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"Madame la Marechale," said he quite coolly, "has taken, I observe, the word of my enemies without asking for the facts. I shall not fatigue her with arguments, as I am on my way to produce the proofs."
With two profound bows, the first to Cyrene, the other to Madame de Noailles, he withdrew.
CHAPTER x.x.xII
A STRONG PROOF
Remorse in all its horror seized him with the last glance of Cyrene's tearful eyes. He could not but feel the demand of those eyes for fine honour in the man on whom they rested in love. She was to him the white flower sprung of the truth and fearlessness, as well as the grace, of long descended chivalry, and who must not be a.s.sociated with anything base. He had never before fully faced his Repentigny impersonation in the aspect of a falsity to her. Now, after his direct lie to her, self-contempt threatened to altogether overwhelm him.
He mechanically went on to Paris, whither Dominique had gone before to secure his lodging. The evening of his arrival was spent in grief.
"The fault is mine, but why?" he asked himself with impatient gloom.
"Why has Providence so unfairly divided the honours and the guilt of life? Why are there rich and poor? Why good and bad? Why should an unfortunate like me, who has meant only well, be entangled in such a mesh of accidents? Why were my eyes designed but to see, my breast to love, my Cyrene, at such frightful cost?"
Next morning, the sunlight gilding the pinnacles of the Louvre, the cries of Paris, the fascinating dash of the metropolis, brought back to him his gift of animal spirits. Were he, he thought, but to successfully outride his present troubles, he would accept a post which had been offered him, as commandant of a cadet school on the far away estates of the Duke de la Rochefoucault, and thither retire quietly with Cyrene, away from the jealousy and criticism of the Court, and make open confession to her.
By appointment made at Troyes he went to meet Grancey in the Palais Royal garden.
Germain took his friend's arm and led him along the antiquated quarter of the Marais, where he had secured a room in a quiet neighbourhood for the old Chevalier de Lincy. His heart beat lest anything should have occurred to arrest the old n.o.ble's illusion. His intention was to introduce Grancey into the apartment of the old man, and there to let him gather from the lips of the occupant words that would link Germain with a house so ancient and respected. They arrived at the door, rang, and demanded of the landlady whether the Chevalier was in. She looked at them curiously as she held the door open.
"Is one of you Monsieur de Lincy's cousin!" she inquired.
"I, Madame," replied he.
"Come in, sir. Have you not received the letter posted yesterday by the priest?"
"By the priest?" Germain stopped, with his friend, on the threshold of the chamber into which she had led them. "Is he ill, then?"
"The saints protect him, sir, he has finished his last illness. He lies upstairs in his beautiful mortuary chamber draped by the Sisters of the Hospital."
"Poor old de Lincy," he murmured, yet could hardly realise it.
"Are you not Monsieur de Lincy, too, sir?" she inquired.
"Certainly," he replied quickly, checking himself, "but he was the head of the house. Alas! let me see him."
She led them up two flights and into the death chamber, which was heavily hung with black and the windows darkened. Two tapers at the head and two at the feet showed where the corpse lay, and near by stood an altar with lights and flowers, beside which two Black Nuns knelt motionlessly. The visitors crossed the room with bowed heads and looked down at the face of the dead. It had lost its worn look and was at peace. A faint smile, as of proud pleasure, rested on the lips, and Lecour knew that smile was for him. It brought him a strange emotion; he felt as if, though condemned by so many of the living, he was loved by the dead; and a great tenderness towards his pathetic relative welled in his heart. He bent over the face and earnestly wept.
"He loved you, Monsieur le Chevalier," the landlady said, weeping also, "and bade the notary leave with me a copy of his will for you. When Monsieur descends, I shall give it to him."
"Did he talk much before he died?"
"A great deal. The confessor said there was a high fever. He talked of a castle upon a mountain--and about you, Monsieur, a good deal. He was not strong when he came to us: I said from the beginning 'He is on the short way to heaven': he seemed like one who had suffered too much."
They followed her out of the chamber. Lecour could not help some eagerness concerning the will, and perusing it closely when she handed it to him, found it bequeathed him all the testator's possessions. He pa.s.sed the deed silently to his friend the Baron, who read the first half and caught the drift.
"Your proof is incontestable," he said briefly.
"The difficulty is but the completion of my proofs. I have to go to Canada for that. But a.s.sure the company of my return."
"We shall appeal in a body to the Prince."
"I pray you not."
"What can we do for you, then?"
"Thank the others. Invite all my friends in Troyes to a banquet in my name this day week, at which you will preside for me. Spare no expense.
You shall be witness for me while I am absent in Canada."
"If to serve you is the programme, I shall live happy."
The Baron returned to Troyes and, duly presiding at the dinner given to the Guards in Germain's name, related excitedly what he had seen.
The young men heard the story with outbursts of delight, drank Lecour's health standing on their chairs, heaped his place with roses, sang over and over a chorus in his honour, and parted swearing vehemently that the dismissal of such a good fellow was a wrong to the company of Noailles concocted as an insult to the whole of them by the rival company of Villeroy.
CHAPTER x.x.xIII
THE REGISTER OF ST. GERMAIN-DES-PReS
A hazy hope concerning his descent had haunted Lecour for some months past. That the Chevalier de Lincy was really in some manner his relative became his belief. He argued that his own fitness for aristocratic society must have a hereditary explanation and that, were he able to trace his lineage a short distance backward he would discover some higher status fallen from by his family through misfortune. On the day of de Grancey's departure, he began to place together the straws of information which might guide him. He had once heard his father speak of having left France at the age of twelve years. Was he a kidnapped and deported heir? Was he a cadet of some reduced family?
Again, on one of the rare occasions when Lecour senior referred to the past--a winter's evening chat by the fire-side with the cure of the parish--he had described his boyish recollection of the interior of the Paris church of St. Germain-des-Pres, then the family church of his family. Was his own name taken from its patron saint? Would its registers contain records of the Lecours?
He knew at least his father's age--born in 1736, it would make him--yes, and also his birth month, June. Here were straws to start by.
He lost no time in crossing the Seine and seeking the church. As he pa.s.sed the middle of the Pont Neuf--near the equestrian statue of Henry IV., a small man, meanly dressed, glided out of the shadow of a vehicle, and moved stealthily after him, his motions wary as a cat's. This man was Jude.
Germain arrived at the edifice, which adjoined the great abbey of the same name, and scanned its ancient spire and dilapidated facade for some moments before he entered, full of thought--"for here," said he "is the temple of my forefathers--the visible link that binds my origin to France." He pa.s.sed in, regarding every pillar and ornament of its quaint, dark, Norman interior with the same fascination, and traversing its length, came to the sacristy behind the high altar. A young priest was standing there overlooking the operations of some workmen, and muttering his breviary.
"Messire, I am seeking information for which I wish to examine your parish registers," said Germain.
"It is an honour, sir," replied the priest. "What is the year?"
"1736."
"The books are here, sir," opening a cupboard in which various large volumes leaned against each other on the shelves. "This is 1736. May I a.s.sist you in finding the entry?"
"I am not sure what I need."
"I fear Monsieur will not find some of the entries easy reading."