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As he spoke the door opened, and Christine entered.
"I rejoice to see you nearly yourself again. You have been most foully used."
Her face just then was like the face that had looked at him in his dreams. Herrick bowed somewhat stiffly and unsteadily over the hand she held out to him, for the ache was still in his limbs.
"Truly, mademoiselle, my service had come near to ending before it was well begun. Death has been hunting me more busily than I care for."
"What of the Duke?"
"He is alive," Herrick answered. "Mine is a tale you may well find difficult to believe."
"For unbelief, circ.u.mstances must be my excuse," she answered after a moment's pause. "There is yet time for repentance. Sit on this stool--you are still weak, I see--and tell us the story."
Herrick told what had happened from the moment Lemasle had made his dash across the clearing, repeated even the old hag's doggerel rhyme, and his own last consciousness of a star above him which pointed toward home.
"These thieves did not say to whom they would take him?" Christine asked him when he had finished.
"To the enemy who would pay highest. These robbers were in no doubt which direction to go. That a big reward would be paid for the Duke's person seemed well known to them. Have none been sent to spy in the enemies' borders, since it would appear spies are so frequent in Montvilliers?"
"We have ever fought our foe openly," she said, turning sharply from the fire by which she was standing.
"One must meet craft with craft," Herrick answered.
"Have you no word of advice, Captain Lemasle?" she asked.
The soldier shrugged his great shoulders, and walking to the fire, kicked back a piece of smouldering peat which had fallen from its place.
"Advice doesn't trip easily to my tongue at any time, and here there are so many considerations. Had the Duke fallen into the hands of those who attacked us, he would have been a dead man by now. I take it that our present position is an improvement upon that."
"They will certainly keep him alive," said Herrick.
"And therefore must travel slowly," said Christine. "We may overtake them."
"We are but two men, mademoiselle," Lemasle remarked. "To attempt the impossible is to court disaster. Besides, they have had many hours'
start, and there is no certainty where they have gone."
Christine looked at Herrick, evidently asking his opinion.
"I should not s.h.i.+rk another desperate venture, mademoiselle," he said, "but there is wisdom in what Captain Lemasle says. To speak frankly, I do not know the real situation in Montvilliers well enough to give an opinion."
"And having heard it, you might have difficulty in understanding it,"
Lemasle muttered.
"At least you know that Count Felix has plotted the death of the young Duke," said Christine.
"That was the story which sent me to warn you," said Herrick.
"I have not believed that tale, I hardly credit it now," she went on, "but we know that the Duke's life has been attempted. Maurice dead, Felix becomes Duke. Montvilliers cannot be long without a ruler.
Maurice in the hands of France or Germany is powerless; therefore this way Felix becomes Duke."
"Would not the people strike a blow for their rightful ruler?" Herrick asked.
"In their present mind they are more likely to listen to Count Felix.
He is a strong man and has plenty of honeyed words when they fit in with his purpose. In Vayenne they hardly know Maurice, and the crowd likes a leader it can see; that is why I was so set on bringing him to the city."
"As the Duke is not dead, the Count may fear to move in this matter,"
said Herrick.
"You do not know him," Lemasle said.
"Even now some of these traitors have ridden back to Vayenne," said Christine. "While we talk, preparations may be going forward for Felix's crowning. Would I were a man!"
"What would you do, mademoiselle?" asked Herrick.
"Do! I would ride to Vayenne, throw this treachery in Felix's teeth, demand the Duke's rescue, set all the wheels of diplomacy turning, and, if need be, cry revolution in the streets."
"Mademoiselle might set the law aside that forbids women to mount the throne, and do all this herself," said Lemasle.
"I am no breaker of laws, captain; and even if I were, the citizens of Vayenne would not easily shout for me. A few--oh yes, there would be a few, but they would be of the rabble chiefly. I have no soul for such an enterprise."
"Yet you might go to the Count," urged Lemasle, "and demand justice for the Duke."
"And every courtier would urge my marriage with Count Felix," she said. "That way will they welcome me as d.u.c.h.ess, who would not draw a sword to place me on the throne. Such a marriage might bring peace.
Were the Duke dead, I might be tempted to make it for my country's sake. As it is----"
"You hate such a marriage?" said Herrick.
"Yes; hate it. Only to save Montvilliers would I make it."
"Mademoiselle, if you bid me, I will go to Vayenne."
"You!"
"Think what you will of me, but at least have I not proved myself a man?" said Herrick.
"There was no mean thought in my mind," she answered. "But what would you do in Vayenne?"
"Why, even cast this treachery in the Count's teeth; let the city know that its honor is at stake, since the Duke is a prisoner; if need be, boast loudly of what I have done to save him, and perhaps ride at the head of that rabble you talk of."
"You would go to your death."
"If I care not, who is there to hinder me on that score?"
"It might be done," said Lemasle; "indeed it might, mademoiselle. You and I could follow to the city. They will not harm you, and you would not go to the castle, where at present you might be unwelcome."
"I might go to the Countess Elisabeth, and----"
"And from thence let it be known that you were for Duke Maurice,"
cried Lemasle. "Faith, I see the Count 'twixt devil and deep sea already."