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"I must!" she cried.
I had put the flambeau in a socket on the wall. Now that the light shone on her steadily, I saw for the first time, though I might have known it from her presence here, how rent with emotion she was, white to the lips, with gleaming eyes and stormy breast. She had spoken low and quietly, but it was a main-force composure, liable to snap like gla.s.s. I thought her on the very verge of pa.s.sionate tears. Vigo looked at her, puzzled, troubled, pitying, as on some beautiful, mad creature. She cried out on him suddenly, her rich voice going up a key:
"You need not say 'cannot' to me, Vigo! You know not how I came here. I was locked in my chamber. I changed clothes with my Norman maid. There was a sentry at each end of the street. I slid down a rope of my bedclothes; it was dark--they did not see me. I knocked at Ferou's door--thank the saints, it opened to me quickly! I told M. Ferou--G.o.d forgive me!--I had business for the duke at the other end of the tunnel.
He took me through, and I came here."
"But, mademoiselle, the bats!" I cried.
"Yes, the bats," she returned, with a little smile. "And my hands on the ropes!" She turned them over; the skin was torn cruelly from her delicate palms and the inside of her fingers. Little threads of blood marked the scores. "Then I came here," she repeated. "In all my life I have never been in the streets alone--not even for one step at noonday.
Now will you tell me, M. Vigo, that I cannot go to St. Denis?"
"Mademoiselle, it is yours to say what you can do."
As for me, I dropped on my knees and laid my lips to her fingers, softly, for fear even their pressure might hurt her tenderness.
"Mademoiselle!" I cried in pure delight. "Mademoiselle, that you are here!"
She flushed under my words.
"Ah, it is no little thing brought me. You knew M. de Mar was arrested?"
We a.s.sented; she went on, more to me than to Vigo, as if in telling me she was telling M. etienne. She spoke low, as if in pain.
"After supper M. de Mayenne went back to his cabinet and let out Paul de Lorraine."
"I wish we had killed him," I muttered. "We had no time or weapons."
"M. de Mayenne sent for me then," she went on, wetting her lips. "I have never seen him so angry. He was furious because M. de Mar had been before his face and he had not known it. He felt he had been made a mock of. He raged against me--I never knew he could be so angry. He said the Spanish envoy was too good for me; I should marry Paul de Lorraine to-morrow."
"Mordieu, mademoiselle!"
"That was not it. I had borne that!" she cried. "Mayhap I deserved it.
But while my lord thundered at me, word came that M. de Mar was taken.
My lord swore he should die. He swore no man ever set him at naught and lived to boast of it."
"Will--"
She swept on unheeding:
"He said he should be tried for the murder of Pontou--he should be tortured to make him confess it."
She dropped down on her knees, hiding her face in her arms on the table, shaking from head to foot as in an ague. Vigo swore to himself, loudly, violently: "If Mayenne do that, by the throne of Heaven, I'll kill him!"
She sprang to her feet, dry-eyed, fierce as a young lioness.
"Is that all you can say? Mayenne may torture him and be killed for it?"
"I shall send to the duke--" Vigo began.
"Aye! I shall go to the duke! I can say who killed Pontou. I know much besides to tell the king. I was Mayenne's cousin, but if he would save his secrets he must give up M. de Mar. Mother of G.o.d! I have been his obedient child; I have let him do so with me as he would. I sent my lover away. I consented to the Spanish marriage. But to this I will not submit. He shall not torture and kill etienne de Mar!"
Vigo took her hand and kissed it.
"Shall we start, Vigo? Once at St. Denis, I am hostage for his safety.
The king can tell Mayenne that if Mar is tortured he will torture me!
Mayenne may not tender me greatly, but he will not relish his cousin's breaking on the wheel."
"Mayenne won't torture M. etienne," Vigo said, patting her hand in both of his, forgetting she was a great lady, he an equery. "Fear not! you will save him, mademoiselle."
"Let us go!" she cried feverishly. "Let us go!"
Gilles was in the court waiting, stripped of his livery, dressed peaceably as a porter, but with a mallet in his hand that I should not like to receive on my crown. I thought we were ready, but Vigo bade us wait. I stood on the house-steps with mademoiselle, while he took aside Squinting Charlot for a low-voiced, emphatic interview.
"Must we wait?" mademoiselle urged me, quivering like the arrow on the bow-string. "They may discover I am gone. Need we wait?"
"Aye," I answered; "if Vigo bids us. He knows."
We waited then. Vigo disappeared presently. Mademoiselle and I stood patient, with, oh! what impatience in our hearts, wondering how he could so hinder us. Not till he came back did it dawn on me for what we had stayed. He was dressed as an under-groom, not a tag of St. Quentin colours on him.
"I beg a thousand pardons, mademoiselle. I had to give my lieutenant his orders. Now, if you will give the word, we go."
"Do you go, M. Vigo?" She breathed deep. It was easy to see she looked upon him as a regiment.
"Of course," Vigo answered, as if there could be no other way.
I said in pure devilry, to try to ruffle him:
"Vigo, you said you were here to guard Monsieur's interests-his house, his goods, his moneys. Do you desert your trust?"
Mademoiselle turned quickly to him:
"Vigo, you must not let me take you from your rightful post. Felix and your man here will care for me--"
"The boy talks silliness, mademoiselle," Vigo returned tranquilly.
"Mademoiselle is worth a dozen hotels. I go with her."
He walked beside her across the court, I following with Gilles, laughing to myself. Only yesterday had Vigo declared that never would he give aid and comfort to Mlle. de Montluc. It was no marvel she had conquered M.
etienne, for he must needs have been in love with some one, but in bringing Vigo to her feet she had won a triumph indeed.
We had to go out by the great gate, because the key of the postern was in the Bastille. But as if by magic every guardsman and hanger-about had disappeared--there was not one to stare at the lady; though when we had pa.s.sed some one locked the gates behind us. Vigo called me up to mademoiselle's left. Gilles was to loiter behind, far enough to seem not to belong to us, near enough to come up at need. Thus, at a good pace, mademoiselle stepping out as brave as any of us, we set out across the city for the Porte St. Denis.
Our quarter was very quiet; we scarce met a soul. But afterward, as we reached the neighbourhood of the markets, the streets grew livelier. Now were we gladder than ever of Vigo's escort; for whenever we approached a band of roisterers or of gentlemen with lights, mademoiselle sheltered herself behind the equery's broad back, hidden as behind a tower. Once the gallant M. de Champfleury, he who in pink silk had adorned Mme. de Mayenne's salon, pa.s.sed close enough to touch her. She heaved a sigh of relief when he was by. For her own sake she had no fear; the midnight streets, the open road to St. Denis, had no power to daunt her: but the dread of being recognized and turned back rode her like a nightmare.
Close by the gate, Vigo bade us pause in the door of a shop while he went forward to reconnoiter. Before long he returned.
"Bad luck, mademoiselle. Brissac's not on. I don't know the officer, but he knows me, that's the worst of it. He told me this was not St. Quentin night. Well, we must try the Porte Neuve."
But mademoiselle demurred: