CHAPTER I. THE
REPUBLICAN
He was born with a gift of
laughter and a sense that the world was mad. And that was all his
patrimony. His very paternity was obscure, although the village of
Gavrillac had long since dispelled the cloud of mystery that hung
about it. Those simple Brittany folk were not so simple as to be
deceived by a pretended relationship which did not even possess the
virtue of originality. When a nobleman, for no apparent reason,
announces himself the godfather of an infant fetched no man knew
whence, and thereafter cares for the lad’s rearing and education,
the most unsophisticated of country folk perfectly understand the
situation. And so the good people of Gavrillac permitted themselves
no illusions on the score of the real relationship between
Andre-Louis Moreau—as the lad had been named—and Quintin de
Kercadiou, Lord of Gavrillac, who dwelt in the big grey house that
dominated from its eminence the village clustering below.
Andre-Louis had learnt his
letters at the village school, lodged the while with old
Rabouillet, the attorney, who in the capacity of fiscal intendant,
looked after the affairs of M. de Kercadiou. Thereafter, at the age
of fifteen, he had been packed off to Paris, to the Lycee of Louis
Le Grand, to study the law which he was now returned to practise in
conjunction with Rabouillet. All this at the charges of his
godfather, M. de Kercadiou, who by placing him once more under the
tutelage of Rabouillet would seem thereby quite clearly to be
making provision for his future.
Andre-Louis, on his side, had
made the most of his opportunities. You behold him at the age of
four-and-twenty stuffed with learning enough to produce an
intellectual indigestion in an ordinary mind. Out of his zestful
study of Man, from Thucydides to the Encyclopaedists, from Seneca
to Rousseau, he had confirmed into an unassailable conviction his
earliest conscious impressions of the general insanity of his own
species. Nor can I discover that anything in his eventful life ever
afterwards caused him to waver in that opinion.
In body he was a slight wisp of a
fellow, scarcely above middle height, with a lean, astute
countenance, prominent of nose and cheek-bones, and with lank,
black hair that reached almost to his shoulders. His mouth was
long, thin-lipped, and humorous. He was only just redeemed from
ugliness by the splendour of a pair of ever-questing, luminous
eyes, so dark as to be almost black. Of the whimsical quality of
his mind and his rare gift of graceful expression, his
writings—unfortunately but too scanty—and particularly his
Confessions, afford us very ample evidence. Of his gift of oratory
he was hardly conscious yet, although he had already achieved a
certain fame for it in the Literary Chamber of Rennes—one of those
clubs by now ubiquitous in the land, in which the intellectual
youth of France foregathered to study and discuss the new
philosophies that were permeating social life. But the fame he had
acquired there was hardly enviable. He was too impish, too caustic,
too much disposed—so thought his colleagues—to ridicule their
sublime theories for the regeneration of mankind. Himself he
protested that he merely held them up to the mirror of truth, and
that it was not his fault if when reflected there they looked
ridiculous.
All that he achieved by this was
to exasperate; and his expulsion from a society grown mistrustful
of him must already have followed but for his friend, Philippe de
Vilmorin, a divinity student of Rennes, who, himself, was one of
the most popular members of the Literary Chamber.
Coming to Gavrillac on a November
morning, laden with news of the political storms which were then
gathering over France, Philippe found in that sleepy Breton village
matter to quicken his already lively indignation. A peasant of
Gavrillac, named Mabey, had been shot dead that morning in the
woods of Meupont, across the river, by a gamekeeper of the Marquis
de La Tour d’Azyr. The unfortunate fellow had been caught in the
act of taking a pheasant from a snare, and the gamekeeper had acted
under explicit orders from his master.
Infuriated by an act of tyranny
so absolute and merciless, M. de Vilmorin proposed to lay the
matter before M. de Kercadiou. Mabey was a vassal of Gavrillac, and
Vilmorin hoped to move the Lord of Gavrillac to demand at least
some measure of reparation for the widow and the three orphans
which that brutal deed had made.
But because Andre-Louis was
Philippe’s dearest friend—indeed, his almost brother—the young
seminarist sought him out in the first instance. He found him at
breakfast alone in the long, low-ceilinged, white-panelled
dining-room at Rabouillet’s—the only home that Andre-Louis had ever
known—and after embracing him, deafened him with his denunciation
of M. de La Tour d’Azyr.
“I have heard of it already,”
said Andre-Louis.
“You speak as if the thing had
not surprised you,” his friend reproached him.
“Nothing beastly can surprise me
when done by a beast. And La Tour d’Azyr is a beast, as all the
world knows. The more fool Mabey for stealing his pheasants. He
should have stolen somebody else’s.”
“Is that all you have to say
about it?”
“What more is there to say? I’ve
a practical mind, I hope.”
“What more there is to say I
propose to say to your godfather, M. de Kercadiou. I shall appeal
to him for justice.”
“Against M. de La Tour d’Azyr?”
Andre-Louis raised his eyebrows.
“Why not?”
“My dear ingenuous Philippe, dog
doesn’t eat dog.”
“You are unjust to your
godfather. He is a humane man.”
“Oh, as humane as you please. But
this isn’t a question of humanity. It’s a question of
game-laws.”
M. de Vilmorin tossed his long
arms to Heaven in disgust. He was a tall, slender young gentleman,
a year or two younger than Andre-Louis. He was very soberly dressed
in black, as became a seminarist, with white bands at wrists and
throat and silver buckles to his shoes. His neatly clubbed brown
hair was innocent of powder.
“You talk like a lawyer,” he
exploded.
“Naturally. But don’t waste anger
on me on that account. Tell me what you want me to do.”
“I want you to come to M. de
Kercadiou with me, and to use your influence to obtain justice. I
suppose I am asking too much.”
“My dear Philippe, I exist to
serve you. I warn you that it is a futile quest; but give me leave
to finish my breakfast, and I am at your orders.”
M. de Vilmorin dropped into a
winged armchair by the well-swept hearth, on which a piled-up fire
of pine logs was burning cheerily. And whilst he waited now he gave
his friend the latest news of the events in Rennes. Young, ardent,
enthusiastic, and inspired by Utopian ideals, he passionately
denounced the rebellious attitude of the privileged.
Andre-Louis, already fully aware
of the trend of feeling in the ranks of an order in whose
deliberations he took part as the representative of a nobleman, was
not at all surprised by what he heard. M. de Vilmorin found it
exasperating that his friend should apparently decline to share his
own indignation.
“Don’t you see what it means?” he
cried. “The nobles, by disobeying the King, are striking at the
very foundations of the throne. Don’t they perceive that their very
existence depends upon it; that if the throne falls over, it is
they who stand nearest to it who will be crushed? Don’t they see
that?”
“Evidently not. They are just
governing classes, and I never heard of governing classes that had
eyes for anything but their own profit.”
“That is our grievance. That is
what we are going to change.”
“You are going to abolish
governing classes? An interesting experiment. I believe it was the
original plan of creation, and it might have succeeded but for
Cain.”
“What we are going to do,” said
M. de Vilmorin, curbing his exasperation, “is to transfer the
government to other hands.”
“And you think that will make a
difference?”
“I know it will.”
“Ah! I take it that being now in
minor orders, you already possess the confidence of the Almighty.
He will have confided to you His intention of changing the pattern
of mankind.”
M. de Vilmorin’s fine ascetic
face grew overcast. “You are profane, Andre,” he reproved his
friend.
“I assure you that I am quite
serious. To do what you imply would require nothing short of divine
intervention. You must change man, not systems. Can you and our
vapouring friends of the Literary Chamber of Rennes, or any other
learned society of France, devise a system of government that has
never yet been tried? Surely not. And can they say of any system
tried that it proved other than a failure in the end? My dear
Philippe, the future is to be read with certainty only in the past.
Ab actu ad posse valet consecutio. Man never changes. He is always
greedy, always acquisitive, always vile. I am speaking of Man in
the bulk.”
“Do you pretend that it is
impossible to ameliorate the lot of the people?” M. de Vilmorin
challenged him.
“When you say the people you
mean, of course, the populace. Will you abolish it? That is the
only way to ameliorate its lot, for as long as it remains populace
its lot will be damnation.”
“You argue, of course, for the
side that employs you. That is natural, I suppose.” M. de Vilmorin
spoke between sorrow and indignation.
“On the contrary, I seek to argue
with absolute detachment. Let us test these ideas of yours. To what
form of government do you aspire? A republic, it is to be inferred
from what you have said. Well, you have it already. France in
reality is a republic to-day.”
Philippe stared at him. “You are
being paradoxical, I think. What of the King?”
“The King? All the world knows
there has been no king in France since Louis XIV. There is an obese
gentleman at Versailles who wears the crown, but the very news you
bring shows for how little he really counts. It is the nobles and
clergy who sit in the high places, with the people of France
harnessed under their feet, who are the real rulers. That is why I
say that France is a republic; she is a republic built on the best
pattern—the Roman pattern. Then, as now, there were great patrician
families in luxury, preserving for themselves power and wealth, and
what else is accounted worth possessing; and there was the populace
crushed and groaning, sweating, bleeding, starving, and perishing
in the Roman kennels. That was a republic; the mightiest we have
seen.”
Philippe strove with his
impatience. “At least you will admit—you have, in fact, admitted
it—that we could not be worse governed than we are?”
“That is not the point. The point
is should we be better governed if we replaced the present ruling
class by another? Without some guarantee of that I should be the
last to lift a finger to effect a change. And what guarantees can
you give? What is the class that aims at government? I will tell
you. The bourgeoisie.”
“What?”
“That startles you, eh? Truth is
so often disconcerting. You hadn’t thought of it? Well, think of it
now. Look well into this Nantes manifesto. Who are the authors of
it?”
“I can tell you who it was
constrained the municipality of Nantes to send it to the King. Some
ten thousand workmen—shipwrights, weavers, labourers, and artisans
of every kind.”
“Stimulated to it, driven to it,
by their employers, the wealthy traders and shipowners of that
city,” Andre-Louis replied. “I have a habit of observing things at
close quarters, which is why our colleagues of the Literary Chamber
dislike me so cordially in debate. Where I delve they but skim.
Behind those labourers and artisans of Nantes, counselling them,
urging on these poor, stupid, ignorant toilers to shed their blood
in pursuit of the will o’ the wisp of freedom, are the sail-makers,
the spinners, the ship-owners and the slave-traders. The
slave-traders! The men who live and grow rich by a traffic in human
flesh and blood in the colonies, are conducting at home a campaign
in the sacred name of liberty! Don’t you see that the whole
movement is a movement of hucksters and traders and peddling
vassals swollen by wealth into envy of the power that lies in birth
alone? The money-changers in Paris who hold the bonds in the
national debt, seeing the parlous financial condition of the State,
tremble at the thought that it may lie in the power of a single man
to cancel the debt by bankruptcy. To secure themselves they are
burrowing underground to overthrow a state and build upon its ruins
a new one in which they shall be the masters. And to accomplish
this they inflame the people. Already in Dauphiny we have seen
blood run like water—the blood of the populace, always the blood of
the populace. Now in Brittany we may see the like. And if in the
end the new ideas prevail? if the seigneurial rule is overthrown,
what then? You will have exchanged an aristocracy for a plutocracy.
Is that worth while? Do you think that under money-changers and
slave-traders and men who have waxed rich in other ways by the
ignoble arts of buying and selling, the lot of the people will be
any better than under their priests and nobles? Has it ever
occurred to you, Philippe, what it is that makes the rule of the
nobles so intolerable? Acquisitiveness. Acquisitiveness is the
curse of mankind. And shall you expect less acquisitiveness in men
who have built themselves up by acquisitiveness? Oh, I am ready to
admit that the present government is execrable, unjust,
tyrannical—what you will; but I beg you to look ahead, and to see
that the government for which it is aimed at exchanging it may be
infinitely worse.”
Philippe sat thoughtful a moment.
Then he returned to the attack.
“You do not speak of the abuses,
the horrible, intolerable abuses of power under which we labour at
present.”
“Where there is power there will
always be the abuse of it.”
“Not if the tenure of power is
dependent upon its equitable administration.”
“The tenure of power is power. We
cannot dictate to those who hold it.”
“The people can—the people in its
might.”
“Again I ask you, when you say
the people do you mean the populace? You do. What power can the
populace wield? It can run wild. It can burn and slay for a time.
But enduring power it cannot wield, because power demands qualities
which the populace does not possess, or it would not be populace.
The inevitable, tragic corollary of civilization is populace. For
the rest, abuses can be corrected by equity; and equity, if it is
not found in the enlightened, is not to be found at all. M. Necker
is to set about correcting abuses, and limiting privileges. That is
decided. To that end the States General are to assemble.”
“And a promising beginning we
have made in Brittany, as Heaven hears me!” cried Philippe.
“Pooh! That is nothing. Naturally
the nobles will not yield without a struggle. It is a futile and
ridiculous struggle—but then... it is human nature, I suppose, to
be futile and ridiculous.”
M. de Vilmorin became witheringly
sarcastic. “Probably you will also qualify the shooting of Mabey as
futile and ridiculous. I should even be prepared to hear you argue
in defence of the Marquis de La Tour d’Azyr that his gamekeeper was
merciful in shooting Mabey, since the alternative would have been a
life-sentence to the galleys.”
Andre-Louis drank the remainder
of his chocolate; set down his cup, and pushed back his chair, his
breakfast done.
“I confess that I have not your
big charity, my dear Philippe. I am touched by Mabey’s fate. But,
having conquered the shock of this news to my emotions, I do not
forget that, after all, Mabey was thieving when he met his
death.”
M. de Vilmorin heaved himself up
in his indignation.
“That is the point of view to be
expected in one who is the assistant fiscal intendant of a
nobleman, and the delegate of a nobleman to the States of
Brittany.”
“Philippe, is that just? You are
angry with me!” he cried, in real solicitude.
“I am hurt,” Vilmorin admitted.
“I am deeply hurt by your attitude. And I am not alone in resenting
your reactionary tendencies. Do you know that the Literary Chamber
is seriously considering your expulsion?”
Andre-Louis shrugged. “That
neither surprises nor troubles me.”
M. de Vilmorin swept on,
passionately: “Sometimes I think that you have no heart. With you
it is always the law, never equity. It occurs to me, Andre, that I
was mistaken in coming to you. You are not likely to be of
assistance to me in my interview with M. de Kercadiou.” He took up
his hat, clearly with the intention of departing.
Andre-Louis sprang up and caught
him by the arm.
“I vow,” said he, “that this is
the last time ever I shall consent to talk law or politics with
you, Philippe. I love you too well to quarrel with you over other
men’s affairs.”
“But I make them my own,”
Philippe insisted vehemently.
“Of course you do, and I love you
for it. It is right that you should. You are to be a priest; and
everybody’s business is a priest’s business. Whereas I am a
lawyer—the fiscal intendant of a nobleman, as you say—and a
lawyer’s business is the business of his client. That is the
difference between us. Nevertheless, you are not going to shake me
off.”
“But I tell you frankly, now that
I come to think of it, that I should prefer you did not see M. de
Kercadiou with me. Your duty to your client cannot be a help to
me.”
His wrath had passed; but his
determination remained firm, based upon the reason he gave.
“Very well,” said Andre-Louis.
“It shall be as you please. But nothing shall prevent me at least
from walking with you as far as the chateau, and waiting for you
while you make your appeal to M. de Kercadiou.”
And so they left the house good
friends, for the sweetness of M. de Vilmorin’s nature did not admit
of rancour, and together they took their way up the steep main
street of Gavrillac.
CHAPTER II. THE ARISTOCRAT
The sleepy village of Gavrillac,
a half-league removed from the main road to Rennes, and therefore
undisturbed by the world’s traffic, lay in a curve of the River
Meu, at the foot, and straggling halfway up the slope, of the
shallow hill that was crowned by the squat manor. By the time
Gavrillac had paid tribute to its seigneur—partly in money and
partly in service—tithes to the Church, and imposts to the King, it
was hard put to it to keep body and soul together with what
remained. Yet, hard as conditions were in Gavrillac, they were not
so hard as in many other parts of France, not half so hard, for
instance, as with the wretched feudatories of the great Lord of La
Tour d’Azyr, whose vast possessions were at one point separated
from this little village by the waters of the Meu.
The Chateau de Gavrillac owed
such seigneurial airs as might be claimed for it to its dominant
position above the village rather than to any feature of its own.
Built of granite, like all the rest of Gavrillac, though mellowed
by some three centuries of existence, it was a squat, flat-fronted
edifice of two stories, each lighted by four windows with external
wooden shutters, and flanked at either end by two square towers or
pavilions under extinguisher roofs. Standing well back in a garden,
denuded now, but very pleasant in summer, and immediately fronted
by a fine sweep of balustraded terrace, it looked, what indeed it
was, and always had been, the residence of unpretentious folk who
found more interest in husbandry than in adventure.
Quintin de Kercadiou, Lord of
Gavrillac—Seigneur de Gavrillac was all the vague title that he
bore, as his forefathers had borne before him, derived no man knew
whence or how—confirmed the impression that his house conveyed.
Rude as the granite itself, he had never sought the experience of
courts, had not even taken service in the armies of his King. He
left it to his younger brother, Etienne, to represent the family in
those exalted spheres. His own interests from earliest years had
been centred in his woods and pastures. He hunted, and he
cultivated his acres, and superficially he appeared to be little
better than any of his rustic metayers. He kept no state, or at
least no state commensurate with his position or with the tastes of
his niece Aline de Kercadiou. Aline, having spent some two years in
the court atmosphere of Versailles under the aegis of her uncle
Etienne, had ideas very different from those of her uncle Quintin
of what was befitting seigneurial dignity. But though this only
child of a third Kercadiou had exercised, ever since she was left
an orphan at the early age of four, a tyrannical rule over the Lord
of Gavrillac, who had been father and mother to her, she had never
yet succeeded in beating down his stubbornness on that score. She
did not yet despair—persistence being a dominant note in her
character—although she had been assiduously and fruitlessly at work
since her return from the great world of Versailles some three
months ago.
She was walking on the terrace
when Andre-Louis and M. de Vilmorin arrived. Her slight body was
wrapped against the chill air in a white pelisse; her head was
encased in a close-fitting bonnet, edged with white fur. It was
caught tight in a knot of pale-blue ribbon on the right of her
chin; on the left a long ringlet of corn-coloured hair had been
permitted to escape. The keen air had whipped so much of her cheeks
as was presented to it, and seemed to have added sparkle to eyes
that were of darkest blue.
Andre-Louis and M. de Vilmorin
had been known to her from childhood. The three had been playmates
once, and Andre-Louis—in view of his spiritual relationship with
her uncle—she called her cousin. The cousinly relations had
persisted between these two long after Philippe de Vilmorin had
outgrown the earlier intimacy, and had become to her Monsieur de
Vilmorin.
She waved her hand to them in
greeting as they advanced, and stood—an entrancing picture, and
fully conscious of it—to await them at the end of the terrace
nearest the short avenue by which they approached.
“If you come to see monsieur my
uncle, you come inopportunely, messieurs,” she told them, a certain
feverishness in her air. “He is closely—oh, so very
closely—engaged.”
“We will wait, mademoiselle,”
said M. de Vilmorin, bowing gallantly over the hand she extended to
him. “Indeed, who would haste to the uncle that may tarry a moment
with the niece?”
“M. l’abbe,” she teased him,
“when you are in orders I shall take you for my confessor. You have
so ready and sympathetic an understanding.”
“But no curiosity,” said
Andre-Louis. “You haven’t thought of that.”
“I wonder what you mean, Cousin
Andre.”
“Well you may,” laughed Philippe.
“For no one ever knows.” And then, his glance straying across the
terrace settled upon a carriage that was drawn up before the door
of the chateau. It was a vehicle such as was often to be seen in
the streets of a great city, but rarely in the country. It was a
beautifully sprung two-horse cabriolet of walnut, with a varnish
upon it like a sheet of glass and little pastoral scenes
exquisitely painted on the panels of the door. It was built to
carry two persons, with a box in front for the coachman, and a
stand behind for the footman. This stand was empty, but the footman
paced before the door, and as he emerged now from behind the
vehicle into the range of M. de Vilmorin’s vision, he displayed the
resplendent blue-and-gold livery of the Marquis de La Tour
d’Azyr.
“Why!” he exclaimed. “Is it M. de
La Tour d’Azyr who is with your uncle?”
“It is, monsieur,” said she, a
world of mystery in voice and eyes, of which M. de Vilmorin
observed nothing.
“Ah, pardon!” he bowed low, hat
in hand. “Serviteur, mademoiselle,” and he turned to depart towards
the house.
“Shall I come with you,
Philippe?” Andre-Louis called after him.
“It would be ungallant to assume
that you would prefer it,” said M. de Vilmorin, with a glance at
mademoiselle. “Nor do I think it would serve. If you will
wait...”
M. de Vilmorin strode off.
Mademoiselle, after a moment’s blank pause, laughed ripplingly.
“Now where is he going in such a hurry?”
“To see M. de La Tour d’Azyr as
well as your uncle, I should say.”
“But he cannot. They cannot see
him. Did I not say that they are very closely engaged? You don’t
ask me why, Andre.” There was an arch mysteriousness about her, a
latent something that may have been elation or amusement, or
perhaps both. Andre-Louis could not determine it.
“Since obviously you are all
eagerness to tell, why should I ask?” quoth he.
“If you are caustic I shall not
tell you even if you ask. Oh, yes, I will. It will teach you to
treat me with the respect that is my due.”
“I hope I shall never fail in
that.”
“Less than ever when you learn
that I am very closely concerned in the visit of M. de La Tour
d’Azyr. I am the object of this visit.” And she looked at him with
sparkling eyes and lips parted in laughter.
“The rest, you would seem to
imply, is obvious. But I am a dolt, if you please; for it is not
obvious to me.”
“Why, stupid, he comes to ask my
hand in marriage.”
“Good God!” said Andre-Louis, and
stared at her, chapfallen.
She drew back from him a little
with a frown and an upward tilt of her chin. “It surprises
you?”
“It disgusts me,” said he,
bluntly. “In fact, I don’t believe it. You are amusing yourself
with me.”
For a moment she put aside her
visible annoyance to remove his doubts. “I am quite serious,
monsieur. There came a formal letter to my uncle this morning from
M. de La Tour d’Azyr, announcing the visit and its object. I will
not say that it did not surprise us a little...”
“Oh, I see,” cried Andre-Louis,
in relief. “I understand. For a moment I had almost feared...” He
broke off, looked at her, and shrugged.
“Why do you stop? You had almost
feared that Versailles had been wasted upon me. That I should
permit the courtship of me to be conducted like that of any village
wench. It was stupid of you. I am being sought in proper form, at
my uncle’s hands.”
“Is his consent, then, all that
matters, according to Versailles?”
“What else?”
“There is your own.”
She laughed. “I am a dutiful
niece... when it suits me.”
“And will it suit you to be
dutiful if your uncle accepts this monstrous proposal?”
“Monstrous!” She bridled. “And
why monstrous, if you please?”
“For a score of reasons,” he
answered irritably.
“Give me one,” she challenged
him.
“He is twice your age.”
“Hardly so much,” said she.
“He is forty-five, at
least.”
“But he looks no more than
thirty. He is very handsome—so much you will admit; nor will you
deny that he is very wealthy and very powerful; the greatest
nobleman in Brittany. He will make me a great lady.”
“God made you that, Aline.”
“Come, that’s better. Sometimes
you can almost be polite.” And she moved along the terrace,
Andre-Louis pacing beside her.
“I can be more than that to show
reason why you should not let this beast befoul the beautiful thing
that God has made.”
She frowned, and her lips
tightened. “You are speaking of my future husband,” she reproved
him.
His lips tightened too; his pale
face grew paler.
“And is it so? It is settled,
then? Your uncle is to agree? You are to be sold thus, lovelessly,
into bondage to a man you do not know. I had dreamed of better
things for you, Aline.”
“Better than to be Marquise de La
Tour d’Azyr?”
He made a gesture of
exasperation. “Are men and women nothing more than names? Do the
souls of them count for nothing? Is there no joy in life, no
happiness, that wealth and pleasure and empty, high-sounding titles
are to be its only aims? I had set you high—so high, Aline—a thing
scarce earthly. There is joy in your heart, intelligence in your
mind; and, as I thought, the vision that pierces husks and shams to
claim the core of reality for its own. Yet you will surrender all
for a parcel of make-believe. You will sell your soul and your body
to be Marquise de La Tour d’Azyr.”
“You are indelicate,” said she,
and though she frowned her eyes laughed. “And you go headlong to
conclusions. My uncle will not consent to more than to allow my
consent to be sought. We understand each other, my uncle and I. I
am not to be bartered like a turnip.”
He stood still to face her, his
eyes glowing, a flush creeping into his pale cheeks.
“You have been torturing me to
amuse yourself!” he cried. “Ah, well, I forgive you out of my
relief.”
“Again you go too fast, Cousin
Andre. I have permitted my uncle to consent that M. le Marquis
shall make his court to me. I like the look of the gentleman. I am
flattered by his preference when I consider his eminence. It is an
eminence that I may find it desirable to share. M. le Marquis does
not look as if he were a dullard. It should be interesting to be
wooed by him. It may be more interesting still to marry him, and I
think, when all is considered, that I shall probably—very
probably—decide to do so.”
He looked at her, looked at the
sweet, challenging loveliness of that childlike face so tightly
framed in the oval of white fur, and all the life seemed to go out
of his own countenance.
“God help you, Aline!” he
groaned.
She stamped her foot. He was
really very exasperating, and something presumptuous too, she
thought.
“You are insolent,
monsieur.”
“It is never insolent to pray,
Aline. And I did no more than pray, as I shall continue to do.
You’ll need my prayers, I think.”
“You are insufferable!” She was
growing angry, as he saw by the deepening frown, the heightened
colour.
“That is because I suffer. Oh,
Aline, little cousin, think well of what you do; think well of the
realities you will be bartering for these shams—the realities that
you will never know, because these cursed shams will block your way
to them. When M. de La Tour d’Azyr comes to make his court, study
him well; consult your fine instincts; leave your own noble nature
free to judge this animal by its intuitions. Consider
that...”
“I consider, monsieur, that you
presume upon the kindness I have always shown you. You abuse the
position of toleration in which you stand. Who are you? What are
you, that you should have the insolence to take this tone with
me?”
He bowed, instantly his cold,
detached self again, and resumed the mockery that was his natural
habit.
“My congratulations,
mademoiselle, upon the readiness with which you begin to adapt
yourself to the great role you are to play.”
“Do you adapt yourself also,
monsieur,” she retorted angrily, and turned her shoulder to
him.
“To be as the dust beneath the
haughty feet of Madame la Marquise. I hope I shall know my place in
future.”
The phrase arrested her. She
turned to him again, and he perceived that her eyes were shining
now suspiciously. In an instant the mockery in him was quenched in
contrition.
“Lord, what a beast I am, Aline!”
he cried, as he advanced. “Forgive me if you can.”
Almost had she turned to sue
forgiveness from him. But his contrition removed the need.
“I’ll try,” said she, “provided
that you undertake not to offend again.”
“But I shall,” said he. “I am
like that. I will fight to save you, from yourself if need be,
whether you forgive me or not.”
They were standing so,
confronting each other a little breathlessly, a little defiantly,
when the others issued from the porch.
First came the Marquis of La Tour
d’Azyr, Count of Solz, Knight of the Orders of the Holy Ghost and
Saint Louis, and Brigadier in the armies of the King. He was a
tall, graceful man, upright and soldierly of carriage, with his
head disdainfully set upon his shoulders. He was magnificently
dressed in a full-skirted coat of mulberry velvet that was laced
with gold. His waistcoat, of velvet too, was of a golden apricot
colour; his breeches and stockings were of black silk, and his
lacquered, red-heeled shoes were buckled in diamonds. His powdered
hair was tied behind in a broad ribbon of watered silk; he carried
a little three-cornered hat under his arm, and a gold-hilted
slender dress-sword hung at his side.
Considering him now in complete
detachment, observing the magnificence of him, the elegance of his
movements, the great air, blending in so extraordinary a manner
disdain and graciousness, Andre-Louis trembled for Aline. Here was
a practised, irresistible wooer, whose bonnes fortunes were become
a by-word, a man who had hitherto been the despair of dowagers with
marriageable daughters, and the desolation of husbands with
attractive wives.
He was immediately followed by M.
de Kercadiou, in completest contrast. On legs of the shortest, the
Lord of Gavrillac carried a body that at forty-five was beginning
to incline to corpulence and an enormous head containing an
indifferent allotment of intelligence. His countenance was pink and
blotchy, liberally branded by the smallpox which had almost
extinguished him in youth. In dress he was careless to the point of
untidiness, and to this and to the fact that he had never
married—disregarding the first duty of a gentleman to provide
himself with an heir—he owed the character of misogynist attributed
to him by the countryside.
After M. de Kercadiou came M. de
Vilmorin, very pale and self-contained, with tight lips and an
overcast brow.
To meet them, there stepped from
the carriage a very elegant young gentleman, the Chevalier de
Chabrillane, M. de La Tour d’Azyr’s cousin, who whilst awaiting his
return had watched with considerable interest—his own presence
unsuspected—the perambulations of Andre-Louis and
mademoiselle.
Perceiving Aline, M. de La Tour
d’Azyr detached himself from the others, and lengthening his stride
came straight across the terrace to her.
To Andre-Louis the Marquis
inclined his head with that mixture of courtliness and
condescension which he used. Socially, the young lawyer stood in a
curious position. By virtue of the theory of his birth, he ranked
neither as noble nor as simple, but stood somewhere between the two
classes, and whilst claimed by neither he was used familiarly by
both. Coldly now he returned M. de La Tour d’Azyr’s greeting, and
discreetly removed himself to go and join his friend.
The Marquis took the hand that
mademoiselle extended to him, and bowing over it, bore it to his
lips.
“Mademoiselle,” he said, looking
into the blue depths of her eyes, that met his gaze smiling and
untroubled, “monsieur your uncle does me the honour to permit that
I pay my homage to you. Will you, mademoiselle, do me the honour to
receive me when I come to-morrow? I shall have something of great
importance for your ear.”
“Of importance, M. le Marquis?
You almost frighten me.” But there was no fear on the serene little
face in its furred hood. It was not for nothing that she had
graduated in the Versailles school of artificialities.
“That,” said he, “is very far
from my design.”
“But of importance to yourself,
monsieur, or to me?”
“To us both, I hope,” he answered
her, a world of meaning in his fine, ardent eyes.
“You whet my curiosity, monsieur;
and, of course, I am a dutiful niece. It follows that I shall be
honoured to receive you.”
“Not honoured, mademoiselle; you
will confer the honour. To-morrow at this hour, then, I shall have
the felicity to wait upon you.”
He bowed again; and again he bore
her fingers to his lips, what time she curtsied. Thereupon, with no
more than this formal breaking of the ice, they parted.
She was a little breathless now,
a little dazzled by the beauty of the man, his princely air, and
the confidence of power he seemed to radiate. Involuntarily almost,
she contrasted him with his critic—the lean and impudent
Andre-Louis in his plain brown coat and steel-buckled shoes—and she
felt guilty of an unpardonable offence in having permitted even one
word of that presumptuous criticism. To-morrow M. le Marquis would
come to offer her a great position, a great rank. And already she
had derogated from the increase of dignity accruing to her from his
very intention to translate her to so great an eminence. Not again
would she suffer it; not again would she be so weak and childish as
to permit Andre-Louis to utter his ribald comments upon a man by
comparison with whom he was no better than a lackey.
Thus argued vanity and ambition
with her better self and to her vast annoyance her better self
would not admit entire conviction.
Meanwhile, M. de La Tour d’Azyr
was climbing into his carriage. He had spoken a word of farewell to
M. de Kercadiou, and he had also had a word for M. de Vilmorin in
reply to which M. de Vilmorin had bowed in assenting silence. The
carriage rolled away, the powdered footman in blue-and-gold very
stiff behind it, M. de La Tour d’Azyr bowing to mademoiselle, who
waved to him in answer.
Then M. de Vilmorin put his arm
through that of Andre Louis, and said to him, “Come, Andre.”
“But you’ll stay to dine, both of
you!” cried the hospitable Lord of Gavrillac. “We’ll drink a
certain toast,” he added, winking an eye that strayed towards
mademoiselle, who was approaching. He had no subtleties, good soul
that he was.
M. de Vilmorin deplored an
appointment that prevented him doing himself the honour. He was
very stiff and formal.
“And you, Andre?”
“I? Oh, I share the appointment,
godfather,” he lied, “and I have a superstition against toasts.” He
had no wish to remain. He was angry with Aline for her smiling
reception of M. de La Tour d’Azyr and the sordid bargain he saw her
set on making. He was suffering from the loss of an illusion.
CHAPTER III. THE ELOQUENCE OF M.
DE VILMORIN
As they walked down the hill
together, it was now M. de Vilmorin who was silent and preoccupied,
Andre-Louis who was talkative. He had chosen Woman as a subject for
his present discourse. He claimed—quite unjustifiably—to have
discovered Woman that morning; and the things he had to say of the
sex were unflattering, and occasionally almost gross. M. de
Vilmorin, having ascertained the subject, did not listen. Singular
though it may seem in a young French abbe of his day, M. de
Vilmorin was not interested in Woman. Poor Philippe was in several
ways exceptional. Opposite the Breton arme—the inn and
posting-house at the entrance of the village of Gavrillac—M. de
Vilmorin interrupted his companion just as he was soaring to the
dizziest heights of caustic invective, and Andre-Louis, restored
thereby to actualities, observed the carriage of M. de La Tour
d’Azyr standing before the door of the hostelry.
“I don’t believe you’ve been
listening to me,” said he.
“Had you been less interested in
what you were saying, you might have observed it sooner and spared
your breath. The fact is, you disappoint me, Andre. You seem to
have forgotten what we went for. I have an appointment here with M.
le Marquis. He desires to hear me further in the matter. Up there
at Gavrillac I could accomplish nothing. The time was ill-chosen as
it happened. But I have hopes of M. le Marquis.”
“Hopes of what?”
“That he will make what
reparation lies in his power. Provide for the widow and the
orphans. Why else should he desire to hear me further?”
“Unusual condescension,” said
Andre-Louis, and quoted “Timeo Danaos et dona ferentes.”
“Why?” asked Philippe.
“Let us go and discover—unless
you consider that I shall be in the way.”
Into a room on the right,
rendered private to M. le Marquis for so long as he should elect to
honour it, the young men were ushered by the host. A fire of logs
was burning brightly at the room’s far end, and by this sat now M.
de La Tour d’Azyr and his cousin, the Chevalier de Chabrillane.
Both rose as M. de Vilmorin came in. Andre-Louis following, paused
to close the door.
“You oblige me by your prompt
courtesy, M. de Vilmorin,” said the Marquis, but in a tone so cold
as to belie the politeness of his words. “A chair, I beg. Ah,
Moreau?” The note was frigidly interrogative. “He accompanies you,
monsieur?” he asked.
“If you please, M. le
Marquis.”
“Why not? Find yourself a seat,
Moreau.” He spoke over his shoulder as to a lackey.
“It is good of you, monsieur,”
said Philippe, “to have offered me this opportunity of continuing
the subject that took me so fruitlessly, as it happens, to
Gavrillac.”
The Marquis crossed his legs, and
held one of his fine hands to the blaze. He replied, without
troubling to turn to the young man, who was slightly behind
him.
“The goodness of my request we
will leave out of question for the moment,” said he, darkly, and M.
de Chabrillane laughed. Andre-Louis thought him easily moved to
mirth, and almost envied him the faculty.
“But I am grateful,” Philippe
insisted, “that you should condescend to hear me plead their
cause.”
The Marquis stared at him over
his shoulder. “Whose cause?” quoth he.
“Why, the cause of the widow and
orphans of this unfortunate Mabey.”
The Marquis looked from Vilmorin
to the Chevalier, and again the Chevalier laughed, slapping his leg
this time.
“I think,” said M. de La Tour
d’Azyr, slowly, “that we are at cross-purposes. I asked you to come
here because the Chateau de Gavrillac was hardly a suitable place
in which to carry our discussion further, and because I hesitated
to incommode you by suggesting that you should come all the way to
Azyr. But my object is connected with certain expressions that you
let fall up there. It is on the subject of those expressions,
monsieur, that I would hear you further—if you will honour
me.”
Andre-Louis began to apprehend
that there was something sinister in the air. He was a man of quick
intuitions, quicker far than those of M. de Vilmorin, who evinced
no more than a mild surprise.
“I am at a loss, monsieur,” said
he. “To what expressions does monsieur allude?”
“It seems, monsieur, that I must
refresh your memory.” The Marquis crossed his legs, and swung
sideways on his chair, so that at last he directly faced M. de
Vilmorin. “You spoke, monsieur—and however mistaken you may have
been, you spoke very eloquently, too eloquently almost, it seemed
to me—of the infamy of such a deed as the act of summary justice
upon this thieving fellow Mabey, or whatever his name may be.
Infamy was the precise word you used. You did not retract that word
when I had the honour to inform you that it was by my orders that
my gamekeeper Benet proceeded as he did.”
“If,” said M. de Vilmorin, “the
deed was infamous, its infamy is not modified by the rank, however
exalted, of the person responsible. Rather is it aggravated.”
“Ah!” said M. le Marquis, and
drew a gold snuffbox from his pocket. “You say, ‘if the deed was
infamous,’ monsieur. Am I to understand that you are no longer as
convinced as you appeared to be of its infamy?”
M. de Vilmorin’s fine face wore a
look of perplexity. He did not understand the drift of this.
“It occurs to me, M. le Marquis,
in view of your readiness to assume responsibility, that you must
believe justification for the deed which is not apparent to
myself.”
“That is better. That is
distinctly better.” The Marquis took snuff delicately, dusting the
fragments from the fine lace at his throat. “You realize that with
an imperfect understanding of these matters, not being yourself a
landowner, you may have rushed to unjustifiable conclusions. That
is indeed the case. May it be a warning to you, monsieur. When I
tell you that for months past I have been annoyed by similar
depredations, you will perhaps understand that it had become
necessary to employ a deterrent sufficiently strong to put an end
to them. Now that the risk is known, I do not think there will be
any more prowling in my coverts. And there is more in it than that,
M. de Vilmorin. It is not the poaching that annoys me so much as
the contempt for my absolute and inviolable rights. There is,
monsieur, as you cannot fail to have observed, an evil spirit of
insubordination in the air, and there is one only way in which to
meet it. To tolerate it, in however slight a degree, to show
leniency, however leniently disposed, would entail having recourse
to still harsher measures to-morrow. You understand me, I am sure,
and you will also, I am sure, appreciate the condescension of what
amounts to an explanation from me where I cannot admit that any
explanations were due. If anything in what I have said is still
obscure to you, I refer you to the game laws, which your lawyer
friend there will expound for you at need.”
With that the gentleman swung
round again to face the fire. It appeared to convey the intimation
that the interview was at an end. And yet this was not by any means
the intimation that it conveyed to the watchful, puzzled, vaguely
uneasy Andre-Louis. It was, thought he, a very curious, a very
suspicious oration. It affected to explain, with a politeness of
terms and a calculated insolence of tone; whilst in fact it could
only serve to stimulate and goad a man of M. de Vilmorin’s
opinions. And that is precisely what it did. He rose.
“Are there in the world no laws
but game laws?” he demanded, angrily. “Have you never by any chance
heard of the laws of humanity?”
The Marquis sighed wearily. “What
have I to do with the laws of humanity?” he wondered.
M. de Vilmorin looked at him a
moment in speechless amazement.
“Nothing, M. le Marquis. That
is—alas!—too obvious. I hope you will remember it in the hour when
you may wish to appeal to those laws which you now deride.”
M. de La Tour d’Azyr threw back
his head sharply, his high-bred face imperious.
“Now what precisely shall that
mean? It is not the first time to-day that you have made use of
dark sayings that I could almost believe to veil the presumption of
a threat.”
“Not a threat, M. le Marquis—a
warning. A warning that such deeds as these against God’s
creatures... Oh, you may sneer, monsieur, but they are God’s
creatures, even as you or I—neither more nor less, deeply though
the reflection may wound your pride. In His eyes...”
“Of your charity, spare me a
sermon, M. l’abbe!”
“You mock, monsieur. You laugh.
Will you laugh, I wonder, when God presents His reckoning to you
for the blood and plunder with which your hands are full?”
“Monsieur!” The word, sharp as
the crack of a whip, was from M. de Chabrillane, who bounded to his
feet. But instantly the Marquis repressed him.
“Sit down, Chevalier. You are
interrupting M. l’abbe, and I should like to hear him further. He
interests me profoundly.”
In the background Andre-Louis,
too, had risen, brought to his feet by alarm, by the evil that he
saw written on the handsome face of M. de La Tour d’Azyr. He
approached, and touched his friend upon the arm.
“Better be going, Philippe,” said
he.
But M. de Vilmorin, caught in the
relentless grip of passions long repressed, was being hurried by
them recklessly along.
“Oh, monsieur,” said he,
“consider what you are and what you will be. Consider how you and
your kind live by abuses, and consider the harvest that abuses must
ultimately bring.”
“Revolutionist!” said M. le
Marquis, contemptuously. “You have the effrontery to stand before
my face and offer me this stinking cant of your modern so-called
intellectuals!”
“Is it cant, monsieur? Do you
think—do you believe in your soul—that it is cant? Is it cant that
the feudal grip is on all things that live, crushing them like
grapes in the press, to its own profit? Does it not exercise its
rights upon the waters of the river, the fire that bakes the poor
man’s bread of grass and barley, on the wind that turns the mill?
The peasant cannot take a step upon the road, cross a crazy bridge
over a river, buy an ell of cloth in the village market, without
meeting feudal rapacity, without being taxed in feudal dues. Is not
that enough, M. le Marquis? Must you also demand his wretched life
in payment for the least infringement of your sacred privileges,
careless of what widows or orphans you dedicate to woe? Will naught
content you but that your shadow must lie like a curse upon the
land? And do you think in your pride that France, this Job among
the nations, will suffer it forever?”
He paused as if for a reply. But
none came. The Marquis considered him, strangely silent, a half
smile of disdain at the corners of his lips, an ominous hardness in
his eyes.
Again Andre-Louis tugged at his
friend’s sleeve.
“Philippe.”
Philippe shook him off, and
plunged on, fanatically.
“Do you see nothing of the
gathering clouds that herald the coming of the storm? You imagine,
perhaps, that these States General summoned by M. Necker, and
promised for next year, are to do nothing but devise fresh means of
extortion to liquidate the bankruptcy of the State? You delude
yourselves, as you shall find. The Third Estate, which you despise,
will prove itself the preponderating force, and it will find a way
to make an end of this canker of privilege that is devouring the
vitals of this unfortunate country.”
M. le Marquis shifted in his
chair, and spoke at last.
“You have, monsieur,” said he, “a
very dangerous gift of eloquence. And it is of yourself rather than
of your subject. For after all, what do you offer me? A rechauffe
of the dishes served to out-at-elbow enthusiasts in the provincial
literary chambers, compounded of the effusions of your Voltaires
and Jean-Jacques and such dirty-fingered scribblers. You have not
among all your philosophers one with the wit to understand that we
are an order consecrated by antiquity, that for our rights and
privileges we have behind us the authority of centuries.”
“Humanity, monsieur,” Philippe
replied, “is more ancient than nobility. Human rights are
contemporary with man.”
The Marquis laughed and
shrugged.
“That is the answer I might have
expected. It has the right note of cant that distinguishes the
philosophers.”
And then M. de Chabrillane
spoke.
“You go a long way round,” he
criticized his cousin, on a note of impatience.
“But I am getting there,” he was
answered. “I desired to make quite certain first.”
“Faith, you should have no doubt
by now.”
“I have none.” The Marquis rose,
and turned again to M. de Vilmorin, who had understood nothing of
that brief exchange. “M. l’abbe,” said he once more, “you have a
very dangerous gift of eloquence. I can conceive of men being
swayed by it. Had you been born a gentleman, you would not so
easily have acquired these false views that you express.”
M. de Vilmorin stared blankly,
uncomprehending.
“Had I been born a gentleman, do
you say?” quoth he, in a slow, bewildered voice. “But I was born a
gentleman. My race is as old, my blood as good as yours,
monsieur.”
From M. le Marquis there was a
slight play of eyebrows, a vague, indulgent smile. His dark, liquid
eyes looked squarely into the face of M. de Vilmorin.
“You have been deceived in that,
I fear.”
“Deceived?”
“Your sentiments betray the
indiscretion of which madame your mother must have been
guilty.”
The brutally affronting words
were sped beyond recall, and the lips that had uttered them,
coldly, as if they had been the merest commonplace, remained calm
and faintly sneering.
A dead silence followed.
Andre-Louis’ wits were numbed. He stood aghast, all thought
suspended in him, what time M. de Vilmorin’s eyes continued fixed
upon M. de La Tour d’Azyr’s, as if searching there for a meaning
that eluded him. Quite suddenly he understood the vile affront. The
blood leapt to his face, fire blazed in his gentle eyes. A
convulsive quiver shook him. Then, with an inarticulate cry, he
leaned forward, and with his open hand struck M. le Marquis full
and hard upon his sneering face.
In a flash M. de Chabrillane was
on his feet, between the two men.
Too late Andre-Louis had seen the
trap. La Tour d’Azyr’s words were but as a move in a game of chess,
calculated to exasperate his opponent into some such counter-move
as this—a counter-move that left him entirely at the other’s
mercy.
M. le Marquis looked on, very
white save where M. de Vilmorin’s finger-prints began slowly to
colour his face; but he said nothing more. Instead, it was M. de
Chabrillane who now did the talking, taking up his preconcerted
part in this vile game.
“You realize, monsieur, what you
have done,” said he, coldly, to Philippe. “And you realize, of
course, what must inevitably follow.”
M. de Vilmorin had realized
nothing. The poor young man had acted upon impulse, upon the
instinct of decency and honour, never counting the consequences.
But he realized them now at the sinister invitation of M. de
Chabrillane, and if he desired to avoid these consequences, it was
out of respect for his priestly vocation, which strictly forbade
such adjustments of disputes as M. de Chabrillane was clearly
thrusting upon him.
He drew back. “Let one affront
wipe out the other,” said he, in a dull voice. “The balance is
still in M. le Marquis’s favour. Let that content him.”
“Impossible.” The Chevalier’s
lips came together tightly. Thereafter he was suavity itself, but
very firm. “A blow has been struck, monsieur. I think I am correct
in saying that such a thing has never happened before to M. le
Marquis in all his life. If you felt yourself affronted, you had
but to ask the satisfaction due from one gentleman to another. Your
action would seem to confirm the assumption that you found so
offensive. But it does not on that account render you immune from
the consequences.”
It was, you see, M. de
Chabrillane’s part to heap coals upon this fire, to make quite sure
that their victim should not escape them.
“I desire no immunity,” flashed
back the young seminarist, stung by this fresh goad. After all, he
was nobly born, and the traditions of his class were strong upon
him—stronger far than the seminarist schooling in humility. He owed
it to himself, to his honour, to be killed rather than avoid the
consequences of the thing he had done.
“But he does not wear a sword,
messieurs!” cried Andre Louis, aghast.
“That is easily amended. He may
have the loan of mine.”
“I mean, messieurs,” Andre-Louis
insisted, between fear for his friend and indignation, “that it is
not his habit to wear a sword, that he has never worn one, that he
is untutored in its uses. He is a seminarist—a postulant for holy
orders, already half a priest, and so forbidden from such an
engagement as you propose.”
“All that he should have
remembered before he struck a blow,” said M. de Chabrillane,
politely.
“The blow was deliberately
provoked,” raged Andre-Louis. Then he recovered himself, though the
other’s haughty stare had no part in that recovery. “O my God, I
talk in vain! How is one to argue against a purpose formed! Come
away, Philippe. Don’t you see the trap...”
M. de Vilmorin cut him short, and
flung him off. “Be quiet, Andre. M. le Marquis is entirely in the
right.”
“M. le Marquis is in the right?”
Andre-Louis let his arms fall helplessly. This man he loved above
all other living men was caught in the snare of the world’s
insanity. He was baring his breast to the knife for the sake of a
vague, distorted sense of the honour due to himself. It was not
that he did not see the trap. It was that his honour compelled him
to disdain consideration of it. To Andre-Louis in that moment he
seemed a singularly tragic figure. Noble, perhaps, but very
pitiful.
CHAPTER IV. THE HERITAGE
It was M. de Vilmorin’s desire
that the matter should be settled out of hand. In this he was at
once objective and subjective. A prey to emotions sadly at conflict
with his priestly vocation, he was above all in haste to have done,
so that he might resume a frame of mind more proper to it. Also he
feared himself a little; by which I mean that his honour feared his
nature. The circumstances of his education, and the goal that for
some years now he had kept in view, had robbed him of much of that
spirited brutality that is the birthright of the male. He had grown
timid and gentle as a woman. Aware of it, he feared that once the
heat of his passion was spent he might betray a dishonouring
weakness, in the ordeal.
M. le Marquis, on his side, was
no less eager for an immediate settlement; and since they had M. de
Chabrillane to act for his cousin, and Andre-Louis to serve as
witness for M. de Vilmorin, there was nothing to delay them.
And so, within a few minutes, all
arrangements were concluded, and you behold that sinisterly
intentioned little group of four assembled in the afternoon
sunshine on the bowling-green behind the inn. They were entirely
private, screened more or less from the windows of the house by a
ramage of trees, which, if leafless now, was at least dense enough
to provide an effective lattice.
There were no formalities over
measurements of blades or selection of ground. M. le Marquis
removed his sword-belt and scabbard, but declined—not considering
it worth while for the sake of so negligible an opponent—to divest
himself either of his shoes or his coat. Tall, lithe, and athletic,
he stood to face the no less tall, but very delicate and frail, M.
de Vilmorin. The latter also disdained to make any of the usual
preparations. Since he recognized that it could avail him nothing
to strip, he came on guard fully dressed, two hectic spots above
the cheek-bones burning on his otherwise grey face.
M. de Chabrillane, leaning upon a
cane—for he had relinquished his sword to M. de Vilmorin—looked on
with quiet interest. Facing him on the other side of the combatants
stood Andre-Louis, the palest of the four, staring from fevered
eyes, twisting and untwisting clammy hands.
His every instinct was to fling
himself between the antagonists, to protest against and frustrate
this meeting. That sane impulse was curbed, however, by the
consciousness of its futility. To calm him, he clung to the
conviction that the issue could not really be very serious. If the
obligations of Philippe’s honour compelled him to cross swords with
the man he had struck, M. de La Tour d’Azyr’s birth compelled him
no less to do no serious hurt to the unfledged lad he had so
grievously provoked. M. le Marquis, after all, was a man of honour.
He could intend no more than to administer a lesson; sharp,
perhaps, but one by which his opponent must live to profit.
Andre-Louis clung obstinately to that for comfort.
Steel beat on steel, and the men
engaged. The Marquis presented to his opponent the narrow edge of
his upright body, his knees slightly flexed and converted into
living springs, whilst M. de Vilmorin stood squarely, a full
target, his knees wooden. Honour and the spirit of fair play alike
cried out against such a match.
The encounter was very short, of
course. In youth, Philippe had received the tutoring in sword-play
that was given to every boy born into his station of life. And so
he knew at least the rudiments of what was now expected of him. But
what could rudiments avail him here? Three disengages completed the
exchanges, and then without any haste the Marquis slid his right
foot along the moist turf, his long, graceful body extending itself
in a lunge that went under M. de Vilmorin’s clumsy guard, and with
the utmost deliberation he drove his blade through the young man’s
vitals.
Andre-Louis sprang forward just
in time to catch his friend’s body under the armpits as it sank.
Then, his own legs bending beneath the weight of it, he went down
with his burden until he was kneeling on the damp turf. Philippe’s
limp head lay against Andre-Louis’ left shoulder; Philippe’s
relaxed arms trailed at his sides; the blood welled and bubbled
from the ghastly wound to saturate the poor lad’s garments.
With white face and twitching
lips, Andre-Louis looked up at M. de La Tour d’Azyr, who stood
surveying his work with a countenance of grave but remorseless
interest.
“You have killed him!” cried
Andre-Louis.
“Of course.”
The Marquis ran a lace
handkerchief along his blade to wipe it. As he let the dainty
fabric fall, he explained himself. “He had, as I told him, a too
dangerous gift of eloquence.”
And he turned away, leaving
completest understanding with Andre-Louis. Still supporting the
limp, draining body, the young man called to him.
“Come back, you cowardly
murderer, and make yourself quite safe by killing me too!”
The Marquis half turned, his face
dark with anger. Then M. de Chabrillane set a restraining hand upon
his arm. Although a party throughout to the deed, the Chevalier was
a little appalled now that it was done. He had not the high stomach
of M. de La Tour d’Azyr, and he was a good deal younger.
“Come away,” he said. “The lad is
raving. They were friends.”
“You heard what he said?” quoth
the Marquis.
“Nor can he, or you, or any man
deny it,” flung back Andre-Louis. “Yourself, monsieur, you made
confession when you gave me now the reason why you killed him. You
did it because you feared him.”
“If that were true—what, then?”
asked the great gentleman.
“Do you ask? Do you understand of
life and humanity nothing but how to wear a coat and dress your
hair—oh, yes, and to handle weapons against boys and priests? Have
you no mind to think, no soul into which you can turn its vision?
Must you be told that it is a coward’s part to kill the thing he
fears, and doubly a coward’s part to kill in this way? Had you
stabbed him in the back with a knife, you would have shown the
courage of your vileness. It would have been a vileness
undisguised. But you feared the consequences of that, powerful as
you are; and so you shelter your cowardice under the pretext of a
duel.”
The Marquis shook off his
cousin’s hand, and took a step forward, holding now his sword like
a whip. But again the Chevalier caught and held him.
“No, no, Gervais! Let be, in
God’s name!”
“Let him come, monsieur,” raved
Andre-Louis, his voice thick and concentrated. “Let him complete
his coward’s work on me, and thus make himself safe from a coward’s
wages.”
M. de Chabrillane let his cousin
go. He came white to the lips, his eyes glaring at the lad who so
recklessly insulted him. And then he checked. It may be that he
remembered suddenly the relationship in which this young man was
popularly believed to stand to the Seigneur de Gavrillac, and the
well-known affection in which the Seigneur held him. And so he may
have realized that if he pushed this matter further, he might find
himself upon the horns of a dilemma. He would be confronted with
the alternatives of shedding more blood, and so embroiling himself
with the Lord of Gavrillac at a time when that gentleman’s
friendship was of the first importance to him, or else of
withdrawing with such hurt to his dignity as must impair his
authority in the countryside hereafter.
Be it so or otherwise, the fact
remains that he stopped short; then, with an incoherent
ejaculation, between anger and contempt, he tossed his arms, turned
on his heel and strode off quickly with his cousin.
When the landlord and his people
came, they found Andre-Louis, his arms about the body of his dead
friend, murmuring passionately into the deaf ear that rested almost
against his lips:
“Philippe! Speak to me, Philippe!
Philippe... Don’t you hear me? O God of Heaven! Philippe!”
At a glance they saw that here
neither priest nor doctor could avail. The cheek that lay against
Andre-Louis’s was leaden-hued, the half-open eyes were glazed, and
there was a little froth of blood upon the vacuously parted
lips.
Half blinded by tears Andre-Louis
stumbled after them when they bore the body into the inn. Upstairs
in the little room to which they conveyed it, he knelt by the bed,
and holding the dead man’s hand in both his own, he swore to him
out of his impotent rage that M. de La Tour d’Azyr should pay a
bitter price for this.