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"Obey me blindly, my good friend, otherwise you will be dazzled."
"He is right," thought the furrier.
And he went off to the King's surgeon, who lived in an inn in the Place du Martroi.
At this juncture Catherine de' Medici found herself, politically speaking, in the same extremities as she had been in when Christophe had seen her at Blois. Though she had inured herself to the struggle, and had exerted her fine intellect in that first defeat, her situation, though precisely the same now as then, was even more critical and dangerous than at the time of the riots at Amboise. Events had grown in magnitude, and the Queen had grown with them. Though she seemed to proceed in agreement with the Princes of Lorraine, Catherine held the threads of a conspiracy skilfully plotted against her terrible a.s.sociates, and was only waiting for a favorable moment to drop her mask.
The Cardinal had just found himself deceived by Catherine. The crafty Italian had seen in the younger branch of the Royal Family an obstacle she could use to check the pretensions of the Guises; and, in spite of the counsel of the two Gondis, who advised her to leave the Guises to act with what violence they could against the Bourbons, she had, by warning the Queen of Navarre, brought to nought the plot to seize Bearn concerted by the Guises with the King of Spain. As this State secret was known only to themselves and to Catherine, the Princes of Lorraine were a.s.sured of her betrayal, and they wished to send her back to Florence; but to secure proofs of Catherine's treachery to the State--the House of Lorraine was the State--the Duke and Cardinal had just made her privy to their scheme for making away with the King of Navarre.
The precautions which were immediately taken by Antoine de Bourbon proved to the brothers that this secret, known but to three people, had been divulged by the Queen-mother. The Cardinal de Lorraine accused Catherine of her breach of faith in the presence of the King, threatening her with banishment if any fresh indiscretions on her part should imperil the State.
Catherine, seeing herself in imminent danger, was compelled to act as a high-handed sovereign. She gave ample proof indeed of her fine abilities, but it must also be confessed that she was well served by the friends she trusted.
L'Hopital sent her a letter in these terms:
"Do not allow a Prince of the Blood to be killed by a committee, or you will soon be carried off yourself."
Catherine sent Birague to le Vignay, desiring the Chancellor to come to the a.s.sembly of the States-General, although he was in banishment. Birague returned the same evening with l'Hopital, halting within three leagues of Orleans, and the Chancellor thus declared himself on the side of the Queen-mother.
Chiverni, whose fidelity was with good reason regarded as doubtful by the Guises, had fled from Orleans, and by a forced march, which nearly was his death, he reached ecouen in ten hours. He there told the Connetable de Montmorency of the danger his nephew the Prince de Conde was in, and of the encroachments of the Guises. Anne de Montmorency, furious at learning that the Prince owed his life merely to the sudden illness of which Francis II.
was dying, marched up with fifteen hundred horse and a hundred gentlemen under arms. The more effectually to surprise the Guises, he had avoided Paris, coming from ecouen to Corbeil, and from Corbeil to Pithiviers by the Valley of the Essonne.
"Man to man, and both to pull, leaves each but little wool!" he said, on the occasion of this das.h.i.+ng advance.
Anne de Montmorency, who had been the preserver of France when Charles V.
invaded Provence, and the Duc de Guise, who had checked the Emperor's second attempt at Metz, were, in fact, the two greatest French warriors of their time.
Catherine had waited for the right moment to stir up the hatred of the man whom the Guises had overthrown. The Marquis de Simeuse, in command of the town of Gien, on hearing of the advance of so considerable a force as the Connetable brought with him, sprang to horse, hoping to warn the Duke in time. The Queen-mother, meanwhile, certain that the Connetable would come to his nephew's rescue, and confident of the Chancellor's devotion to the royal cause, had fanned the hopes and encouraged the spirit of the Reformed party. The Colignys and the adherents of the imperiled House of Bourbon had made common cause with the Queen-mother's partisans; a coalition between various antagonistic interests, attacked by a common foe, was silently formed in the a.s.sembly of the States, where the question was boldly broached of making Catherine Regent of France in the event of the young King's death. Catherine herself, whose faith in astrology was far greater than her belief in Church dogmas, had ventured to extremes against her foes when she saw her son dying at the end of the time fixed as his term of life by the famous soothsayer brought to the chateau de Chaumont by Nostradamus.
A few days before the terrible close of his reign, Francis II. had chosen to go out on the Loire, so as not to be in the town at the hour of the Prince de Conde's intended execution. Having surrendered the Prince's head to the Cardinal de Lorraine, he feared a riot quite as much as he dreaded the supplications of the Princesse de Conde. As he was embarking, a fresh breeze, such as often sweeps the Loire at the approach of winter, gave him so violent an earache that he was forced to return home; he went to bed, never to leave it alive.
In spite of the disagreement of the physicians, who, all but Chapelain, were his enemies and opponents, Ambroise Pare maintained that an abscess had formed in the head, and that if no outlet were pierced the chances of the King's death were greater every day.
In spite of the late hour and the rigorous enforcement of the curfew at that time in Orleans, which was ruled as in a state of siege, Pare's lamp was s.h.i.+ning in his window where he was studying. Lecamus called to him from below; and when he had announced his name, the surgeon gave orders that his old friend should be admitted.
"You give yourself no rest, Ambroise, and while saving the lives of others you will wear out your own," said the furrier as he went in.
Indeed, there sat the surgeon, his books open, his instruments lying about, and before him a skull not long since buried, dug up from the grave, and perforated.
"I must save the King."
"Then you are very sure you can, Ambroise?" said the old man, shuddering.
"As sure as I am alive. The King, my good old friend, has some evil humor festering on his brain, which will fill it up, and the danger is pressing; but by piercing the skull I let the matter out and free his head. I have already performed this operation three times; it was invented by a Piedmontese, and I have been so lucky as to improve upon it. The first time it was at the siege of Metz, on Monsieur de Pienne, whom I got out of the sc.r.a.pe, and who has only been all the wiser for it; the second time it saved the life of a poor man on whom I wished to test the certainty of this daring operation to which Monsieur de Pienne had submitted; the third time was on a gentleman in Paris, who is now perfectly well. Trepanning--for that is the name given to it--is as yet little known. The sufferers object to it on the score of the imperfection of the instrument, but that I have been able to improve. So now I am experimenting on this head, to be sure of not failing to-morrow on the King's."
"You must be very sure of yourself, for your head will be in danger if you----"
"I will wager my life that he is cured," replied Pare, with the confidence of genius. "Oh, my good friend, what is it to make a hole in a skull with due care? It is what soldiers do every day with no care at all."
"But do you know, my boy," said the citizen, greatly daring, "that if you save the King, you ruin France? Do you know that your instrument will place the crown of the Valois on the head of a Prince of Lorraine, calling himself the direct heir of Charlemagne? Do you know that surgery and politics are, at this moment, at daggers drawn? Yes, the triumph of your genius will be the overthrow of your religion. If the Guises retain the Regency, the blood of the Reformers will flow in streams! Be a great citizen rather than a great surgeon, and sleep through to-morrow morning, leaving the King's room free to those leeches who, if they do not save the King, will save France."
"I!" cried Pare. "I--leave a man to die when I can cure him? Never! If I am to be hanged for a Calvinist, I will go to the chateau, all the same, right early to-morrow. Do not you know that the only favor I mean to ask, when I have saved the King, is your Christophe's life? There will surely be a moment when Queen Mary can refuse me nothing?"
"Alas, my friend, has not the little King already refused the Princesse de Conde any pardon for her husband? Do not kill your religion by enabling the man to live who ought to die."
"Are you going to puzzle yourself by trying to find out how G.o.d means to dispose of things in the future?" said Pare. "Honest folks have but one motto--'Do your duty, come what may.'--I did this at the siege of Calais when I set my foot on the Grand Master; I risked being cut down by all his friends and attendants, and here I am, surgeon to the King; I am a Reformer, and yet I can call the Guises my friends.--I will save the King!"
cried the surgeon, with the sacred enthusiasm of conviction that genius knows, "and G.o.d will take care of France!"
There was a knock at the door, and a few minutes later one of Ambroise Pare's servants gave a note to Lecamus, who read aloud these ominous words:
"A scaffold is being erected at the Convent of the Recollets for the beheading of the Prince de Conde to-morrow."
Ambroise and Lecamus looked at each other, both overpowered with horror.
"I will go and make sure," said the furrier.
Out on the square, Ruggieri took Lecamus by the arm, asking what was Pare's secret for saving the King; but the old man, fearing some treachery, insisted on going to see the scaffold. So the astrologer and the furrier went together to the Recollets, where, in fact, they found carpenters at work by torchlight.
"Hey day, my friend," said Lecamus to one of them; "what business is this?"
"We are preparing to hang some heretics, since the bleeding at Amboise did not cure them," said a young friar, who was superintending the workmen.
"Monseigneur the Cardinal does well," said the prudent Ruggieri. "But in my country we do even better."
"What do you do?"
"We burn them, brother."
Lecamus was obliged to lean on the astrologer; his legs refused to carry him, for he thought that his son might next day be swinging to one of those gibbets. The poor old man stood between two sciences--astrology and medicine; each promised to save his son, for whom the scaffold was visibly rising. In this confusion of mind he was as wax in the hands of the Florentine.
"Well, my most respectable vendor of _vair_, what have you to say to these pleasantries of Lorraine?" said Ruggieri.
"Woe the day! You know I would give my own skin to see my boy's safe and sound."
"That is what I call talking like a skinner," replied the Italian. "But if you will explain to me the operation that Ambroise proposes to perform on the King, I will guarantee your son's life."
"Truly?" cried the old furrier.
"What shall I swear by?" said Ruggieri.
On this the unhappy old man repeated his conversation with Pare to the Italian, who was off, leaving the disconsolate father in the road the instant he had heard the great surgeon's secret.
"Whom the devil does he mean mischief to?" cried Lecamus, as he saw Ruggieri running at his utmost speed towards the Place de l'Estape.
Lecamus knew nothing of the terrible scene which was going on by the King's bedside, and which had led to the order being given for the erection of the scaffold for the Prince, who had been sentenced in default, as it were, though his execution was postponed for the moment by the King's illness.