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"You may inform your high-born friend, Mr. Molyneux, that I heard everything he had to say; that my pride once had the pleasure of listening to his high-born confession!"
"Ah, it is gentle to taunt one with his birth, mademoiselle? Ah, no!
There is a man in my country who say strange things of that--that a man is not his father, but himself."
"You may inform your friend, Mr. Molyneux, that he had a chance to defend himself against accusation; that he said all--"
"That I did say all I could have strength to say. Mademoiselle, you did not see--as it was right--that I had been stung by a big wasp. It was nothing, a scratch; but, mademoiselle, the sky went round and the moon dance' on the earth. I could not wish that big wasp to see he had stung me; so I mus' only say what I can have strength for, and stand straight till he is gone. Beside', there are other rizzons. Ah, you mus' belief!
My Molyneux I sen' for, and tell him all, because he show courtesy to the yo'ng Frenchman, and I can trus' him. I trus' you, mademoiselle--long ago--and would have tol' you ev'rything, excep' jus'
because--well, for the romance, the fon! You belief? It is so clearly so; you do belief, mademoiselle?"
She did not even look at him. M. Beaucaire lifted his hand appealingly toward her. "Can there be no faith in--in--he said timidly, and paused.
She was silent, a statue, my Lady Disdain.
"If you had not belief' me to be an impostor; if I had never said I was Chateaurien; if I had been jus' that Monsieur Beaucaire of the story they tol' you, but never with the heart of a lackey, an hones' man, a man, the man you knew, himself, could you--would you--" He was trying to speak firmly; yet, as he gazed upon her splendid beauty, he choked slightly, and fumbled in the lace at his throat with unsteady fingers.--"Would you--have let me ride by your side in the autumn moonlight?" Her glance pa.s.sed by him as it might have pa.s.sed by a footman or a piece of furniture. He was dressed magnificently, a mult.i.tude of orders glittering on his breast. Her eye took no knowledge of him.
"Mademoiselle-I have the honor to ask you: if you had known this Beaucaire was hones', though of peasant birth, would you--"
Involuntarily, controlled as her icy presence was, she shuddered. There was a moment of silence.
"Mr. Molyneux," said Lady Mary, "in spite of your discourtesy in allowing a servant to address me, I offer you a last chance to leave this room undisgraced. Will you give me your arm?"
"Pardon me, madam," said Mr. Molyneux.
Beaucaire dropped into a chair with his head bent low and his arm outstretched on the table; his eyes filled slowly in spite of himself, and two tears rolled down the young man's cheeks.
"An' live men are jus'--names!" said M. Beaucaire.
Chapter Six
In the outer room, Winterset, unable to find Lady Mary, and supposing her to have joined Lady Rellerton, disposed of his negus, then approached the two visitors to pay his respects to the young prince, whom he discovered to be a stripling of seventeen, arrogant looking, but pretty as a girl. Standing beside the Marquis de Mirepoix--a man of quiet bearing--he was surrounded by a group of the great, among whom Mr.
Nash naturally counted himself. The Beau was felicitating himself that the foreigners had not arrived a week earlier, in which case he and Bath would have been detected in a piece of gross ignorance concerning the French n.o.bility--making much of de Mirepoix's ex-barber.
"'Tis a lucky thing that fellow was got out of the way," he e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed, under cover.
"Thank me for it," rejoined Winterset.
An attendant begged Mr. Nash's notice. The head bailiff sent word that Beaucaire had long since entered the building by a side door. It was supposed Mr. Nash had known of it, and the Frenchman was not arrested, as Mr. Molyneux was in his company, and said he would be answerable for him. Consternation was so plain on the Beau's trained face that the Duke leaned toward him anxiously.
"The villain's in, and Molyneux hath gone mad!"
Mr. Bantison, who had been fiercely elbowing his way toward them, joined heads with them. "You may well say he is in," he exclaimed "and if you want to know where, why, in yonder card-room. I saw him through the half-open door."
"What's to be done?" asked the Beau.
"Send the bailiffs--"
"Fie, fie! A file of bailiffs? The scandal!"
"Then listen to me," said the Duke. "I'll select half-a-dozen gentlemen, explain the matter, and we'll put him in the center of us and take him out to the bailiffs. 'Twill appear nothing. Do you remain here and keep the attention of Beaujolais and de Mirepoix. Come, Bantison, fetch Townbrake and Harry Rakell yonder; I'll bring the others."
Three minutes later, his Grace of Winterset flung wide the card-room door, and, after his friends had entered, closed it.
"Ah!" remarked M. Beaucaire quietly. "Six more large men."
The Duke, seeing Lady Mary, started; but the angry signs of her interview had not left her face, and rea.s.sured him. He offered his hand to conduct her to the door. "May I have the honor?"
"If this is to be known, 'twill be better if I leave after; I should be observed if I went now."
"As you will, madam," he answered, not displeased. "And now, you impudent villain," he began, turning to M. Beaucaire, but to fall back astounded. "'Od's blood, the dog hath murdered and robbed some royal prince!" He forgot Lady Mary's presence in his excitement. "Lay hands on him!" he shouted. "Tear those orders from him!"
Molyneux threw himself between. "One word!" he cried. "One word before you offer an outrage you will repent all your lives!"
"Or let M. de Winterset come alone," laughed M. Beaucaire.
"Do you expect me to fight a cut-throat barber, and with bare hands?"
"I think one does not expec' monsieur to fight anybody. Would I fight you, you think? That was why I had my servants, that evening we play.
I would gladly fight almos' any one in the won'; but I did not wish to soil my hand with a--"
"Stuff his lying mouth with his orders!" shouted the Duke.
But Molyneux still held the gentlemen back. "One moment," he cried.
"M. de Winterset," said Beaucaire, "of what are you afraid? You calculate well. Beaucaire might have been belief--an impostor that you yourself expose'? Never! But I was not goin' reveal that secret. You have not absolve me of my promise."
"Tell what you like," answered the Duke. "Tell all the wild lies you have time for. You have five minutes to make up your mind to go quietly."
"Now you absolve me, then? Ha, ha! Oh, yes! Mademoiselle," he bowed to Lady Mary, "I have the honor to reques' you leave the room. You shall miss no details if these frien's of yours kill me, on the honor of a French gentleman."
"A French what?" laughed Bantison.
"Do you dare keep up the pretense?" cried Lord Town brake. "Know, you villain barber, that your master, the Marquis de Mirepoix, is in the next room."
Molyneux heaved a great sigh of relief. "Shall I--" He turned to M.
Beaucaire.
The young man laughed, and said: "Tell him come here at once.
"Impudent to the last!" cried Bantison, as Molyneux hurried from the room.
"Now you goin' to see M. Beaucaire's master," said Beaucaire to Lady Mary. "'Tis true what I say, the other night. I cross from Prance in his suite; my pa.s.sport say as his barber. Then to pa.s.s the ennui of exile, I come to Bath and play for what one will. It kill the time. But when the people hear I have been a servant they come only secretly; and there is one of them--he has absolve' me of a promise not to speak--of him I learn something he cannot wish to be tol'. I make some trouble to learn this thing. Why I should do this? Well--that is my own rizzon. So I make this man help me in a masque, the unmasking it was, for, as there is no one to know me, I throw off my black wig and become myself--and so I am 'Chateaurien,' Castle Nowhere. Then this man I use', this Winterset, he--"
"I have great need to deny these accusations?" said the Duke.
"Nay," said Lady Mary wearily.