bound closely with ropes. His eyes were closed, his clothes were stained with blood. He was seemingly unconscious. The next day the official organ of the Government proclaimed the capture of the scarlet pimpinelle, and there was a public holiday in honour of the event. Marguerite had listened to this terrible narrative dry-eyed and silent. Now she still sat there, hardly conscious of what went on around her, of Suzanne's tears that fell unceasingly upon her fingers, of Sir Andrew who had sunk into a chair and buried his head in his hands. She was hardly conscious that she lived. The universe seemed to have stood still before this awful, monstrous cataclysm. But nevertheless she was the first to return to the active realities of the present. Sir Andrew, she said after a while, tell me, where are my lords Tony and Hastings? At Calais, madam, he replied, I saw them there on my way hither. They had delivered the dauphins safely into the hands of his adherents at Mount, and were awaiting Blakeney's further orders, as he had commanded them to do. Will they wait for us there, thank you? For us, Lady Blakeney, he exclaimed in puzzlement. Yes, for us, Sir Andrew, she replied, whilst the ghost of a smile flitted across her drawn face. You had thought of accompanying me to Paris, had you not? But Lady Blakeney, ah, I know what you would say, Sir Andrew. You will speak of dangers, of risks, of death may have. You will tell me that I, as a woman, can do nothing to help my husband. That I could be but a hindrance to him, just as I was in Boulogne. But everything is so different now. Whilst those roots plant his capture, he was clever enough to outwit them. But now they have actually got him. Think you they'll let him escape. They'll watch him night and day, my friend, just as they watch the unfortunate Queen. But they'll not keep him months, weeks, or even days in prison. Even Chauvelin now will no longer attempt to play with the scarlet Pimpernel. They have him, and they will hold him until such time as they'd take him to the guillotine. Her voice broke in a sob. Her self-control was threatening to leave her. She was but a woman, young and passionately in love with the man who was about to die an ignominious death, far away from his country, his kindred, his friends. I cannot let him die alone, Sir Andrew. He will be longing for me, and, after all, there is you and my Lord Tony and Lord Hastings and the others. Surely—surely—we are not going to let him die, not like that, and not alone." You are right, Lady Blakeney, said Sir Andrew earnestly. We are not going to let him die, if human agency can do ought to save him. Already Tony, Hastings, and I have agreed to return to Paris. There are one or two hidden places in and around the city known only to Percy and to the members of the League, where he must find one or more of us if he succeeds in getting away. All the way between Paris and Calais we have places of refuge, places where any of us can hide at a given moment, where we can find disguises when we want them or horses in an emergency. No, no, we are not going to despair, Lady Blakeney. There are nineteen of us prepared to lay down our lives for the Scarlet Pimpernel. Already I, as his lieutenant, have been selected as the leader of as determined a gang as has ever entered on a work of rescue before. We leave for Paris to-morrow, and if human pluck and devotion can destroy mountains, then we'll destroy them. Our watchword is God save the Scarlet Pimpernel. He knelt beside her chair, and kissed the cold fingers which, with a sad little smile, she held out to him. And God bless you all, she murmured. Suzanne had risen to her feet when her husband knelt. Now he stood up beside her. The dainty young woman, hardly more than a child, was doing her best to restrain her tears. See how selfish I am, said Marguerite. I talk calmly of taking your husband from you, when I myself know the bitterness of such partings. My husband will go where his duty calls him, said Suzanne, with charming and simple dignity. I love him with all my heart, because he is brave and good. He would not leave his comrade, who is also his chief, in the lurch. God will protect him, I know. I would not ask him to play the part of a coward. Her brown eyes glowed with pride. She was the true wife of a soldier, and with all her dainty ways and childlike manners, she was a splendid woman and a staunch friend. Sir Percy Blakeney had saved her entire family from death. The comte and comte est at Dornay, the vic-comte, her brother, and she herself all owed their lives to the scarlet pimpinale. This she was not like to forget. There is but little danger for us, I fear me, said Sir Andrew lightly. The revolutionary government only wants to strike it ahead. It cares nothing for the limbs. Perhaps it feels that without our leader we are enemies not worthy of persecution. If there are any dangers, so much the better, he added. But I don't anticipate any. Unless we succeed in freeing our chief, and having freed him, we fear nothing more. The same applies to me, Sir Andrew, rejoined Marguerite earnestly. Now that they have captured Percy, those human fiends will care naught for me. If you succeed in freeing Percy, I, like you, will have nothing more to fear. And if you fail?" She paused and put her small, wide hand on Sir Andrew's arm. "'Take me with you, Sir Andrew,' she entreated, "'do not condemn me to the awful torture of weary waiting, day after day, wandering, guessing, never daring to hope, lest hope deferred be more hard to bear than dreary hopelessness. Then, as Sir Andrew, very undecided, yet half inclined to yield, stood silent and resolute, she pressed her point, gently but firmly insistent. I would not be in the way, Sir Andrew. I would know how to efface myself so as not to interfere with your plans. But—oh!" she added, while a quivering note of passion trembled in her voice. Can't you see that I must breathe the air that he breathes, else I shall stifle, or may hap go mad?" Sir Andrew turned to his wife, a mute query in his eyes. "'You would do an inhuman and cruel act,' said Sousa, with seriousness that sat quaintly on her baby-face, if you did not afford your protection to Marguerite. For I do believe that if you did not take her with you to-morrow, she would go to Paris alone.' Marguerite thanked her friend with her eyes. Sousa was a child in nature, but she had a woman's heart. She loved her husband, and therefore knew and understood what Marguerite must be suffering now. Sir Andrew no longer could resist the unfortunate woman's earnest pleading. Frankly, he thought that if she remained in England while Percy was in such deadly peril, she ran the grave risk of losing her reason before the terrible strain of suspense. He knew her to be a woman of courage and one capable of great physical endurance, and really he was quite honest when he said that he did not believe there would be much danger for the headless League of the Scarlet Pimpernel unless they succeeded in freeing their chief. And if they did succeed, then indeed there would be nothing to fear, for the brave and loving wife who, like every true woman does, and has done in like circumstances since the beginning of time, was only demanding with passionate insistence the right to share the fate good or ill of the man whom she loved. CHAPTER 25 Paris once more Sir Andrew had just come in. He was trying to get a little warmth into his half-frozen limbs, for the cold had set in again, and this time with renewed vigor, and Marguerite was pouring out a cup of hot coffee which she had been brewing for him. She had not asked for news. She knew that he had none to give her, else he had not worn that weary, despondent look in his kind face. "'I'll just try one more place this evening,' he said, as soon as he had swallowed some of the hot coffee. A restaurant in the Rue de la Harpe. The members of the Cordelier Club often go there for supper, and they are usually well informed. I might glean something definite there. It seems very strange that they are so slow in bringing him to trial,' said Marguerite, in that dull, toneless voice which had become habitual to her. When you first brought me the awful news that—I made sure that they would bring him to trial at once, and was in terror lest we arrived here too late to—to see him." She checked herself quickly, bravely trying to still the quiver of her voice. "'And of our mind?' she asked. He shook his head, sadly. "'With regard to him, I am at a still greater loss,' he said. "'I cannot find his name on any of the prison registers, and I know that he is not in the Conciergerie. They have cleared out all prisoners from there. There is only Percy.'" "'Pour our mind.' She sighed. It must be almost worse for him than for any of us. It was his first act of thoughtlessness and obedience that brought all this misery upon our heads. She spoke sadly, but quietly. Sir Andrew noted that there was no bitterness in her tone, but her very quietude was heartbreaking. There was such an infinity of despair in the calm of her eyes." "'Well, though we cannot understand it all, Lady Blakeney,' he said, with forced cheerfulness, we must remember one thing—that whilst there is life, there is hope.' "'Hope,' she exclaimed, with a world of pathos in her sigh, her large eyes dry and circled, fixed with indescribable sorrow on her friend's face.' Folks turned his head away, pretending to busy himself with the coffee-making utensils. He could not bear to see that look of hopelessness in her face, for in his heart he could not find the wherewithal to cheer her. Despair was beginning to seize on him too, and this he would not let her see. They had been in Paris three days now, and it was six days since Blakeney had been arrested. Sir Andrew and Marguerite had found temporary lodgings inside Paris. Tony and Hastings were just outside the gates, and all along the route between Paris and Calais, at Saint-Germain, at Mante, in the villages between Beauvais and Amiens, wherever money could obtain friendly help, members of the devoted league of the Scarlet Pimpinel lay in hiding, waiting to aid their chief. Folks had ascertained that Percy was kept a close prisoner in the Consiercherie, in the very rooms occupied by Marie Antoinette during the last months of her life. He left poor Marguerite to guess how closely that elusive Scarlet Pimpinel was being guarded, the precautions surrounding him being even more minute than those which had made the unfortunate queen's closing days a martyrdom for her. Out of Armand he could glean no satisfactory news, only the negative probability that he was not detained in any of the larger prisons of Paris, as no register which he, folks, so laboriously consulted, bore record of the name of Saint-Germain. Haunting the restaurants and drinking-booths where the most advanced Jacobins and terrorists were wont to meet, he had learnt one or two details of Blakeney's incarceration, which he could not possibly impart to Marguerite. The capture of the mysterious Englishman known as the Scarlet Pimpinel had created a great deal of popular satisfaction, but it was obvious that not only was the public mind not allowed to associate that capture with the escape of little Capay from the temple, but it soon became clear to folks that the news of that escape was still being kept a profound secret. On one occasion he had succeeded in spying on the chief agent of the Committee of General Security, whom he knew by sight, while the latter was sitting at dinner in company of a stout, florid man with a pock-marked face and podgy hands covered with rings. Sir Andrew marvelled who this man might be. Heron spoke to him in ambiguous phrases that would have been unintelligible to anyone who did not know the circumstances of the Dauphin's escape and the part that the leak of the Scarlet Pimpinel had played in it. But to Sir Andrew folks, who cleverly disguised as a farrier, grimy after his day's work, was straining his ears to listen whilst apparently consuming huge slabs of boiled beef, it soon became clear that the chief agent and his fat friend were talking of the Dauphin of Blakeney. He won't hold out much longer, citizen, the chief agent was saying in a confident voice. Our men are absolutely unremitting in their task. Two of them watch him night and day. They look after him well and practically never lose sight of him. But the moment he tries to get any sleep, one of them rushes into the cell with a loud banging of bayonet and sabre, a noisy tread on the flagstones and shouts to the top of his voice, Now there, Naristo, where's the brat? Tell us now when you shall be down and go to sleep. I have done it myself all through one day just for the pleasure of it. It's a little tiring for you to have to shout a good deal now and sometimes give the cursed Englishman a good shake-up. He has had five days of it and not one wink of sleep during that time, not one single minute of rest, and he only gets enough food to keep him alive. I tell you, we can't last. Citizen Chauvelin had a splendid idea there. It would all come right in a day or two. Hmm! grunted the other sulkily. Those Englishmen are tough. Yes! retorted Heron, with a grim laugh and a leer of savagery that made his gaunt face look positively hideous. You would have given out after three days, friend de Bats, would you not? And I warned you, didn't I? I told you, if you tampered with the brat, I would make you cry in mercy to me for death. And I warned you, said the other imperturbably, not to worry so much about me, but to keep your eyes open for those cursed Englishmen. I am keeping my eyes open for you, nevertheless, my friend. If I thought you knew where the vermin's spawn was at this moment, I would—you would put me on the same rack that you or your precious friend Chauvelin have devised to the Englishmen. But I don't know where the lad is. If I did, I would not be in Paris. I know that, assented Heron, with a sneer. You would soon be after the reward, over an Austria, what? But I have your movements tracked day and night, my friend. I dare say you are as anxious as we are, as to the whereabouts of the child. Had he been taken over the front here, you would have been the first to hear of it, eh? No, he added confidently, and as if anxious to reassure himself. My firm belief is that the original idea of these confounded Englishmen was to try and get the child over to England, and that they alone know where he is. I tell you it won't be many days before that very withered scarlet pimponel will order his followers to give little capé up to us. Oh, they are hanging about Paris some of them, I know that. Citizen Chauvelin is convinced that the wife isn't very far away. Give her a sight of our husband now, say I, and she'll make the others give the child up soon enough." The man laughed like a hyena, gloating over its prey. Sir Andrew nearly betrayed himself then. He had to dig his nails into his own flesh to prevent himself from springing then and there at the throat of that wretch whose monstrous ingenuity had invented torture for the fallen enemy far worse than any that the cruelties of medieval inquisitions had devised. So they would not let him sleep. A simple idea borne in the brain of a fiend. Heron had spoken of Chauvelin as the originator of the devilry. A man weakened deliberately day by day by insufficient food, and the horrible process of denying him rest. It seemed inconceivable that human, sentient beings should have thought of such a thing. Perspirations stood up in beads on Sir Andrew's brow when he thought of his friend, brought down by want of sleep to—what? His physique was splendidly powerful, but could it stand against such racking torment for long? And the clear, the alert mind, the scheming brain, the reckless daring, how soon would these become enfeebled by the slow, steady torture of an utter want of rest? Folks had to smother a cry of horror, which surely must have drawn the attention of that fiend on himself, had he not been so engrossed in the enjoyment of his own devilry. As it was, he ran out of the stuffy eating-house, for he felt as if its fetid air must choke him. For an hour after that he wandered about the streets, not daring to face Marguerite lest his eyes betrayed some of the horror which was shaking his very soul. That was twenty-four hours ago. Today he had learnt little else. It was generally known that the Englishman was in the Conciergerie prison, that he was being closely watched, and that his trial would come on within the next few days. But no one seemed to know exactly when. The public was getting restive, demanding that trial and execution to which everyone seemed to look forward as to a holiday. In the meanwhile, the escape of the Dauphan had been kept from the knowledge of the public. Heron and his gang, fearing for their lives, had still hopes of extracting from the Englishman the secret of the lad's hiding-place, and the means they employed for arriving at this end, was worthy of Lucifer and his host of devils in hell. From other fragments of conversation which surround true folks had gleaned that same evening, it seemed to him that in order to hide their defocations, Heron and the four commissaries in charge of little Capay had substituted a deaf and dumb child for the escaped little prisoner. This miserable small wreck of humanity was reputed to be sick and kept in a darkened room, in bed, and was in that condition exhibited to any member of the convention who had the right to see him. A partition had been very hastily erected in the inner room once occupied by the Simon, and the child was kept behind that partition, and no one was allowed to come too near to him. Thus the fraud was succeeding fairly well. Heron and his accomplices only cared to save their skins, and the wretched little substitute being really ill, they firmly hoped that he would soon die, when no doubt they would brute abroad the news of the death of Capay, which would relieve them of further responsibility. That such ideas, such thoughts, such schemes, should have engendered in human minds it is almost impossible to conceive. And yet we know, from no less important a witness than Madame Simon herself, that the child who died in the temple a few weeks later was a poor little imbecile. A deaf and dumb child brought hither from one of the asylums and left to die in peace. There was nobody but kindly death to take him out of his misery, for the giant intellect that had planned and carried out the rescue of the uncrowned King of France, and which alone might have had the power to save him, too, was being broken on the rack of enforced sleeplessness. CHAPTER XXVI THE BITTEREST PHOE That same evening, Sir Andrew Folks, having announced his intention of gleaning further news of Armand, if possible, went out shortly after seven o'clock, promising to be home again about nine. Marguerite, on the other hand, had to make her friend a solemn promise that she would try and eat some supper which the landlady of these miserable apartments had agreed to prepare for her. So far they had been left in peaceful occupation of these squalid lodgings in a tumble-down house on the Guidle-à-Ferêt, facing the House of Justice, the grim walls of which Marguerite would watch with wide-open, dry eyes for as long as the grey wintry light lingered over them. Even now, though the darkness had set in, and snow falling in close small flakes through a thick white veil over the landscape, she sat at the open window long after Sir Andrew had gone out, watching the few small flicks of light that blinked across from the other side of the river, and which came from the windows of the Châtelet Towers. The windows of the Conciergerie she could not see, for these gave on one of the inner courtyards. But there was a melancholy consolation, even in the gazing on those walls that held in their cruel, grim embrace all that she loved in the world. It seemed so impossible to think of Percy, the laughter-loving, irresponsible, light-hearted adventurer, as the prey of those fiends who would revel in their triumph, who would crush him, humiliate him, insult him, eat gods alive, even torture him, perhaps, that they might break the indomitable spirit that would mock them, even on the threshold of death. Surely, surely God would never allow such monstrous infamy as the deliverance of the noble, soaring eagle into the hands of those praying jackals. Marguerite, though her heart ached beyond what human nature could endure, though her anguish on her husband's account was doubled by that which she felt for her brother, could not bring herself to give up all hope. Sir Andrew said it rightly. While there was life, there was hope. While there was life in those vigorous limbs, spirit in that daring mind, how could puny, rampant beasts gain the better of the immortal soul? As for Armand, why if Percy were free she would have no cause to fear for Armand. She sighed a sigh of deep, of passionate regret and longing. If she could only see her husband, if she could only look for one second into those laughing, lazy eyes wherein she alone knew how to fathom the infinity of passion that lay within their depths, if she could but once feel his ardent kiss on her lips, she could more easily endure this agonizing suspense and wait confidently and courageously for the issue. She turned away from the window, for the night was getting bitterly cold. From the tower of Saint-Germain Luxois, the clock slowly struck eight. Even as the last sound of the historic bell died away in the distance, she heard a timid knocking at the door. "'Enter!' she called, unthinkingly. She thought it was her landlady, come up with more wood, may have, for the fire, so she did not turn to the door when she heard it being slowly opened, then closed again, and presently a soft tread on the threadbare carpet. "'May I crave your kind attention, Lady Blakeney!' said a harsh voice subdued to tones of ordinary courtesy. She quickly repressed a cry of horror. How well she knew that voice! When last she heard it, it was at Boulogne dictating that infamous letter, the weapon wherewith Percy had so effectually foiled his enemy. She turned and faced the man who was her bitterest foe, hers in the person of the man she loved. "'Chauvelin!' she gasped. "'Himself, at your service, dear lady,' he said simply. He stood in the full light of the lamp, his trim, small figure, boldly cut out against the dark wall beyond. He wore the usual sable-colored clothes which he effected, with the primly folded jubble and cuffs edged with narrow lace. Without waiting for permission from her, he quietly and deliberately placed his hat and cloak on a chair. Then he turned once more toward her, and made a movement as if to advance into the room, but instinctively she put up a hand as if to ward off the calamity of his approach. He shrugged his shoulders, and the shadow of a smile that had neither mirth nor kindliness in it hovered round the corners of his thin lips. "'Have I your permission to sit?' he asked. "'As you will,' she replied slowly, keeping her wide open eyes fixed upon him, as does a frightened bird upon the serpent whom it loathes and fears. "'And may I crave a few moments of your undivided attention, Lady Blakeney?' he continued, taking a chair, and so placing it beside the table that the light of the lamp, when he sat, remained behind him, and his face was left in shadow. "'Is it necessary?' asked Marguerite. "'It is,' he replied curtly, if you desire to see and speak with your husband, to be of use to him before it is too late. "'Then I pray you speak, citizen, and I will listen.' She sank into a chair, not heeding whether the light of the lamp fell on her face or not, whether the lines in her haggard cheeks or her tear-dimmed eyes showed plainly the sorrow and despair that had traced them. She had nothing to hide from this man, the cause of all the tortures which she endured. She knew that neither courage nor sorrow would move him, and that hatred for Percy, personal deadly hatred for the man who had twice foiled him, had long crushed the last spark of humanity in his heart. Perhaps, Lady Blakeney, he began after a slight pause, and in his smooth, even voice, it would interest you to hear how I succeeded in procuring for myself this pleasure of an interview with you. Your spies did their usual work, I suppose, she said coldly. Exactly. We have been on your track for three days, and yesterday evening an unguarded movement on the part of Sir Andrew Folks gave us the final clue out to your whereabouts. "'Of Sir Andrew Folks,' she asked, greatly puzzled. He was in an eating-house, cleverly disguised, I own, trying to glean information, no doubt, as to the probable fate of Sir Percy Blakeney. As chance would have it, my friend Heron, of the Committee of General Security, chance to be discussing with reprehensible openness, a certain—what shall I say—certain measures which, at my advice, the Committee of Public Safety have been forced to adopt, with a view to— A truce on your smooth-tongued speeches, citizen Chauvelin, she had opposed firmly. Sir Andrew Folks has told me not of this, so I pray you speak plainly and to the point, if you can." He bowed, with marked irony. "'As you please,' he said. Sir Andrew Folks, hearing certain matters of which I will tell you anon, made a movement which betrayed him to one of our spies. At a word from Citizen Heron, this man followed on the heels of the young farrier, who had shown such interest in the conversation of the chief agent. Sir Andrew, I imagine, burning with indignation at what he had heard, was perhaps not quite so cautious as he usually is. Anyway, the man on his track followed him to the store. It was quite simple, as you see. As for me, I had guessed a week ago that we would see the beautiful Lady Blakeney in Paris before long. When I knew where Sir Andrew Folks lodged, I had no difficulty in guessing that Lady Blakeney would not be far off." And what was there in Citizen Heron's conversation last night? She asked quietly, that so aroused Sir Andrew's indignation. He has not told you? Oh! it is very simple. Let me tell you, Lady Blakeney, exactly how matter stand. Sir Percy Blakeney, before lucky chance had last delivered him into our hands, thought fit, as no doubt you know, to meddle with our most important prisoner of state. A child—I know it, sir. The son of a murdered father whom you and your friends were slowly doing to death. That is, as may be—Lady Blakeney, rejoined Chauvelin calmly, but it was none of Sir Percy Blakeney's business. This, however, he chose to disregard. He succeeded in carrying little capé from the temple, and two days later we had him under lock and key. Through some infamous and treacherous tricks, sir, she retorted. Chauvelin made no immediate reply. His pale, inscrutable eyes were fixed upon her face, and the smile of irony round his mouth appeared more strongly marked than before. That, again, is as it may be, he said, swiftly. But anyhow, for the moment we have the upper hand. Sir Percy is in the conciergerie, guarded day and night, more closely than Marie Antoinette even was guarded. And he laughs at your bolts and bars, sir. She rejoined proudly. Remember Calais. Remember Boulogne. His laugh at your discomforture, then, must resound in your ear even to-day. Yes. But for the moment laughter is on our side. Still, we are willing to forego even that pleasure, if Sir Percy will but move a finger towards his own freedom. Again some infamous letter. She asked with a bitter contempt. Some attempt against his honour? No, no, Lady Blakeney. He interposed with perfect blandness. Matters are so much simpler now, you see. We hold Sir Percy at our mercy. We could send him to the guillotine to-morrow, but we might be willing—remember, I only say we might— to exercise our prerogative of mercy, if Sir Percy Blakeney will on his side accede to a request from us. And that request? Is a very natural one. He took Capay away from us, and it is but credible that he knows at the present moment exactly where the child is. Let him instruct his followers. And I mistake not, Lady Blakeney, there are several of them not very far from Paris just now. Let him, I say, instruct these followers of his to return the person of young Capay to us, and not only will we undertake to give these same gentlemen a safe conduct back to England, but we even might be inclined to deal somewhat less harshly with the gallant scarlet Kimpanel himself. She laughed a harsh, mirthless, contemptuous laugh. I don't think that I quite understand, she said after a moment or two, whilst he waited calmly until her outbreak of hysterical mirth had subsided. You want my husband, the scarlet Kimpanel citizen, to deliver the little king of France to you, after he has risked his life to save the child out of your clutches? Is that what you are trying to say? It is, rejoined Chauvelin complacently, just what we have been saying to Sir Percy Blakeney for the past six days, madame. Well, if you have had your answer, have you not? Yes, he replied slowly, but the answer has become weaker day by day. Weaker? I don't understand. Let me explain, Lady Blakeney, said Chauvelin, now with measured emphasis. He put both elbows on the table, and leaned well forward, peering into her face lest one of its varied expressions escaped him. Just now you taunted me with my failure in Calais and again at Boulogne, with a proud toss of the head which I own is excessive becoming. You threw the name of the Scarlet Pimpanel in my face like a challenge which I no longer dare to accept. The Scarlet Pimpanel, you would say to me, stands for loyalty, for honour, and for indomitable courage. Think you he would sacrifice his honour to obtain your mercy? Remember Boulogne and your discomforture. All of which, dear lady, is perfectly charming and womanly and enthusiastic, and I, bowing my humble head, must own that I was fooled in Calais and baffled in Boulogne. But in Boulogne I made a grave mistake, and one from which I learned a lesson, which I am putting into practice now. He paused a while as if waiting for her reply. His pale, keen eyes had already noted that with every phrase he uttered, the lines in her beautiful face became more hard and set. A look of horror was gradually spreading over it, as if the icy cold hand of death had passed over her cheeks and eyes, leaving them rigid like stone. In Boulogne, resumed Chauvelin quietly, satisfied that his words were hitting steadily at her heart. In Boulogne, Sopersi and I did not fight an equal fight. Fresh from a pleasant sojourn in his own magnificent home, full of the spirit of adventure which puts the essence of life into a man's veins, Sopersi Blakeney's splendid physique was pitted against my feeble powers. Of course I lost the battle. I made the mistake of trying to subdue a man who was in the zenith of his strength. Where as now? Yes, Citizen Chauvelin, she said. Where as now? Sopersi Blakeney has been in the prison of the Conciergerie for exactly one week, Lady Blakeney, he replied, speaking very slowly and letting every one of his words sink individually into her mind. Even before he had time to take the bearings of his cell or to plan on his own behalf one of those remarkable escapes, for which he is so justly famous, our men began to work on a scheme which I am proud to say originated with myself. A week has gone by since then, Lady Blakeney, and during that time a special company of prison guard, acting under the orders of the Committee of General Security and of Public Safety, have questioned the prisoner unremittingly—unremittingly, remember—day and night. Two by two these men take it in turns to enter the prisoner's cell every quarter of an hour. Lately it has had to be more often, and ask him the one question—where is Little Capay? Up to now we have received no satisfactory reply, although we have explained to Sopersi that many of his followers are honouring the neighbourhood of Paris with their visit, and that all we ask from him are instructions to those gallant gentlemen to bring Young Capay back to us. It is all very simple. Unfortunately the prisoner is somewhat obstinate. At first even the idea seemed to amuse him. He used to laugh and say that he always had the faculty of sleeping with his eyes open. But our soldiers are untiring in their efforts, and the want of sleep as well as of sufficient food and of fresh air is certainly beginning to tell on Sopersi Blakeney's magnificent physique. I don't think that it will be very long before he gives way to our general persuasions. And in any case now I assure you, dear lady, that we do not need to fear any attempt on his part to escape. I doubt if he could walk very steadily across this room. Marguerite had sat quite silent, and apparently impassive, all the while that Chauvelin had been speaking. Even now she scarcely stirred. Her face expressed absolutely nothing but deep puzzlement. There was a frown between her brows, and her eyes, which were always of such liquid blue, now looked almost black. She was trying to visualize that which Chauvelin had put before her. A man harassed, day and night, unceasingly, unremittingly, with one question, allowed neither respite nor sleep. His brain, soul and body fagged out at every hour, every moment of the day and night, until mind and body and soul must inevitably give way under anguish ten thousand times more unendurable than any physical torment invented by monsters in barbaric times. That man thus harassed, thus fagged out, thus martyrized at all hours of the day and night, was her husband, whom she loved with every fibre of her being, with every throb of her heart. Torture? Oh, no! These were advanced and civilized times that could afford to look with horror on the excesses of medieval days. This was a revolution that made for progress, and challenged the opinion of the world. The cells of the Temple of la Force or the Conciergerie held no secret inquisition with iron maidens and racks and thumbscrews. But a few men had put their tortuous brains together, and had said to one another, We want to find out, from that man, where we can lay our hands on little Capay, so we won't let him sleep until he has told us. It is not torture. Oh, no! Who would dare to say that we torture our prisoners? It is only a little horse-play, worrying to the prisoner, no doubt, but, after all, he can end the unpleasantness at any moment. He need but to answer our question, and he can go to sleep as comfortably as a little child. The want of sleep is very trying. The want of proper food and of fresh air is very weakening. The prisoner must give way sooner or later. So these fiends had decided it between them, and they had put their idea into execution for one whole week. Marguerite looked at Chauvelin as she would on some monstrous inscrutable sphinx, marvelling, if God, even in his anger, could really have created such a fiendish brain, or, having created it, could allow it to wreak such devoury unpunished. Even now, she felt that he was enjoying the mental anguish which he had put upon her, and she saw his thin, evil lips curved into a smile. So you came to-night to tell me all this? She asked, as soon as she could trust herself to speak. Her impulse was to shriek out her indignation, her horror of him, into his face. She longed to call down God's eternal curse upon this fiend, but instinctively she held herself in check. Her indignation, her words of loathing, would only have added to his delight. You have had your wish, she added coldly. Now I pray you go. You're pardoned, Lady Blakeney. He said with all his habitual blandness. My object in coming to see you to-night was twofold. Me thought that I was acting as your friend in giving you authentic news of supercy, and in suggesting the possibility of your adding your persuasion to ours. My persuasion? You mean that I— You would wish to see your husband, would you not, Lady Blakeney? Yes. Then I pray you command me. I will grant you the permission whenever you wish to go. You are in the hope, citizen, she said, that I will do my best to break my husband's spirit by my tears or my prayers. Is that it? Not necessarily, he replied pleasantly. I assure you that we can manage to do that ourselves in time. You devil! The cry of pain and of horror was involuntarily rung from the depths of her soul. Are you not afraid that God's hand will strike you down where you stand? No, he said lightly. I am not afraid, Lady Blakeney. You see, I do not happen to believe in God. Come, he added more seriously, have I not proved to you that my offer is disinterested? Yet I repeat it even now. If you desire to see Sir Percy in prison, command me, and the doors shall be open to you. She waited a moment, looking him straight and quite dispassionately in the face. Then she said coldly, Very well, I will go. When? he asked. This evening. Just as you wish. I would have to go and see my friend Heron first and arrange with him for your visit. Then go! I will follow in half an hour. C'est entendu. Will you be at the main entrance of the Conciergerie at half-past nine? You know it, perhaps, no? It is in the Roud-la-Barrierie, immediately on the right of the foot of the great staircase of the House of Justice. Of the House of Justice! she exclaimed involuntarily, a world of bitter contempt in her cry. Then she added in her former matter-of-fact tones, Very good, citizen! At half-past nine I will be at the entrance, you name. And I will be at the door prepared to escort you. He took up his hat and coat and bowed ceremoniously to her. Then he turned to go. At the door a cry from her, involuntarily enough got nose, made him pause. My interview with the prisoner, she said, vainly trying, poor soul, to repress that quiver of anxiety in her voice. It will be private? Oh, yes! Of course! he replied with a reassuring smile. Au revoir, Lady Blakeney! Half-past nine, remember? She could no longer trust herself to look on him as he finally took his departure. She was afraid, yes, absolutely afraid, that her fortitude would give way, meanly, despicably, uselessly give way, that she would suddenly fling herself at the feet of that sneering and human wretch, that she would pray, implore, heaven above, what might not she do in the face of this awful reality, if the last lingering shred of vanishing reason of pride and of courage did not hold her in check. Therefore she forced herself not to look on that departing, sable-clad figure, on that evil face and those hands that held Percy's fate in their cruel grip. But her ears caught the welcome sound of his departure, the opening and shutting of the door, his light footstep echoing down the stone stairs. When at last she felt that she was really alone, she uttered a loud cry like a wounded doe, and falling on her knees, she buried her face in her hands in a passionate fit of weeping. Violent sobs shook her entire frame. It seemed as if an overwhelming anguish was tearing at her heart, the physical pain of it was almost unendurable. And yet, even through this paroxysm of tears, her mind clung to one root idea. When she saw Percy, she must be brave and calm, be able to help him, if he wanted her, to do his bidding, if there was anything that she could do, or any message that she could take to the others. Of hope she had none. The last lingering ray of it had been extinguished by that fiend when he said, We need not fear that he will escape. I doubt if he could walk very steadily across this room now. It lacked ten minutes to the half-hour. The night was dark and bitterly cold. Snow was still falling in sparse, thin flakes, and lay like a crisp and glittering mantel over the parapets of the bridges and the grim towers of the Châtelet prison. They walked on silently now. All that they had wanted to say to one another had been said inside the squalid room of their lodgings, when Ser Andrew folks had come home and learned that Chauvelin had been. They are killing him by inches, Ser Andrew, had been the heart-rending cry which burst from Marguerite's oppressed heart as soon as her hands rested in the kindly ones of her best friend. Is there ought that we can do? There was, of course, very little that could be done. One or two fine steel files which Ser Andrew gave her to conceal beneath the folds of her kerchief, also a tiny dagger with sharp, poisoned blade, which, for a moment, she held in her hand, hesitating, her eyes filling with tears, her heart throbbing with unspeakable sorrow. Then slowly, very slowly, she raised the small, death-dealing instrument to her lips, and reverently kissed the narrow blade. If it must be, she murmured, God in his mercy will forgive. She sheathed the dagger, and this, too, she hid in the folds of her gown. Can you think of anything else Ser Andrew that he might want? She asked. I have money in plenty in case those soldiers— Ser Andrew sighed, and turned away from her so as to hide the hopelessness which he felt. Since three days now he had been exhausting every conceivable means of getting at the prison guard with bribery and corruption, but Chauvelin and his friends had taken excellent precautions. The prison of a conciergerie, situated as it was in the very heart of the labyrinthine and complicated structure of the châtelet and the House of Justice, and isolated from every other group of cells in the building, was inaccessible, save from one narrow doorway which gave on the guard room first, and thence on the inner cell beyond. Just as all attempts to rescue the late unfortunate queen from that prison had failed, so now every attempt to reach the imprisoned scarlet Pimpernel was equally doomed to bitter disappointment. The guard room was filled with soldiers day and night. The windows of the inner cell, heavily barred, were too small to admit of the passage of a human body, and they were raised twenty feet from the corridor below. Ser Andrew had stood in the corridor two days ago. He had looked on the window behind which he knew that his friend must be eating out his noble heart in a longing for liberty, and he had realized then that every effort at help from the outside was for doomed to failure. Courage, Lady Blakeney, he said to Marguerite, when anon they had crossed the Ponto-Change and were wending their way slowly along the Rue de la Barriérie. Remember our proud dictum. The scarlet Pimpernel never fails, and also this, that whatever messages Blakeney gives you for us, whatever he wishes us to do, we are to a man ready to do it, and to give our lives for our chief. Courage! Something tells me that a man like Percy is not going to die at the hands of such verminous chauvinist friends. They had reached the great iron gates of the House of Justice. Marguerite, trying to smile, extended her trembling hand to this faithful loyal comrade. I'll not be far, he said. When you come out, do not look to the right or left, but make straight for home. I'll not lose sight of you for a moment, and as soon as possible will overtake you. God bless you both." He pressed his lips on her cold little hand, and watched her tall, elegant figure as she passed through the great gates until the veil of falling snow hid her from his gaze. Then with a deep sigh of bitter anguish and sorrow, he turned away, and was soon lost in the gloom. Marguerite found the gate at the bottom of the monumental stairs open when she arrived. Chauvin was standing immediately inside the building, waiting for her. We are prepared for your visit, Lady Bligny, he said, and the prisoner knows that you are coming. He led the way down one of the numerous and interminable corridors of the building, and she followed briskly, pressing her hand against her bosom there with the folds of her kerchief hid the steel files in the precious stagger. Even in the gloom of these ill-lighted passages, she realized that she was surrounded by guards. There were soldiers everywhere. Two had stood behind the door when first she entered, and had immediately closed it with a loud clang behind her. And all the way down the corridors, through the half light engendered by feebly flickering lamps, she caught glimpses of the white facings on the uniforms of the town guard, or occasionally the glint of steel of a bayonet. Presently Chauvin paused beside a door which he had just reached. His hand was on the latch, for it did not appear to be locked, and he turned toward Marguerite. I am very sorry, Lady Bligny, he said, in simple deferential tones, that the prison authorities, who at my request are granting you this interview at such an unusual hour, have made a slight condition to your visit. A condition, she asked. What is it? You must forgive me, he said, as if purposely evading her question, for I give you my word that I had nothing to do with a regulation that you might justly feel was derogatory to your dignity. If you will kindly step in here, a wardress in charge will explain to you what is required. He pushed open the door, and stood aside ceremoniously in order to allow her to pass in. She looked on him with deep puzzlement, and a look of dark suspicion in her eyes, but her mind was too much engrossed with the thought of her meeting with Percy to worry over any trifle that might, as her enemy had inferred, offend her womanly dignity. She walked into the room, past Chauvelin, who whispered as she went by, I will wait for you here, and I pray you, if you have ought to complain of, summon me at once. Then he closed the door behind her. The room in which Marguerite now found herself was a small, unventilated quadrangle, dimly lighted by a hanging lamp. A woman in a soiled cotton gown, and lank gray hair, brushed away from apartment-like forehead, rose from the chair in which she had been sitting when Marguerite entered, and put away some knitting on which she had apparently been engaged. I was to tell you, citizeness," she said the moment the door had been closed, and she was alone with Marguerite, that the prison authorities have given orders that I should search you before you visit the prisoner. She repeated this phrase mechanically, like a child who has been taught to say a lesson by heart. She was a stoutish, middle-aged woman, with that pasty, flabby skin peculiar to those who live in want of fresh air. But her small, dark eyes were not unkindly, although they shifted restlessly from one object to another, as if she were trying to avoid looking the other woman straight in the face. That you should search me," reiterated Marguerite slowly, trying to understand. Yes," replied the woman, I was to tell you to take off your clothes, so that I might look them through and through. I have often had to do this before when visitors have been allowed inside the prison, so it is no use your trying to deceive me in any way. I am very sharp at finding out if one has any papers or files or ropes concealed in an underpetticoat. Come," she added more roughly, seeing that Marguerite had remained motionless in the middle of the room. The quicker you are about it, the sooner you will be taken to see the prisoner. These words had their desired effect. The proud Lady Blakeney, inwardly revolting at the outrage, knew that resistance would be worse than useless. Chauvelin was the other side of the door. A call from the woman would bring him to her assistance, and Marguerite was only longing to hasten the moment when she could be with her husband. She took off her kerchief and her gown, and calmly submitted to the woman's rough hands as they wandered with sureness and accuracy to the various pockets and folds that might conceal prohibited articles. The woman did her work with peculiar stolidity. She did not utter a word when she found the tiny steel files and placed them on a table beside her. In equal silence, she laid the little dagger beside them, and the purse which contained twenty gold pieces. These she counted in front of Marguerite, and then replaced them in the purse. Her face expressed neither surprise nor greed nor pity. She was obviously beyond the reach of bribery—just a machine, paid by the prison authorities to do this unpleasant work, and no doubt terrorized into doing it conscientiously. When she had satisfied herself that Marguerite had nothing further concealed about her person, she allowed her to put her dress on once more. She even offered to help her on with it. When Marguerite was fully dressed, she opened the door for her. Chauvelin was standing in the passage waiting patiently. At sight of Marguerite, whose pale-set face betrayed nothing of the indignation which she felt, he turned quick, inquiring eyes on the woman. Chauve filed a dagger and a purse with twenty Louis, said the latter curtly. Chauvelin made no comment. He received the information quite placidly, as if it had no special interest for him. Then he said quietly, This way, citizeness. Marguerite followed him, and two minutes later he stood beside a heavy nail-studded door that had a small square grating led into one of the panels, and said simply, This is it. Two soldiers of the National Guard were on sentry at the door, two more were pacing up and down outside it, and had halted when Citizen Chauvelin gave his name and showed his tricolor scarf of office. From behind the small grating in the door, a pair of eyes peered at the newcomers. Quivala came the quick challenge from the guard room within. Citizen Chauvelin of the Committee of Public Safety was the prompt reply. There was the sound of grounding of arms, of the drawing of bolts, and the turning of a key in a complicated lock. The prison was kept locked from within, and very heavy bars had to be moved ere the ponderous doors slowly swung open on its hinges. Two steps led up into the guard room. Marguerite mounted them with the same feeling of awe and almost of reverence as she would have mounted the steps of a sacrificial altar. The guard room itself was more brilliantly lighted than the corridor outside. The sudden glare of two or three lamps, placed about the room, caused her momentarily to close her eyes, that were aching with many shed and unshed tears. The air was rank and heavy with the fumes of tobacco, of wine and stale food. A large barred window gave on the corridor immediately above the door. When Marguerite felt strong enough to look around her, she saw that the room was filled with soldiers. Some were sitting, others standing, others lay on rugs against the wall apparently asleep. There was one who appeared to be in command, for with a word he checked the noise that was going on in the room when she entered, and then he said curtly, "'This way, citizeness.'" He turned to an opening in the wall on the left, the stone lintel of a door, from which the door itself had been removed. An iron bar ran across the opening, and this the sergeant now lifted, nodding to Marguerite to go within. Instinctively she looked round for Chauvelin. But he was nowhere to be seen. Chapter 28 The Caged Lion Was there some instinct of humanity left in the soldier who allowed Marguerite through the barrier into the prisoner cell? Had the one face of this beautiful woman stirred within his heart the last chord of gentleness that was not wholly atrophied by the constant cruelties, the excesses, the mercilessness which his service under this fraternizing republic constantly demanded of him? Perhaps some recollection of former years when first he served as king and country. Recollection of wife or sister or mother pleaded within him in favour of this sorely stricken woman with the look of unspeakable sorrow in her large blue eyes. Certain it is, that as soon as Marguerite passed the barrier he put himself on guard against it with his back to the interior of the cell and to her. Marguerite had posed on the threshold. After the glaring light of the guard room the cell seemed dark, and at first she could hardly see. The whole length of the long narrow cubicle lay to her left, with a slight recess at its further end, so that from the threshold of the doorway she could not see into the distant corner. Swift as a lightning flash, the remembrance came back to her of proud Marie Antoinette narrowing her life to that dark corner where the insolent eyes of a rabble soldiery could not spy her every movement. Marguerite stepped further into the room. Gradually by the dim light of an oil lamp placed upon a table in the recess she began to distinguish various objects—one or two chairs, another table, and a small but very comfortable-looking camp bedstead. Just for a few seconds she saw only these inanimate things. Then she became conscious of Percy's presence. He sat on a chair, with his left arm half-stretched out upon the table, his head hidden in the bend of the elbow. Marguerite did not utter a cry. She did not even tremble. Just for one brief instant she closed her eyes, so as to gather up all her courage before she dared to look again. Then, with a steady and noiseless step, she came quite close to him. She knelt on the flagstones at his feet, and raised reverently to her lips the hand that hung nervously and limp by his side. He gave a start. A shiver seemed to go right through him. He half raised his head, and murmured in a hoarse whisper, I tell you that I do not know, and if I did—she put her arms round him and pillowed her head upon his breast. He turned his head slowly toward her, and now his eyes, hollowed and rimmed with purple, looked straight into hers. I love it! he said. I knew that you would come. His arms closed round her. There was nothing of lifelessness or of weariness in the passion of that embrace. And when she looked up again, it seemed to her as if that first vision which she had had of him, with weary head bent and one haggard face, was not reality—only a dream born of her own anxiety for him. For now the hot ardent blood coursed just as swiftly as ever through his veins, as if life, strong, tenacious, pulsating life, throbbed with unabating vigor in those massive limbs, and behind that square, clear brow, as though the body, but half subdued, had transferred its vanishing strength to the kind and noble heart that was beating with the fervour of self-sacrifice. Percy, she said gently, they will only give us a few moments together. They thought that my tears would break your spirit where their devilry had failed. He held her glance with his own, with that close, intent look which binds soul to soul, and in his deep blue eyes there dance the restless flames of his own undying mirth. Ah! little woman! he said with enforced likeness, even whilst his voice quivered with the intensity of passion engendered by her presence, her nearness, the perfume of her hair. How little they know you, eh! your brave, beautiful, exquisite soul shining now through your glorious eyes would defy the machinations of Satan himself and his horde. Close your dear eyes, my love. I shall go mad with joy if I drink their beauty in any longer. He held her face between his two hands, and, indeed, it seemed as if he could not satiate his soul with looking into her eyes. In the midst of so much sorrow, such misery and such deadly fear, never had Marguerite felt quite so happy, never had she felt him so completely her own. The inevitable bodily weakness, which of necessity had invaded even his splendid physique after a whole week's privations, had made a severe breach in the invincible barrier of self-control, with which the soul of the inner man was kept perpetually hidden behind a mask of indifference and of irresponsibility. And yet, the agony of seeing the lines of sorrow so plainly writ on the beautiful face of the woman he worshipped must have been the keenest that the bold adventurer had ever experienced in the whole course of his reckless life. It was he, and he alone, who was making her suffer. Her, for whose sake he would gladly have shed every drop of his blood, endured every torment, every misery and every humiliation, her whom he worshipped only one degree less than he worshipped his honour, and the cause which he had made his own. Yet, in spite of that agony, in spite of the heart-rending pathos of her pale one face, and through the anguish of seeing her tears, the ruling passion, strong in death, the spirit of adventure, the mad, wild, devil-made care, irresponsibility, was never wholly absent. Dear heart, he said, with a quaint sigh, whilst he buried his face in the soft masses of her hair. Until you came, I was so damned fatigued. He was laughing, and the old look of boyish love of mischief illumined his haggard face. He said not lucky, dear heart, he said a moment or two later, that those brutes do not leave me unshaved. I could not have faced you with a weak's growth of beard round my chin. By dint of promises and bribery I have persuaded one of that rabble to come and shave me every morning. They will not allow me to handle a razor myself. They are afraid I should cut my throat, or one of theirs. But mostly I am too damned sleepy to think of such a thing. Pussy! she exclaimed, with tender and passionate reproach. I know, I know, dear, he murmured, what a brute I am. Ah, God did a cruel thing the day he threw me in your path. To think that once, not so very long ago, we were drifting apart, you and I. You would have suffered less, dear heart, if we had continued to drift. Then as he saw that his bantering tone pained her, he covered her hands with kisses, and treating her forgiveness. Dear heart, he said merrily, I deserve that you should leave me to rot in this abominable cage. They haven't got me yet, little woman, you know. I am not yet dead, only damned sleepy at times. But I'll cheat them even now, never fear. How, Percy! how! she moaned, for her heart was aching with intolerable pain. She knew better than he did the precautions which were being taken against his escape, and she saw more clearly than he realized it himself the terrible barrier set up against that escape by ever encroaching physical weakness. Well, dear, he said simply, to tell you the truth I have not yet thought of that all-important how. I had to wait, you see, until you came. I was so sure that you would come. I have succeeded in putting on paper all my instructions for folks and the others. I will give them to you and on. I knew that you would come, and that I could give them to you. Until then I had but to think of one thing, and that was of keeping body and soul together. My chance of seeing you was to let them have their will with me. Those brutes were sure sooner or later to bring you to me, that you might see the caged fox roaned down to imbecility, eh? That you might add your tears to their persuasion and succeed where they have failed. He laughed lightly with an unstrained note of gaiety. Only Marguerite's sensitive ears caught the faint tone of bitterness which rang through the laugh. Once I know that the little king of France is safe, he said, I can think of how best to rob these damned murderers of my skin. Then suddenly his manner changed. He still held her with one arm closely to him, but the other now lay across the table, and the slender emaciated hand was tightly clutched. He did not look at her, but straight ahead. The eyes, unnaturally large now, with their deep purple rims, looked far ahead beyond the stone walls of this grim, cruel prison. The passionate lover, hungering for his beloved, had vanished. There sat the man with a purpose, the man whose firm hand had snatched men and women and children from death, the reckless enthusiast who tossed his life against an ideal. For a while he sat thus, while in his drawn, haggard face she could trace every line formed by his thoughts, the frown of anxiety, the resolute setting of the lips, the obstinate look of will around the firm jaw. Then he turned again to her. I beautiful one, he said softly. The moments are very precious. God knows I could spend eternity thus with your dear form nestling against my heart, but those damned murderers will only give us half an hour, and I want your help, my beloved, now that I am a helpless cur caught in their trap. Will you listen attentively, dear heart, to what I am going to say? Yes, Percy, I will listen, she replied. And have you the courage to do just what I tell you, dear? I would not have the courage to do all else, she said simply. It means going from hence to-day, dear heart, and perhaps not meeting again, hush, my beloved, he said tenderly, placing his thin hand over her mouth, from which a sharp cry of pain had well now escaped. Your exquisite soul will be with me always. Try not to give way to despair. While your love alone, which I see shining from your dear eyes, is enough to make a man cling to life with all his might, tell me, will you do as I ask you? And she replied firmly and courageously, I will do just what you ask, Percy. God bless you for your courage, dear. You will have need of it. For the sake of that helpless innocent. The next instant he was kneeling on the floor, and his hands were wandering over the small, irregular flagstones immediately underneath the table. Marguerite had risen to her feet. She watched her husband with intent and puzzled eyes. She saw him suddenly pass his slender fingers along a crevice between two flagstones, then raise one of these slightly, and from beneath it extract a small bundle of papers, each carefully folded and sealed. Then he replaced the stone, and one small rose to his knees. He gave a quick glance toward the doorway. That corner of his cell, the recess wherein stood the table, was invisible to any one who had not actually crossed the threshold. Reassured that his movements could not have been and were not watched, he drew Marguerite closer to him. Dear heart! he whispered, I want to place these papers in your care. Look upon them as my last will and testament. I succeeded in fooling those brutes one day by pretending to be willing to exceed to their will. They gave me pen and ink and paper and wax, and I was to write out an order to my followers to bring the dauphin hither. They left me in peace for one quarter of an hour, which gave me time to write three letters, one for Armand, and the other two for folks, and to hide them under the flooring of my cell. You see, dear, I knew that you would come, and that I could give them to you then. He paused, and that ghost of a smile once more hovered round his lips. He was thinking of that day when he had fooled Heron and Chauvelin into the belief that their devoury had succeeded, and that they had brought the reckless adventurer to his knees. He smiled at the recollection of their wrath when they knew that they had been tricked, and after a quarter of an hour's anxious waiting found a few sheets of paper scribbled over with incoherent words or satirical verse, and the prisoner having apparently snatched ten minutes' sleep which seemingly had restored him quite a modicum of his strength. But of this he told Marguerite nothing, nor of the insults and humiliation which he had had to bear in consequence of that trick. He did not tell her that directly afterwards the order went forth that the prisoner was to be kept on bread and water in the future, nor that Chauvelin had stood by laughing and jeering while— No, he did not tell her all that. The recollection of it all had still the power to make him laugh. Was it not all a part and parcel of that great gamble for human lives wherein he had held the winning cards himself for so long? It is your turn now, he had said even then to his bitter enemy. Yes, Chauvelin had replied, our turn at last, and you will not bend, my fine English gentleman, we'll break you yet, never fear. It was the thought of it all, of that hand to hand, will to will, spirit to spirit struggle that lighted up his haggard face even now, gave him a fresh zest for life, a desire to combat and to conquer in spite of all, in spite of the odds that had martyred his body, but left the mind, the will, the power still unconquered. He was pressing one of the papers into her hand, holding her fingers tightly in his, and compelling her gaze with the ardent excitement of his own. This first letter is for folks, he said. It relates to the final measures for the safety of the Dauphin. They are my instructions to those members of the League who are in or near Paris at the present moment. Folks I know must be with you. He was not likely, God bless his loyalty, to let you come to Paris alone. Then give this letter to him, dear heart, at once, to-night, and tell him that it is my express command that he and the others shall act in my newt accordance with my instructions. But the Dauphin surely is safe now, she urged. Folks and the others are here in order to help you. To help me, dear heart? He interposed earnestly. God alone can do that now, and such of my poor wits as these devils do not succeed in crushing out of me within the next ten days. Ten days? I have waited a week, until this hour, when I could place this packet in your hands. Another ten days should see the Dauphin out of France. After that, we shall see. Percy, she exclaimed, in an agony of horror, you cannot endure this for another day, and live. Nay, he said, in a tone that was almost insolent in its proud defiance, there is but little that a man cannot do when he sets his mind to it. For the rest, it is in God's hands, he added, more gently. Dear heart, you swole that you would be brave. The Dauphin is still in France, and until he is out of it, he will not really be safe. His friends wanted to keep him inside the country. God only knows what they still hope. Had I been free, I should not have allowed him to remain so long. Now those good people at Mont will yield to my letter, and to folks' earnest appeal. They will allow one of our league to convey the child safely out of France, and I'll wait here until I know that he is safe. If I tried to get away now, and succeeded, my heaven help us. The hue and crime might turn against the child, and he might be captured before I could get to him. Dear heart, dear, dear heart, try to understand. The safety of that child is bound with my honour, but I swear to you, my sweet love, that the day on which I feel that that safety is assured, I will save my own skin. Or there is left of it, if I can. Percy! she cried with a sudden outburst of passionate revolt. You speak as if the safety of that child were of more moment than your own. Ten days! But God in heaven, have you thought how I shall live these ten days while slowly, inch by inch, you give your dear, your precious life for a full long cause? I am very tough, my dear. He said likely. It is not a question of life. I shall only be spending a few more very uncomfortable days in this damned whole. But what of that? Her eyes spoke the reply. Her eyes veiled with tears that wandered with heartbreaking anxiety from the hollow circles round his own to the lines of weariness about the firm lips and jaw. He laughed at her solicitude. I can last out longer than these brutes have any idea of, he said gaily. You cheat yourself, Percy. She rejoined with quiet earnestness. Every day that you spend immured between these walls with that ceaseless nerve-wracking torment of sleeplessness which these devils have devised for the breaking of your will, every day, thus spent, diminishes your power of ultimately saving yourself. You see, I speak calmly, dispassionately. I do not even urge my claims upon your life. But what you must weigh in the balance is the claim of all those for whom in the past you have already stayed your life, those lives you have purchased by risking your own. What, in comparison with your noble life, is that of the puny descendant of a line of decadent kings? Why should it be sacrificed, ruthlessly, hopelessly sacrificed, that a boy might live who is as nothing to the world, to his country, even to his own people? She had tried to speak calmly, never raising her voice beyond a whisper. Her hands still clutched that paper which seemed to sear her fingers, the paper which she felt held writ upon its smooth surface the death sentence of the man she loved. But his look did not answer her firm appeal. It was fixed far away beyond the prison walls, on a lonely country road outside Paris, with the rain falling in a thin drizzle, the leaden clouds overhead chasing one another, driven by the gale. Paul might, he murmured softly. He walked so bravely by my side, until the little feet grew weary. Then he nestled in my arms and slept until we met folks waiting with the cart. He was no king of France just then, only a helpless innocent whom heaven aided me to save. Marguerite bowed her head in silence. There was nothing more that she could say, no plea that she could urge. Indeed, she had understood, as he had begged her to understand. She understood that long ago he had mapped out the course of his life, and now that that course happened to lead up a cavalry of humiliation and of suffering, he was not likely to turn back, even though on the summit death already was waiting, beckoning with no uncertain hand. Not until he could murmur in the wake of the great and divine sacrifice itself, the sublime words, it is accomplished. But the dauphin is safe enough now, was all that she said, after that one moment's silence when her heart, too, had offered up to God the supreme abnegation of self, and calmly faced a sorrow which threatened to break it at last. Yes, he rejoined. Safe enough for the moment. But he would be safe as still if he were out of France. I had hoped to take him one day with me to England. But in this plan damnable fate has interfered. His adherents wanted to get him to Vienna, and their wish had best be fulfilled now. In my instructions to folks I have mapped out a simple way for accomplishing the journey. Tony will be the one best suited to lead the expedition, and I want him to make straight for Holland. The northern frontiers are not so closely watched as are the Austrian ones. There is a faithful adherent of the bourbon cause who lives at Delft, and who will give shelter of his name and home to the fugitive king of France until he can be conveyed to Vienna. He is named Naudorf. Once I feel that the child is safe in his hands I will look after myself, never fear. He paused, for his strength which was only factitious, born of the excitement that Marguerite's presence at cold forth was threatening to give way. His voice, though he had spoken in a whisper all along, was very hoarse, and his temples were throbbing with the sustained effort to speak. If those fiends had only thought of denying me food instead of sleep, he murmured involuntarily, I could have held out until. Then, with characteristic swiftness, his mood changed in a moment. His arms closed round Marguerite once more with a passion of self-reproach. Heaven forgive me for a selfish brute, he said, whilst the ghost of a smile once more lit up the whole of his face. Dear soul, I must have forgotten your sweet presence, thus brooding over my own troubles, whilst your loving heart has a grave a burden. God help me, then it can possibly bear. Listen, my beloved, for I don't know how many minutes longer they intend to give us, and I have not yet spoken to you about Armand. Armand! she cried. A twinge of remorse had gripped her. For fully ten minutes now she had relegated all thoughts of her brother to a distant cell of her memory. We have no news of Armand, she said. Sir Andrew has searched all the prison registers. Oh, we're not my heart atrophied by all that it has endured this past senite. It would feel a final throb of agonizing pain at every thought of Armand. A curious look, which even her loving eyes fail to interpret, passed like a shadow over her husband's face. But the shadow lifted in a moment, and it was with a reassuring smile that he said to her, Dear heart, Armand is comparatively safe for the moment. Tell folks not to search the prison registers for him, rather to seek out Mademoiselle Lynch. She will know where to find Armand. Jean Lynch! she exclaimed with a world of bitterness in the tone of her voice. The girl whom Armand loved, it seems, with a passion greater than his loyalty. Oh, Sir Andrew tried to disguise my brother's folly, but I guessed what he did not choose to tell me. It was his disobedience, his want of trust that brought this unspeakable misery on us all. Do not blame him over much, Dear heart. Armand was in love, and love excuses every sin committed in its name. Jean Lynch was arrested, and Armand lost his reason temporarily. The very day on which I rescued the dauphan from the temple, I had the good fortune to drag the little lady out of prison. I had given my promise to Armand that she should be safe, and I kept my word. But this Armand did not know. Or else— He checked himself abruptly, and once more that strange enigmatical look crept into his eyes. I took Jean Lynch to a place of comparative safety, he said after a slight pause. But since then she has been set entirely free. Free? Yes. Chauvelin himself brought me the news, he replied, with a quick, mirthless laugh wholly unlike his usual, light-hearted gaiety. He had to ask me where to find Jean, for I unknown knew where she was. As for Armand, they'll not worry about him whilst I am here. Another reason why I must bide a while longer. But in the meanwhile, dear, I pray you find Mademoiselle Lynch. She lives at number five, Square du Roule. Through her I know that you can get to see Armand. This second letter, he added, pressing a smaller packet into our hand, is for him. Give it to him, dear heart. It will, I hope, tend to cheer him. I fear me the poor lad frets, yet he only sinned because he loved, and to me he will always be your brother. The man who held your affection for all the years before I came into your life. Give him this letter, dear. They are my instructions to him as the others of a folks. But tell him to read them when he is alone. You will do that, dear heart. Will you not? Yes, Percy, she said simply. I promise. Great joy and the expression of intense relief lit up his face whilst his eyes spoke the gratitude which he felt. Then there is one thing more, he said. There are others in this cruel city, dear heart, who have trusted me, and whom I must not fail. Marie de Marmantelle and her brother, faithful servants of the late Queen. They were on the eve of arrest when I succeeded in getting them to a place of comparative safety. And there are others there too. All of these poor victims have trusted me implicitly. They are waiting for me there, trusting in my promise to convey them safely to England. Sweetheart, you must redeem my promise to them. You will? You will? Promise me that you will. I promise, Percy, she said once more. Then go, dear, to-morrow, in the late afternoon, to number ninety-eight, Au Roux de Charon. It is a narrow house at the extreme end of that long street which abuts on the fortifications. The lower part of the house is occupied by a dealer in rags and old clothes. He and his wife and family are wretchedly poor, but they are kind, good souls, and for a consideration and a minimum of risk to themselves, they will always render service to the English Milore, whom they believe to be a band of inveterate snugglers. Folks and all the others know these people and know the house. Armand, by the same token, knows it too. Marie de Marmontel and her brother are there, and several others. The old Comte de Les Ardières, the Abbe de Firmont, their names spell suffering, loyalty, and hopelessness. I was lucky enough to convey them safely to that hidden shelter. They trust me implicitly, dearheart. They are waiting for me there, trusting in my promise to them. Dearheart, you will go, will you not? Yes, Percy. I will go, I have promised. Folks has some certificates of safety by him, and the old clothes dealer will supply the necessary disguises. He has a covered cart which he uses for his business and which you can borrow from him. Folks will drive the little party to a chars farm in Saint-Germain, where other members of the league should be in waiting for the final journey to England. Folks will know how to arrange for everything. He was always my most able lieutenant. Once everything is organized, he can appoint hastings to lead the party. But you, dearheart, must do as you wish. A chars farm would be a safe retreat for you and for folks, if—I know, I know, dear—he added with infinite tenderness. See, I do not even suggest that you should leave me. Folks will be with you, and I know that neither he nor you would go even if I commanded. Either a chars farm, or even the house in the Rue de Charon, would be quite safe for you, dear, under folks' protection, until the time when I myself can carry you back. You, my precious burden, to England in my known arms, or until— Hush, dearheart! he entreated, smothering with a passionate kiss the low moan of pain which had escaped her lips. It is all in God's hands now. I am in a tight corner, tighter than ever I have been before, but I am not dead yet, and those brutes have not yet paid the full price for my life. Tell me, dearheart, that you have understood, that you will do all that I ask. Tell me again, my dear, dear love. It is the very essence of life to hear your sweet lips murmur this promise now." And for the third time she reiterated firmly, I have understood every word that you said to me, Percy, and I promise on your precious life to do what you ask. He sighed a deep sigh of satisfaction, and even at that moment there came from the guard room beyond the sound of a harsh voice saying premedrally, that half-hour is nearly over, Sergeant, it is time you interfered. Three minutes more, citizen, was the curt reply. Three minutes, you devils! murmured Blakeney between sec teeth, whilst a sudden light, which even Margrette's keen gaze failed to interpret, leapt into his eyes. Then he pressed the third letter into her hand. Once more his close, intent gaze compelled hers. Their faces were close one to the other, so near to him did he draw her, so tightly did he hold her to him. The paper was in her hand, and his fingers were pressed firmly on hers. Put this in your kerchief, my beloved, he whispered. Let it rest on your exquisite bosom where I so love to pillow my head. Keep it there until the last hour when it seems to you that nothing more can come between me and shame. Hush, dear! he added, with passionate tenderness, checking the hot protest that at the word shame had sprung to her lips. I cannot explain more fully now. I do not know what may happen. I am only a man, and who knows what subtle devilry those brutes might not devise for bringing the untamed adventurer to his knees. For the next ten days the dofam will be on the high roads of France on his way to safety. Every stage of his journey will be known to me. I can, from between these four walls, follow him and his escort step by step. Well, dear, I am but a man already brought to shame for weakness by mere physical discomfort, the want of sleep, such a trifle, after all. But in case my reason tottered, God knows what I might do. Then give this packet to folks. It contains my final instructions, and he will know how to act. Promise me, dear heart, that you will not open the packet unless—unless my known dishonor seems to you imminent—unless I have yielded to these brutes in this prison, and sent folks or one of the other's orders to exchange the dofam's life for mine. Then, when my own handwriting hath proclaimed me a coward, then and then only give this packet to folks. Promise me that, and also that when you and he have mastered its contents, you will act exactly as I have commanded. Promise me that, dear, in your own sweet name, which may God bless, and in that of folks, our loyal friend. Through the sobs that Well-Knight choked her, she murmured the promise he desired. His voice had grown hoarser and more spent with the inevitable reaction after the long and sustained effort, but the vigor of the spirit was untouched, the fervour, the enthusiasm. Dear heart, he murmured, do not look on me with those dear, scared eyes of yours. If there is ought that puzzles you in what I said, try and trust me a little while longer. Remember, I must save the dofam at all costs. Mine honour is bound with his safety. What happens to me after that matters but little, yet I wish to live for your dear sake. He drew a long breath which had not weariness in it. The haggard look had completely vanished from his face. The eyes were lighted up from within. The very soul of reckless staring at immortal gaiety illumined his whole personality. Do not look so sad, little woman, he said, with a strange and sudden recudescence of power. Those damned murderers have not got me yet, even now. Then he went down like a log. The effort had been too prolonged. Weakened nature reasserted her rights, and he lost consciousness. Marguerite, helpless and almost distraught with grief, had yet the strength of mind not to call for assistance. She pillowed the loved one's head upon her breast. She kissed the dear, tired eyes, the poor, throbbing temples. The unutterable pathos of seeing this man, who was always the personification of extreme vitality, energy and boundless endurance and pluck, lying thus helpless like a tired child in her arms, was perhaps the saddest moment of this day of sorrow. But in her trust she never wavered for one instant. Much that he had said had puzzled her, but the word shame coming from his own lips as a comment on himself never caused her the slightest pang of fear. She had quickly hidden the tiny packet in her kerchief. She would act point by point, exactly as he had ordered her to do, and she knew that folks would never waver either. Her heart ached well night a breaking point. That which she could not understand had increased her anguish tenfold. If she could only have given way to tears, she could have borne this final agony more easily. But the solace of tears was not for her, when those loved eyes once more opened to consciousness, they should see hers glowing with courage and determination. There had been silence for a few minutes in the little cell. The soldiery outside, enured to their hideous duty, thought no doubt that the time had come for them to interfere. The iron bar was raised and thrown back with a loud crash. The butt-ends of muskets were grounded against the floor, and two soldiers made noisy eruption into the cell. "'Hola, citizen, wake up!' shouted one of the men. "'You have not told us yet what you have done with Cappé.'" Marguerite uttered a cry of horror. Instinctively her arms were interposed between the unconscious man and these inhuman creatures, with a beautiful gesture of protecting motherhood. "'He has fainted,' she said, her voice quivering with indignation. "'My God, are you devils that you have not one spark of manhood in you?' The men shrugged their shoulders, and both laughed brutally. They had seen worthsites than these, since they served a republic that ruled by bloodshed and by terror. They were own brothers in callousness and cruelty, to those men who on this self-same spot a few months ago had watched the daily agony of a martyred queen, or to those who had rushed into the Abbey prison on that awful day in September, and at a word from their infamous leaders had put eighty defenceless prisoners, men, women, and children to the sword. "'Tell him to say what he has done with Cappé,' said one of the soldiers now, and this rough command was accompanied with a coarse jest that sent the blood flaring up into Marguerite's pale cheeks. The brutal laugh, the coarse words which accompanied it, the insult flung at Marguerite, had penetrated to Blakeney's slowly returning consciousness. With sudden strength that appeared almost supernatural, he jumped to his feet, and before any of the others could interfere, he had with clenched fist struck the soldier a full blow on the mouth. The man staggered back with a curse, the other shouted for help. In a moment the narrow place swarmed with soldiers. Marguerite was roughly torn away from the prisoner's side, and thrust into the far corner of the cell, from where she only saw a confused mass of blue coats and white belts, and towering for one brief moment above what seemed to her fevered fancy like a veritable sea of lids, the pale face of her husband, with wide dilated eyes, searching the gloom for hers. "'Remember,' he shouted, and his voice for that brief moment rang out clear and sharp above the din. Then he disappeared behind the wall of glistening bayonets, of blue coats and uplifted arms. Mercifully for her she remembered nothing more very clearly. She felt herself being dragged out of the cell, the iron bar being thrust down behind her with a loud clang. Then in a vague, dreamy state of semi-unconsciousness, she saw the heavy bolts being drawn back from the outer door, heard the grating of the key in the monumental lock, and the next moment, a breath of fresh air, brought the sensation of renewed life into her. CHAPTER XXXV. I am sorry, Lady Blakeney, said a harsh, dry voice close to her. The incident at the end of your visit was none of our making, remember? She turned away, sickened with horror, at thought of contact with this wretch. She had heard the heavy, open door swing-two behind her on its ponderous hinges, and the key once again turned in the lock. She felt as if she had suddenly been thrust into a coffin, and that clods of earth were being thrown upon her breast, oppressing her heart so that she could not breathe. Had she looked for the last time on the man whom she loved beyond everything else on earth, whom she worshipped more ardently day by day, was she even now carrying within the folds of her kerchief a message from a dying man to his comrades? Mechanically, she followed Chauvelin down the corridor, and along the passages which she had traversed a brief half-hour ago. From some distant church tower, a clock told the hour of ten. It had then really only been a little more than thirty brief minutes, since she first had entered this grim building, which seemed less stony than the monsters who held authority within it. To her it seemed that centuries had gone over her head during that time. She felt like an old woman, unable to straighten her back or to steady her limbs. She could only dimly see some few paces ahead the trim figure of Chauvelin walking with measured steps, his hands held behind his back, his head thrown up with what looked like triumphant defiance. At the door of the cubicle, where she had been forced to submit to the indignity of being searched by a wardress, the latter was now standing, waiting with characteristic solidity. In her hand she held the steel files, the dagger, and the purse, which, as Marguerite passed, she held out to her. Your property, citizeness," she said placidly. She emptied the purse into her own hand, and solemnly counted out the twenty pieces of gold. She was about to replace them all into the purse when Marguerite pressed one of them back into her wrinkled hand. Nineteen will be enough, citizeness," she said. Keep one for yourself, not only for me, but for all the poor women who come here with their heart full of hope, and go hencewith it full of despair. The woman turned calm, lackluster eyes on her, and silently pocketed the gold-piece with a grudgingly muttered word of thanks. Chauvelin, during this brief interlude, had walked thoughtlessly on ahead. Marguerite, peering down the length of the narrow corridor, spied his sable-clad figure some hundred meters further on as it crossed the dim circle of light thrown by one of the lamps. She was about to follow, when it seemed to her as if someone was moving in the darkness close beside her. The wardress was even now in the act of closing the door of her cubicle, and there were a couple of soldiers who were disappearing from view round one end of the passage, whilst Chauvelin's retreating form was lost in the gloom at the other. There was no light close to where she herself was standing, and the blackness around her was as impenetrable as a veil. The sound of a human creature moving and breathing close to her in this intense darkness acted weirdly on her overraught nerves. «Givala!« she called. There was a more distinct movement among the shadows this time, as of a swift tread on the flagstones of the corridor. All else was silent round, and now she could plainly hear those footsteps running rapidly down the passage away from her. She strained her eyes to see more clearly, and a nun in one of the dim circles of light on her head, she spied a man's figure, slender and darkly clad, walking seen quickly yet furtively like one pursued. As he crossed the light the man turned to look back. It was her brother Armand. Her first instinct was to call to him. The second checked that call upon her lips. Percy had said that Armand was in no danger. Then why should he be sneaking along the dark corridors of this awful house of justice if he was free and safe? Certainly, even at a distance, her brother's movement suggested to Marguerite that he was in danger of being seen. He cowered in the darkness, tried to avoid the circles of light thrown by the lamps in the passage. At all costs Marguerite felt that she must warn him that the way he was going now would lead him straight into Chauvelin's arms, and she longed to let him know that she was close by. Feeling sure that he would recognize her voice, she made pretence to turn back to the cubicle through the door of which the wardress had already disappeared, and called out as loudly as she dared, good-night citizeness. But Armand, who surely must have heard, did not pause at the sound. Rather was he walking on more rapidly than before. In less than a minute he would be reaching the spot where Chauvelin stood waiting for Marguerite. That end of the corridor, however, received no light from any of the lamps. Strive how she might, Marguerite could see nothing now either of Chauvelin or of Armand. Blindly, instinctively, she ran forward, thinking only to reach Armand and to warn him to turn back before it was too late, before he found himself face to face with the most bitter enemy he and his nearest and dearest had ever had. But as she at last came to a halt at the end of the corridor, panting with the exertion of running and the fear for Armand, she almost fell up against Chauvelin, who was standing there alone and imperturbable, seemingly having waited patiently for her. She could only dimly distinguish his face, the sharp features and thin, cruel mouth, but she felt, more than she actually saw, his cold, steely eyes fixed with a strange expression of mockery upon her. But of Armand there was no sign, and she, poor soul, had difficulty in not betraying the anxiety which she felt for her brother. Had the flagstone swallowed him up? A door on the right was the only one that gave on the corridor at this point. It led to the concierge's lodge, and then south into the courtyard. Had Chauvelin been dreaming, sleeping with his eyes open whilst he stood waiting for her, and had Armand succeeded in slipping past him under cover of darkness, and through that door to safety that lay beyond these prison walls? Marguerite, miserably agitated, not knowing what to think, looked somewhat wild-eyed on Chauvelin. He smiled, that inscrutable, muffless smile of his, and said blandly, Is there all else I can do for you, citizeness? This is your nearest way out. No doubt Sir Andrew will be waiting to escort you home. Then as she, not daring either to reply or to question, walked straight up to the door. He hurried forward, prepared to open it for her. But before he did so he turned to her once again. I trust that your visit has pleased you, Lady Bligny," he said suavely, at what hour do you desire to repeat it to-morrow? To-morrow? She reiterated, in a vague, absent manner, for she was still dazed with the strange incident of Armand's appearance and his flight. Yes. You would like to see Sir Percy again to-morrow, would you not? I myself would gladly pay him a visit from time to time, but he does not care for my company. My colleague, citizen Heron, on the other hand, calls on him four times in every twenty-four hours. He does so a few moments before the changing of the guard, and stays chatting with Sir Percy until after the guard is changed, when he inspects the men and satisfies himself that no traitor has crept in among them. All the men are personally known to him, you see. These hours are at five in the morning and again at eleven, and then again at five and eleven in the evening. My friend Heron, as you see, is zealous and assiduous, and, strangely enough, Sir Percy does not seem to view his visit with any displeasure. Now, at any other hour of the day, Lady Blakeney, I pray you command me, and I will arrange that Citizen Heron grant you a second interview with the prisoner. Marguerite had only listened to Chauvelin's lengthy speech with half a near. Her thoughts still dwelt on the past half hour with its bitter joy and its agonizing pain, and fighting through her thoughts of Percy, there was the recollection of Armand which so disquieted her. But though she had only vaguely listened to what Chauvelin was saying, she caught the drift of it. Madly she longed to accept his suggestion. The very thought of seeing Percy on the morrow was solace to her aching heart. It could feed on hope to-night, instead of on its own bitter pain. But even during this brief moment of hesitancy, and while her whole being cried out for this joy that her enemy was holding out to her, even then, in the gloom ahead of her, she seemed to see a vision of a pale face raised above a crowd of swaying heads, and of the eyes of the dreamer searching for her own, whilst the last sublime cry of perfect self-devotion once more echoed in her ear. Remember! The promise which she had given him, that which she fulfilled. The burden which he had laid on her shoulders, she would try to bear as heroically as he was bearing his own. I, even at the cost of the supreme sorrow, of never resting again in the haven of his arms. But in spite of sorrow, in spite of anguish so terrible that she could not imagine death itself to have a more cruel sting, she wished, above all, to safeguard that final, attenuated thread of hope which was wound round the packet that lay hidden on her breast. She wanted, above all, not to arouse Chauvelin's suspicions by markedly refusing to visit the prisoner again, suspicions that might lead to her being searched once more, and the precious packet filched from her. Therefore, she said to him earnestly now, I thank you, citizen, for your solicitude on my behalf, but you will understand, I think, that my visit to the prisoner has been almost more than I could bear. I cannot tell you at this moment whether to-morrow I should be in a fit state to repeat it. As you please," he said obeyingly, but I pray you to remember one thing, and that is— He paused a moment, while his restless eyes wandered rapidly over her face, trying, as it were, to get at the soul of this woman, at her innermost thoughts which he felt were hidden from him. Yes, citizen," she said quietly, what is it that I am to remember? That it rests with you, Lady Blakeney, to put an end to the present situation. How? Surely you can persuade Sir Percy's friends not to leave their chief endurance file. They themselves could put an end to his troubles to-morrow. By giving up the dough found to you, you mean? She retorted coldly, precisely. And you hoped—you still hope—that by placing before me the picture of your own fiendish cruelty against my husband, you will induce me to act the part of a traitor towards him and a coward before his followers? Oh! he said deprecatingly. The cruelty now is no longer mine. Sir Percy's release is in your hands, Lady Blakeney, in that of his followers. I should only be too willing to end the present intolerable situation. You and your friends are applying the last turn of the thumbscrew, not I. She smothered the cry of horror that had risen to her lips. The man's cold, blooded sophistry was threatening to make a breach in her armor of self-control. She would no longer trust herself to speak, but made a quick movement towards the door. He shrugged his shoulders as if the matter were now entirely out of his control. Then he opened the door for her to pass out, and as her skirts brushed against him, he bowed with studied deference, murmuring a cordial, good-night. And remember, Lady Blakeney, he added politely, that should you at any time desire to communicate with me at my rooms—nineteen roues-du-puis—I hold myself entirely at your service. Then as her tall, graceful figure disappeared in the outside gloom, he passed his thin hand over his mouth, as if to wipe away the last lingering signs of triumphant irony. The second visit will work wonders, I think, my fine lady. He murmured under his breath. Still they sat opposite one another. He, the friend, and she, the wife, talking over that brief half-hour that had meant an eternity to her. Marguerite had tried to tell Saran to everything, bitter as it was to put into actual words the pathos and misery which she had witnessed. Yet she would hide nothing from the devoted comrade whom she knew Percy would trust absolutely. To him she repeated every word that Percy had uttered, described every inflection of his voice, those enigmatic phrases which she had not understood, and together they cheated one another into the belief that hope lingered somewhere hidden in those words. I am not going to despair, Lady Blakeney, said Sir Andrew firmly, and, moreover, we are not going to disobey. I would stake my life that even now Blakeney has some scheme in his mind which is embodied in the various letters which he has given you, and which, heaven help us in that case, we might thwart by disobedience. Tomorrow in the late afternoon I will escort you to the Rue de Charon. It is a house that we all know well, and which our mind, of course, knows too. I had already inquired there two days ago to ascertain whether by chance Saint-Just was not in hiding there, but Lucas, the landlord, an old clothes-stealer, knew nothing about him. Marguerite told him about her swift vision of our mind in the dark corridor of the House of Justice. Can you understand it, Sir Andrew? she asked, fixing her deep, luminous eyes inquiringly upon him. No, I cannot, he said, after an almost imperceptible moment of hesitancy. But we shall see him to-morrow. I have no doubt that Mademoiselle Lange will know where to find him. And now that we know where she is, all our anxiety about him at any rate should soon be at an end. He rose and made some allusion to the lateness of the hour. Somehow it seemed to her that her devoted friend was trying to hide his innermost thoughts from her. She watched him with an anxious, intent gaze. Can you understand it at all, Sir Andrew? she reiterated, with a pathetic note of appeal. No, no, he said firmly, on my soul, Lady Blakeney, I know no more of Armand than you do yourself. But I am sure that Percy is right. The boy frets because remorse must have assailed him by now. Had he but obeyed implicitly that day, as we all did— But he could not frame the whole terrible proposition in words. Bitsily, as he himself felt on the subject of Armand, he would not add yet another burden to this devoted woman's heavy load of misery. It was fate, Lady Blakeney, he said after a while. Fate! a damnable fate which did it all. Great God! to think of Blakeney in the hands of those brutes seems so horrible that at times I feel as if the whole thing were a nightmare, and that the next moment we shall both wake hearing his merry voice echoing through this room. He tried to cheer her with words of hope that he knew were but chimeras. A heavy weight of despondency lay on his heart. The letter from his chief was hidden against his breast. He would study it and on in the privacy of his own apartment, so as to commit every word to memory that related to the measures for the ultimate safety of the child king. After that, it would have to be destroyed lest it fall into inimical hands. Soon he bade Marguerite good night. She was tired out, body and soul, and he, her faithful friend, vaguely wondered how long she would be able to withstand the strain of so much sorrow, such unspeakable misery. When at last she was alone, Marguerite made brave efforts to compose her nerves for us to obtain a certain modicum of sleep this night, but strive how she might sleep would not come. How could it, when before her wearied brain there rose constantly that awful vision of Percy in the long, narrow cell, with weary head bent over his arm, and those fiends shouting persistently in his ear, Wake up, citizen, tell us, where is Capay? The fear obsessed her that his mind might give way, for the mental agony of such intense weariness must be well nigh impossible to bear. In the dark, as she sat hour after hour at the open window, looking out in the direction where, through the veil of snow, the gray walls of the Châtelet prison, towered silent and grim, she seemed to see his pale, drawn face with almost appalling reality. She could see every line of it, and could study it with the intensity born of a terrible fear. How long would the ghostly glimmer of merriment still linger in the eyes? When would the horse, mirthless laugh, rise to the lips, that awful laugh that proclaims madness? Oh, she could have screamed now with the awfulness of this haunting terror. Ghoul seemed to be mocking her out of the darkness. Every flake of snow that fell silently on the window sill became a grinning face that taunted and derided. Every cry in the silence of the night, every footstep on the cube below, turned to hideous jeers hurled at her by tormenting fiends. She closed the window quickly, for she feared that she would go mad. For an hour after that she walked up and down the room, making violent efforts to control her nerves, to find a glimmer of that courage which she promised Percy that she would have.