高中英语阅读素材:英语名著:UNDER THE RED ROBE(红袍下)(PDF版).pdf
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1、UNDER THE RED ROBE1UNDER THE REDROBEBy STANLEY J.WEYMANCONTENTSCHAPTER I.AT ZATONSCHAPTER II.AT THE GREEN PILLARCHAPTER III.THE HOUSE IN THE WOODCHAPTER IV.MADAM AND MADEMOISELLECHAPTER V.REVENGECHAPTER VI.UNDER THE PlC DU MIDICHAPTER VII.A MASTER STROKECHAPTER VIII.A MASTER STROKE-ContinuedCHAPTER
2、IX.THE QUESTIONCHAPTER X.CLONCHAPTER XI.THE ARRESTCHAPTER XII.THE ROAD TO PARISCHAPTER XIII.AT THE FINGER-POSTCHAPTER XIV.ST MARTINS EVECHAPTER XV.ST MARTINS SUMMERUNDER THE RED ROBE2CHAPTER IAT ZATONSMarked cards!There were a score round us when the fool,little knowing the manwith whom he had to de
3、al,and as little how to lose like a gentleman,flungthe words in my teeth.He thought,Ill be sworn,that I should storm andswear and ruffle it like any common cock of the hackle.But that wasnever Gil de Beraults way.For a few seconds after he had spoken I didnot even look at him.I passed my eye instead
4、-smiling,BIENENTENDU-round the ring of waiting faces,saw that there was no oneexcept De Pombal I had cause to fear;and then at last I rose and looked atthe fool with the grim face I have known impose on older and wiser men.Marked cards,M.lAnglais?I said,with a chilling sneer.They areused,I am told,t
5、o trap players-not unbirched schoolboys.Yet I say that they are marked!he replied hotly,in his queer foreignjargon.In my last hand I had nothing.You doubled the stakes.Bah,sir,you knew!You have swindled me!Monsieur is easy to swindle-when he plays with a mirror behind him,I answered tartly.At that t
6、here was a great roar of laughter,which might have been heardin the street,and which brought to the table everyone in the eating-housewhom his voice had not already attracted.But I did not relax my face.I waited until all was quiet again,and then waving aside two or three whostood between us and the
7、 entrance,I pointed gravely to the door.There is a little space behind the church of St Jacques,M.lEtranger,Isaid,putting on my hat and taking my cloak on my arm.Doubtless youwill accompany me thither?He snatched up his hat,his face burning with shame and rage.With pleasure!he blurted out.To the dev
8、il,if you like!I thought the matter arranged,when the Marquis laid his hand on theyoung fellows arm and checked him.This must not be,he said,turning from him to me with his grand,fine-gentlemans air.You know me,M.de Berault.This matter hasUNDER THE RED ROBE3gone far enough.Too far!M.de Pombal,I answ
9、ered bitterly.Still,if you wish totake your friends place,I shall raise no objection.Chut,man!he retorted,shrugging his shoulders negligently.I knowyou,and I do not fight with men of your stamp.Nor need thisgentleman.Undoubtedly,I replied,bowing low,if he prefers to be caned in thestreets.That stung
10、 the Marquis.Have a care!have a care!he cried hotly.You go too far,M.Berault.De Berault,if you please,I objected,eyeing him sternly.My familyhas borne the DE as long as yours,M.de Pombal.He could not deny that,and he answered,As you please;at the sametime restraining his friend by a gesture.But none
11、 the less,he continued,take my advice.The Cardinal has forbidden duelling,and this time hemeans it!You have been in trouble once and gone free.A second timeit may fare worse with you.Let this gentleman go,therefore,M.deBerault.Besides-why,shame upon you,man!he exclaimed hotly;heis but a lad!Two or t
12、hree who stood behind me applauded that,But I turned andthey met my eye;and they were as mum as mice.His age is his own concern,I said grimly.He was old enough awhile ago to insult me.And I will prove my words!the lad cried,exploding at last.He hadspirit enough,and the Marquis had had hard work to r
13、estrain him so long.You do me no service,M.de Pombal,he continued,pettishly shaking offhis friends hand.By your leave,this gentleman and I will settle thismatter.That is better,I said,nodding drily,while the Marquis stood aside,frowning and baffled.Permit me to lead the way.Zatons eating-house stand
14、s scarcely a hundred paces from St Jacquesla Boucherie,and half the company went thither with us.The evening waswet,the light in the streets was waning,the streets themselves were dirtyUNDER THE RED ROBE4and slippery.There were few passers in the Rue St Antoine;and ourparty,which earlier in the day
15、must have attracted notice and a crowd,crossed unmarked,and entered without interruption the paved trianglewhich lies immediately behind the church.I saw in the distance one ofthe Cardinals guard loitering in front of the scaffolding round the newHotel Richelieu;and the sight of the uniform gave me
16、pause for a moment.But it was too late to repent.The Englishman began at once to strip off his clothes.I closed mineto the throat,for the air was chilly.At that moment,while we stoodpreparing,and most of the company seemed a little inclined to stand offfrom me,I felt a hand on my arm,and turning,saw
17、 the dwarfish tailor atwhose house,in the Rue Savonnerie,I lodged at the time.The fellowspresence was unwelcome,to say the least of it;and though for want ofbetter company I had sometimes encouraged him to be free with me athome,I took that to be no reason why I should be plagued with him beforegent
18、lemen.I shook him off,therefore,hoping by a frown to silence him.He was not to be so easily put down,however,and perforce I had tospeak to him.Afterwards,afterwards,I said hurriedly.I am engaged now.For Gods sake,dont,sir!the poor fool cried,clinging to my sleeve.Dont do it!You will bring a curse on
19、 the house.He is but a lad,and-You,too!I exclaimed,losing patience.Be silent,you scum!Whatdo you know about gentlemens quarrels?Leave me;do you hear?But the Cardinal!he cried in a quavering voice.The Cardinal,M.de Berault!The last man you killed is not forgotten yet.This time hewill be sure to-Leave
20、 me,do you hear?I hissed.The fellows impudence passedall bounds.It was as bad as his croaking.Begone!I added.Isuppose you are afraid that he will kill me,and you will lose your money.Frison fell back at that almost as if I had struck him,and I turned tomy adversary,who had been awaiting my motions w
21、ith impatience.Godknows he did look young as he stood with his head bare and his fair hairdrooping over his smooth womans forehead-a mere lad fresh from thecollege of Burgundy,if they have such a thing in England.I felt a suddenUNDER THE RED ROBE5chill as I looked at him:a qualm,a tremor,a presentim
22、ent.What was itthe little tailor had said?That I should-but there,he did not know.What did he know of such things?If I let this pass I must kill a man aday,or leave Paris and the eating-house,and starve.A thousand pardons,I said gravely,as I drew and took my place.Adun.I am sorry that the poor devil
23、 caught me so inopportunely.Nowhowever,I am at your service.He saluted and we crossed swords and began.But from the first Ihad no doubt what the result would be.The slippery stones and fadinglight gave him,it is true,some chance,some advantage,more than hedeserved;but I had no sooner felt his blade
24、than I knew that he was noswordsman.Possibly he had taken half-a-dozen lessons in rapier art,and practised what he learned with an Englishman as heavy and awkwardas himself.But that was all.He made a few wild clumsy rushes,parryingwidely.When I had foiled these,the danger was over,and I held him atm
25、y mercy.I played with him a little while,watching the sweat gather on his browand the shadow of the church tower fall deeper and darker,like theshadow of doom,on his face.Not out of cruelty-God knows I havenever erred in that direction!-but because,for the first time in my life,Ifelt a strange reluc
26、tance to strike the blow.The curls clung to hisforehead;his breath came and went in gasps;I heard the men behind meand one or two of them drop an oath;and then I slipped-slipped,and wasdown in a moment on my right side,my elbow striking the pavement sosharply that the arm grew numb to the wrist.He h
27、eld off.I heard a dozen voices cry,Now!now you have him!But he held off.He stood back and waited with his breast heaving andhis point lowered,until I had risen and stood again.on my guard.Enough!enough!a rough voice behind me cried.Dont hurt theman after that.On guard,sir!I answered coldly-for he se
28、emed to waver,and be indoubt.It was an accident.It shall not avail you again.Several voices cried Shame!and one,You coward!But theEnglishman stepped forward,a fixed look in his blue eyes.He took hisUNDER THE RED ROBE6place without a word.I read in his drawn white face that he had made uphis mind to
29、the worst,and his courage so won my admiration that I wouldgladly and thankfully have set one of the lookers-on-any of the lookers-on-in his place;but that could not be.So I thought of Zatons closed tome,of Pombals insult,of the sneers and slights I had long kept at theswords point;and,pressing him
30、suddenly in a heat of affected anger,Ithrust strongly over his guard,which had grown feeble,and ran himthrough the chest.When I saw him lying,laid out on the stones with his eyes half shut,and his face glimmering white in the dusk-not that I saw him thus long,for there were a dozen kneeling round hi
31、m in a twinkling-I felt anunwonted pang.It passed,however,in a moment.For I found myselfconfronted by a ring of angry faces-of men who,keeping at a distance,hissed and cursed and threatened me,calling me Black Death and the like.They were mostly canaille,who had gathered during the fight,and hadview
32、ed all that passed from the farther side of the railings.While somesnarled and raged at me like wolves,calling me Butcher!and Cut-throat!or cried out that Berault was at his trade again,others threatenedme with the vengeance of the Cardinal,flung the edict in my teeth,andsaid with glee that the guar
33、d were coming-they would see me hanged yet.His blood is on your head!one cried furiously.He will be dead inan hour.And you will swing for him!Hurrah!Begone,I said.Ay,to Montfaucon,he answered,mocking me.No;to your kennel!I replied,with a look which sent him a yardbackwards,though the railings were b
34、etween us.And I wiped my bladecarefully,standing a little apart.For-well,I could understand it-it wasone of those moments when a man is not popular.Those who had comewith me from the eating-house eyed me askance,and turned their backswhen I drew nearer;and those who had joined us and obtained admiss
35、ionwere scarcely more polite.But I was not to be outdone in SANG FROID.I cocked my hat,anddrawing my cloak over my shoulders,went out with a swagger whichdrove the curs from the gate before I came within a dozen paces of it.UNDER THE RED ROBE7The rascals outside fell back as quickly,and in a moment
36、I was in thestreet.Another moment and I should have been clear of the place andfree to lie by for a while-when,without warning,a scurry took placeround me.The crowd fled every way into the gloom,and in a hand-turna dozen of the Cardinals guards closed round me.I had some acquaintance with the office
37、r in command,and he salutedme civilly.This is a bad business,M.de Berault,he said.The man is dead theytell me.Neither dying nor dead,I answered lightly.If that be all you maygo home again.With you,he replied,with a grin,certainly.And as it rains,thesooner the better.I must ask you for your sword,I a
38、m afraid.Take it,I said,with the philosophy which never deserts me.But theman will not die.I hope that may avail you,he answered in a tone I did not like.Leftwheel,my friends!To the Chatelet!March!There are worse places,I said,and resigned myself to fate.After all,Ihad been in a prison before,and le
39、arned that only one jail lets no prisonerescape.But when I found that my friends orders were to hand me over to thewatch,and that I was to be confined like any common jail-bird caughtcutting a purse or slitting a throat,I confess my heart sank.If I could getspeech with the Cardinal,all would probabl
40、y be well;but if I failed in this,or if the case came before him in strange guise,or if he were in a hardmood himself,then it might go ill with me.The edict said,death!And the lieutenant at the Chatelet did not put himself to much troubleto hearten me.What!again M.de Berault?he said,raising hiseyebr
41、ows as he received me at the gate,and recognised me by the light ofthe brazier which his men were just kindling outside.You are a verybold man,or a very foolhardy one,to come here again.The old business,I suppose?Yes,but he is not dead,I answered coolly.He has a trifle-a merescratch.It was behind th
42、e church of St Jacques.UNDER THE RED ROBE8He looked dead enough,my friend,the guardsman interposed.Hehad not yet left us.Bah!I answered scornfully.Have you ever known me make amistake When I kill a man I kill him.I put myself to pains,I tell you,notto kill this Englishman.Therefore he will live.I ho
43、pe so,the lieutenant said,with a dry smile.And you had betterhope so,too,M.de Berault,For if not-Well?I said,somewhat troubled.If not,what,my friend?I fear he will be the last man you will fight,he answered.And even ifhe lives,I would not be too sure,my friend.This time the Cardinal isdetermined to
44、put it down.He and I are old friends,I said confidently.So I have heard,he anwered,with a short laugh.I think that thesame was said of Chalais.I do not remember that it saved his head.This was not reassuring.But worse was to come.Early in themorning orders were received that I should be treated with
45、 especialstrictness,and I was given the choice between irons and one of the cellsbelow the level.Choosing the latter,I was left to reflect upon manythings;among others,on the queer and uncertain nature of the Cardinal,who loved,I knew,to play with a man as a cat with a mouse;and on the illeffects wh
46、ich sometimes attend a high chest-thrust however carefullydelivered.I only rescued myself at last from these and other unpleasantreflections by obtaining the loan of a pair of dice;and the light being justenough to enable me to reckon the throws,I amused myself for hours bycasting them on certain pr
47、inciples of my own.But a long run again andagain upset my calculations;and at last brought me to the conclusion thata run of bad luck may be so persistent as to see out the most sagaciousplayer.This was not a reflection very welcome to me at the moment.Nevertheless,for three days it was all the comp
48、any I had.At the endof that time,the knave of a jailor who attended me,and who had nevergrown tired of telling me,after the fashion of his kind,that I should behanged,came to me with a less assured air.Perhaps you would like a little water?he said civilly.Why,rascal?I asked.UNDER THE RED ROBE9To was
49、h with,he answered.I asked for some yesterday,and you would not bring it,I grumbled.However,better late than never.Bring it now.If I must hang,I willhang like a gentleman.But depend upon it,the Cardinal will not serve anold friend so scurvy a trick.You are to go to him,he announced,when he came back
50、 with thewater.What?To the Cardinal?I cried.Yes,he answered.Good!I exclaimed;and in my joy and relief I sprang up at once,and began to refresh my dress.So all this time I have been doing him aninjustice,I continued.VIVE MONSEIGNEUR!Long live the littleBishop of Luchon!I might have known it,too.Dont
51、make too sure!the man answered spitefully.Then he wenton,I have something else for you.A friend of yours left it at the gate,and he handed me a packet.Quite so!I said,leading his rascally face aright.And you kept itas long as you dared-as long as you thought I should hang,you knave!Was not that so?B
52、ut there,do not lie to me.Tell me instead which of myfriends left it.For,to confess the truth,I had not so many friends at thistime and ten good crowns-the packet contained no less a sum-argued apretty staunch friend,and one of whom a man might reasonably be proud.The knave sniggered maliciously.A c
53、rooked dwarfish man left it,hesaid.I doubt I might call him a tailor and not be far out.Chut!I answered-but I was a little out of countenance,nevertheless.I understand.An honest fellow enough,and in debt to me!I am gladhe remembered.But when am I to go,friend?In an hour,he answered sullenly.Doubtles
54、s he had looked to getone of the crowns;but I was too old a hand for that.If I came back Icould buy his services;and if I did not I should have wasted my money.Nevertheless,a little later,when I found myself on my way to theHotel Richelieu under so close a guard that I could see nothing in thestreet
55、 except the figures that immediately surrounded me,I wished that Ihad given him the money.At such times,when all hangs in the balanceUNDER THE RED ROBE10and the sky is overcast,the mind runs on luck and old superstitions,and isprone to think a crown given here may avail there-though THERE be ahundre
56、d leagues away.The Palais Richelieu was at this time in building,and we wererequired to wait in a long,bare gallery,where the masons were at work.Iwas kept a full hour here,pondering uncomfortably on the strange whimsand fancies of the great man who then ruled France as the KingsLieutenant-General,w
57、ith all the Kings powers,and whose life I had oncebeen the means of saving by a little timely information.On occasion hehad done something to wipe out the debt;and at other times he hadpermitted me to be free with him,and so far we were not unknown to oneanother.Nevertheless,when the doors were at l
58、ast thrown open,and I was ledinto his presence,my confidence underwent a shock.His cold glance,that,roving over me,regarded me not as a man but an item,the steelyglitter of his southern eyes,chilled me to the bone.The room was bare,the floor without carpet or covering.Some of the woodwork lay about,
59、unfinished and in pieces.But the man-this man,needed no surroundings.His keen pale face,his brilliant eyes,even his presence-though he was ofno great height,and began already to stoop at the shoulders-were enoughto awe the boldest.I recalled,as I looked at him,a hundred tales of hisiron will,his col
60、d heart,his unerring craft.He had humbled the Kingsbrother,the splendid Duke of Orleans,in the dust.He had curbed theQueen-mother.A dozen heads,the noblest in France,had come to theblock through him.Only two years before he had quelled Rochelle;onlya few months before he had crushed the great insurr
61、ection in Languedoc:and though the south,stripped of its old privileges,still seethed withdiscontent,no one in this year 1630 dared lift a hand against him-openly,at any rate.Under the surface a hundred plots,a thousand intrigues,sought his life or his power;but these,I suppose,are the hap of everyg
62、reat man.No wonder,then,that the courage on which I plumed myself sank lowat sight of him;or that it was as much as I could do to mingle with thehumility of my salute some touch of the SANG FROID of oldUNDER THE RED ROBE11acquaintanceship.And perhaps that had had been better left out.For it seemed t
63、hat thisman was without bowels.For a moment,while he stood looking at me,and before he spoke to me,I gave myself up for lost.There was a glintof cruel satisfaction in his eyes that warned me,before he opened hismouth,what he was going to say to me.I could not have made a better catch,M.de Berault,he
64、 said,smilingvillainously,while he gently smoothed the fur of a cat that had sprung onthe table beside him.An old offender,and an excellent example.Idoubt it will not stop with you.But later,we will make you the warrantfor flying at higher game.Monseigneur has handled a sword himself,I blurted out.T
65、he veryroom seemed to be growing darker,the air colder.I was never nearerfear in my life.Yes?he said,smiling delicately.And so-?Will not be too hard on the failings of a poor gentleman.He shall suffer no more than a rich one,he replied suavely as hestroked the cat.Enjoy that satisfaction,M.de Beraul
66、t.Is that all?Once I was of service to your Eminence,I said desperately.Payment has been made,he answered,more than once.But for thatI should not have seen you.The Kings face!I cried,snatching at the straw he seemed to holdout.He laughed cynically,smoothly.His thin face,his dark moustache,and whiten
67、ing hair,gave him an air of indescribable keenness.I am not the King,he said.Besides,I am told that you have killedas many as six men in duels.You owe the King,therefore,one life atleast.You must pay it.There is no more to be said,M.de Berault,hecontinued coldly,turning away and beginning to collect
68、 some papers.The law must take its course.I thought that he was about to nod to the lieutenant to withdraw me,and a chilling sweat broke out down my back.I saw the scaffold,I feltthe cords.A moment,and it would be too late!I have a favour to ask,I stammered desperately,if your EminenceUNDER THE RED
69、ROBE12will give me a moment alone.To what end?he answered,turning and eyeing me with colddisfavour.I know you-your past-all.It can do no good,my friend.No harm!I cried.And I am a dying man,Monseigneur!That is true,he said thoughtfully.Still he seemed to hesitate;andmy heart beat fast.At last he look
70、ed at the lieutenant.You may leaveus,he said shortly.Now,he continued,when the officer had withdrawnand left us alone,what is it?Say what you have to say quickly.And,above all,do not try to fool me,M.de Berault.But his piercing eyes so disconcerted me now that I had my chance,and was alone with him,
71、that I could not find a word to say,and stoodbefore him mute.I think this pleased him,for his face relaxed.Well?he said at last.Is that all?The man is not dead,I muttered.He shrugged his shoulders contemptuously.What of that?he said.That was not what you wanted to say tome.Once I saved your Eminence
72、s life,I faltered miserably.Admitted,he answered,in his thin,incisive voice.You mentionedthe fact before.On the other hand,you have taken six to my knowledge,M.de Berault.You have lived the life of a bully,a common bravo,agamester.You,a man of family!For shame!Do you wonder that ithas brought you to
73、 this!Yet on that one point I am willing to hear more,he added abruptly.I might save your Eminences life again,I cried.It was a suddeninspiration.You know something?he said quickly,fixing me with his eyes.Butno,he continued,shaking his head gently.Pshaw!The trick is old.Ihave better spies than you,M
74、.de Berault.But no better sword,I cried hoarsely.No,not in all your guard!That is true,he said slowly.That is true.To my surprise,he spokein a tone of consideration;and he looked down at the floor.Let me think,my friend,he continued.He walked two or three times up and down the room,while I stoodUNDE
75、R THE RED ROBE13trembling.I confess it,trembling.The man whose pulses danger hasno power to quicken,is seldom proof against suspense;and the suddenhope his words awakened in me so shook me that his figure as he trodlightly to and fro with the cat rubbing against his robe and turning time fortime wit
76、h him,wavered before my eyes.I grasped the table to steadymyself.I had not admitted even in my own mind how darkly the shadowof Montfaucon and the gallows had fallen across me.I had leisure to recover myself,for it was some time before he spoke.When he did,it was in a voice harsh,changed,imperative.
77、You have thereputation of a man faithful,at least,to his employer,he said.Do notanswer me.I say it is so.Well,I will trust you.I will give you onemore chance-though it is a desperate one.Woe to you if you fail me!Do you know Cocheforet in Bearn?It is not far from Auch.No,your Eminence.Nor M.de Coche
78、foret?No,your Eminence.So much the better,he replied.But you have heard of him.He hasbeen engaged in every Gascon plot since the late Kings death,and gavemore trouble last year in the Vivarais than any man twice his years.Atpresent he is at Bosost in Spain,with other refugees,but I have learnedthat
79、at frequent intervals he visits his wife at Cocheforet which is sixleagues within the border.On one of these visits he must be arrested.That should be easy,I said.The Cardinal looked at me.Chut,man!what do you know aboutit?he answered bluntly.It is whispered at Cocheforet if a soldiercrosses the str
80、eet at Auch.In the house are only two or three servants,but they have the countryside with them to a man,and they are adangerous breed.A spark might kindle a fresh rising.The arrest,therefore,must be made secretly.I bowed.One resolute man inside the house,the Cardinal continued,thoughtfully glancing
81、 at a paper which lay on the table,with the help oftwo or three servants whom he could summon to his aid at will,mighteffect it.The question is,Will you be the man,my friend?UNDER THE RED ROBE14I hesitated;then I bowed.What choice had I?Nay,nay,speak out!he said sharply.Yes or no,M.de Berault?Yes,yo
82、ur Eminence,I said reluctantly.Again,I say,what choicehad I?You will bring him to Paris,and alive.He knows things,and that iswhy I want him.You understand?I understand,Monseigneur,I answered.You will get into the house as you can,he continued with energy.For that you will need strategy,and good stra
83、tegy.They suspecteverybody.You must deceive them.If you fail to deceive them,or,deceiving them,are found out later,I do not think that you will trouble meagain,or break the edict a second time.On the other hand,should youdeceive me-he smiled still more subtly,but his voice sank to a purringnote-I wi
84、ll break you on the wheel like the ruined gamester you are!I met his look without quailing.So be it!I said recklessly.If I donot bring M.de Cocheforet to Paris,you may do that to me,and morealso!It is a bargain!he answered slowly.I think that you will befaithful.For money,here are a hundred crowns.T
85、hat sum shouldsuffice;but if you succeed you shall have twice as much more.That isall,I think.You understand?Yes,Monseigneur.Then why do you wait?The lieutenant?I said modestly.The Cardinal laughed to himself,and sitting down wrote a word or twoon a slip of paper.Give him that,he said in high good-h
86、umour.I fear,M.de Berault,you will never get your deserts-in this world!UNDER THE RED ROBE15CHAPTER II.AT THE GREEN PILLARCocheforet lies in a billowy land of oak and beech and chestnuts-aland of deep,leafy bottoms and hills clothed with forest.Ridge and valley,glen and knoll,the woodland,sparsely p
87、eopled and more sparsely tilled,stretches away to the great snow mountains that here limit France.Itswarms with game-with wolves and bears,deer and boars.To the end ofhis life I have heard that the great king loved this district,and would sigh,when years and State fell heavily on him,for the beech g
88、roves and box-covered hills of South Bearn.From the terraced steps of Auch you cansee the forest roll away in light and shadow,vale and upland,to the baseof the snow peaks;and,though I come from Brittany and love the smell ofthe salt wind,I have seen few sights that outdo this.It was the second week
89、 of October,when I came to Cocheforet,and,dropping down from the last wooded brow,rode quietly into the place atevening.I was alone,and had ridden all day in a glory of ruddy beechleaves,through the silence of forest roads,across clear brooks and gladesstill green.I had seen more of the quiet and pe
90、ace of the country thanhad been my share since boyhood,and for that reason,or because I had nogreat taste for the task before me-the task now so imminent-I felt a littlehipped.In good faith,it was not a gentlemans work that I was come todo,look at it how you might.But beggars must not be choosers,an
91、d I knew that this feeling wouldnot last.At the inn,in the presence of others,under the spur of necessity,or in the excitement of the chase,were that once begun,I should lose thefeeling.When a man is young he seeks solitude,when he is middle-aged,he flies it and his thoughts.I made therefore for the
92、 Green Pillar,a littleinn in the village street,to which I had been directed at Auch,and,thundering on the door with the knob of my riding switch,railed at theman for keeping me waiting.Here and there at hovel doors in the street-which was a mean,poorplace,not worthy of the name-men and women looked
93、 out at mesuspiciously.But I affected to ignore them;and at last the host came.UNDER THE RED ROBE16He was a fair-haired man,half-Basque,half-Frenchman,and had scannedme well,I was sure,through some window or peephole;for when he cameout he betrayed no surprise at the sight of a well-dressed stranger
94、-aportent in that out-of-the-way village-but eyed me with a kind of sullenreserve.I can lie here to-night,I suppose?I said,dropping the reins on thesorrels neck.The horse hung its head.I dont know,he answered stupidly.I pointed to the green bough which topped a post that stood oppositethe door.This
95、is an inn,is it not?I said.Yes,he answered slowly.It is an inn.But-But you are full,or you are out of food,or your wife is ill,orsomething else is amiss,I answered peevishly.All the same,I am goingto lie here.So you must make the best of it,and your wife too-if youhave one.He scratched his head,look
96、ing at me with an ugly glitter in his eyes.But he said nothing,and I dismounted.Where can I stable my horse?I asked.Ill put it up,he answered sullenly,stepping forward and taking thereins in his hand.Very well,I said.But I go with you.A merciful man is merciful tohis beast,and wherever I go I see my
97、 horse fed.It will be fed,he said shortly.And then he waited for me to go intothe house.The wife is in there,he continued,looking at me stubbornly.IMPRIMIS-if you understand Latin,my friend,I answered.thehorse in the stall.He saw that it was no good,turned the sorrel slowly round,and beganto lead it
98、 across the village street.There was a shed behind the inn,which I had already marked,and taken for the stable,I was surprised whenI found that he was not going there,but I made no remark,and in a fewminutes saw the horse made comfortable in a hovel which seemed tobelong to a neighbour.This done,the
99、 man led the way back to the inn,carrying my valise.UNDER THE RED ROBE17You have no other guests?I said,with a casual air.I knew that hewas watching me closely.No,he answered.This is not much in the way to anywhere,I suppose?No.That was so evident,that I never saw a more retired place.Thehanging woo
100、ds,rising steeply to a great height,so shut the valley in that Iwas puzzled to think how a man could leave it save by the road I had come.The cottages,which were no more than mean,small huts,ran in astraggling double line,with many gaps-through fallen trees and ill-clearedmeadows.Among them a noisy
101、brook ran in and out,and theinhabitants-charcoal-burners,or swine-herds,or poor devils of the likeclass,were no better than their dwellings.I looked in vain for theChateau.It was not to be seen,and I dared not ask for it.The man led me into the common room of the tavern-a low-roofed,poor place,lacki
102、ng a chimney or glazed windows,and grimy with smokeand use.The fire-a great half-burned tree-smouldered on a stone hearth,raised a foot from the floor.A huge black pot simmered over it,andbeside one window lounged a country fellow talking with the goodwife.In the dusk I could not see his face,but I
103、gave the woman a word,and satdown to wait for my supper.She seemed more silent than the common run of her kind;but thismight be because her husband was present.While she moved aboutgetting my meal,he took his place against the door-post and fell to staringat me so persistently that I felt by no mean
104、s at my ease.He was a tall,strong fellow,with a shaggy moustache and brown beard,cut in the modeHenri Quatre;and on the subject of that king-a safe one,I knew,with aBearnais-and on that alone,I found it possible to make him talk.Eventhen there was a suspicious gleam in his eyes that bade me abstain
105、fromquestions;so that as the darkness deepened behind him,and the firelightplayed more and more strongly on his features,and I thought of theleagues of woodland that lay between this remote valley and Auch,Irecalled the Cardinals warning that if I failed in my attempt I should belittle likely to tro
106、uble Paris again.UNDER THE RED ROBE18The lout by the window paid no attention to me;nor I to him,when Ihad once satisfied myself that he was really what he seemed to be.Butby-and-by two or three men-rough,uncouth fellows-dropped in toreinforce the landlord,and they,too seemed to have no other busine
107、ss thanto sit in silence looking at me,or now and again to exchange a word in aPATOIS of their own.By the time my supper was ready,the knavesnumbered six in all;and,as they were armed to a man with huge Spanishknives,and made it clear that they resented my presence in their dull rusticfashion-every
108、rustic is suspicious-I began to think that,unwittingly,I hadput my head into a wasps nest.Nevertheless,I ate and drank with apparent appetite;but little thatpassed within the circle of light cast by the smoky lamp escaped me.Iwatched the mens looks and gestures at least as sharply as they watchedmin
109、e;and all the time I was racking my wits for some mode of disarmingtheir suspicions,or failing that,of learning something more of the position,which far exceeded in difficulty and danger anything that I had expected.The whole valley,it would seem,was on the look-out to protect my man!I had purposely
110、 brought with me from Auch a couple of bottles ofchoice Armagnac;and these had been carried into the house with mysaddle bags.I took one out now and opened it and carelessly offered adram of the spirit to the landlord.He took it.As he drank it,I saw hisface flush;he handed back the cup reluctantly,a
111、nd on that hint I offeredhim another,The strong spirit was already beginning to work,and heaccepted,and in a few minutes began to talk more freely and with less ofthe constraint which had before marked us all.Still,his tongue ranchiefly on questions-he would know this,he would learn that;but eventhi
112、s was a welcome change.I told him openly whence I had come,bywhat road,how long I had stayed in Auch,and where;and so far I satisfiedhis curiosity.Only,when I came to the subject of my visit to CocheforetI kept a mysterious silence,hinting darkly at business in Spain and friendsacross the border,and
113、 this and that;in this way giving the peasants tounderstand,if they pleased,that I was in the same interest as their exiledmaster.They took the bait,winked at one another,and began to look at me in aUNDER THE RED ROBE19more friendly way-the landlord foremost.But when I had led them sofar,I dared go
114、no farther,lest I should commit myself and be found out.Istopped,therefore,and,harking back to general subjects,chanced tocompare my province with theirs.The landlord,now become almosttalkative,was not slow to take up this challenge;and it presently led to myacquiring a curious piece of knowledge.He
115、 was boasting of his greatsnow mountains,the forests that propped them,the bears that roamed inthem,the izards that loved the ice,and the boars that fed on the oak mast.Well,I said,quite by chance,we have not these things,it is true.But we have things in the north you have not.We have tens of thousa
116、ndsof good horses-not such ponies as you breed here.At the horse fair atFecamp my sorrel would be lost in the crowd.Here in the south you willnot meet his match in a long days journey.Do not make too sure of that,the man replied,his eyes bright withtriumph and the dram.What would you say if I showed
117、 you a better-inmy own stable?I saw that his words sent a kind of thrill through his other hearers,andthat such of them as understood for two or three of them talked theirPATOIS only-looked at him angrily;and in a twinkling I began tocomprehend.But I affected dullness,and laughed in scorn.Seeing is
118、believing,I said.I doubt if you knows good horse whenyou see one,my friend.Oh,dont I?he said,winking.Indeed!I doubt it,I answered stubbornly.Then come with me,and I will show you one,he retorted,discretiongiving way to vain-glory.His wife and the others,I saw,looked at himdumbfounded;but,without pay
119、ing any heed to them,he rose,took up alanthorn,and,assuming an air of peculiar wisdom,opened the door.Come with me,he continued.I dont know a good horse when I see one,dont I?I know a better than yours,at anyrate!I should not have been surprised if the other men had interfered;but Isuppose he was a
120、leader among them,they did not,and in a moment wewere outside.Three paces through the darkness took us to the stable,anoffset at the back of the inn.My man twirled the pin,and,leading theUNDER THE RED ROBE20way in,raised his lanthorn.A horse whinnied softly,and turned its bright,mild eyes on us-a ba
121、ldfaced chestnut,with white hairs in its tail and onewhite stocking.There!my guide exclaimed,waving the lanthorn to and froboastfully,that I might see its points.What do you say to that?Is thatan undersized pony?No,I answered,purposely stinting my praise.It is pretty fair-forthis country.Or any coun
122、try,he answered wrathfully.Or any country,I say-Idont care where it is!And I have reason to know!Why,man,thathorse is-But there,that is a good horse,if ever you saw one!And withthat he ended-abruptly and lamely;lowered the lanthorn with a suddengesture,and turned to the door.He was on the instant in
123、 such hurry toleave that he almost shouldered me out.But I understood.I knew that he had neatly betrayed all-that he hadbeen on the point of blurting out that that was M.de Cocheforets horse!M.Cocheforets COMPRENEZ BIEN!And while I turned away my facein the darkness that he might not see me smile,I
124、was not surprised to findthe man in a moment changed,and become,in the closing of the door,assober and suspicious as before,ashamed of himself and enraged with me,and in a mood to cut my throat for a trifle.It was not my cue to quarrel,however.I made therefore,as if I hadseen nothing,and when we wer
125、e back in the inn praised the horsegrudgingly,and like a man but half convinced.The ugly looks and uglyweapons I saw round me were fine incentives to caution;and no Italian,Iflatter myself,could have played his part more nicely than I did.But Iwas heartily glad when it was over,and I found myself,at
126、 last,left alonefor the night in a little garret-a mere fowl-house-upstairs,formed by theroof and gable walls,and hung with strings of apples and chestnuts.It wasa poor sleeping-place-rough,chilly,and unclean.I ascended to it by aladder;my cloak and a little fern formed my only bed.But I was glad to
127、accept it,for it enabled me to he alone and to think out the positionunwatched.Of course M.de Cocheforet was at the Chateau.He had left hisUNDER THE RED ROBE21horse here,and gone up on foot;probably that was his usual plan.Hewas therefore within my reach,in one sense-I could not have come at abetter
128、 time-but in another he was as much beyond it as if I were still inParis.For so far was I from being able to seize him that I dared not ask aquestion,or let fall a rash word,or even look about me freely.I saw Idared not.The slightest hint of my mission,the faintest breath of distrust,would lead to t
129、hroat-cutting-and the throat would be mine;while thelonger I lay in the village,the greater suspicion I should incur,and thecloser would be the watch kept upon me.In such a position some men might have given up the attempt indespair,and saved themselves across the border.But I have alwaysvalued myse
130、lf on my fidelity,and I did not shrink.If not to-day,to-morrow;if not this time,next time.The dice do not always turn up aces.Bracing myself,therefore,to the occasion,I crept,as soon as the housewas quiet,to the window,a small,square,open lattice,much cobwebbed,and partly stuffed with hay.I looked o
131、ut.The village seemed to beasleep.The dark branches of trees hung a few feet away,and almostobscured a grey,cloudy sky,through which a wet moon sailed drearily.Looking downwards,I could at first see nothing;but as my eyes grew usedto the darkness-I had only just put out my rushlight-I made out thest
132、able door and the shadowy outlines of the lean-to roof.I had hoped for this,for I could now keep watch,and learn at leastwhether Cocheforet left before morning.If he did not,I should know hewas still here.If he did,I should be the better for seeing his features,andlearning,perhaps,other things that
133、might be of use to me in the future.Making up my mind to the uncomfortable,I sat down on the floor bythe lattice,and began a vigil that might last,I knew,until morning.It didlast about an hour,at the end of which time I heard whispering below,thenfootsteps;then,as some persons turned a corner,a voic
134、e speaking aloudand carelessly.I could not catch the words or meaning,but the voice wasa gentlemans,and its bold accents and masterful tone left me in no doubtthat the speaker was M.de Cocheforet himself.Hoping to learn more,Ipressed my face nearer to the opening,and had just made out through theglo
135、om two figures-one that of a tall,slight man,wearing a cloak,theUNDER THE RED ROBE22other,I fancied,a womans,in a sheeny white dress-when a thunderingrap on the door of my garret made me spring back a yard from the lattice,and lie down hurriedly on my couch.The summons was repeated.Well?I cried,risi
136、ng on my elbow,and cursing the untimelyinterruption.I was burning with anxiety to see more.What is it?What is the matter?The trap-door was lifted a foot or more.The landlord thrust up hishead.You called,did you not?he said.He held up a rushlight,which illumined half the room and lit up hisgrinning f
137、ace.Called-at this hour of the night,you fool?I answered angrily.No!I did not call.Go to bed,man!But he remained on the ladder,gaping stupidly.I heard you,he said.Go to bed!You are drunk,I answered,sitting up.I tell you I didnot call.Oh,very well,he answered slowly.And you do not want anything?Nothi
138、ng-except to be left alone,I replied sourly.Umph!he said.Good-night!Good-night!Good-night!I answered with what patience I might.The tramp of the horses hoofs as it was led out of the stable was in myears at the moment.Good-night!I continued feverishly,hoping thathe would still retire in time,and I h
139、ave a chance to look out.I want tosleep.Good,he said,with a broad grin.But it is early yet,and you haveplenty of time.And then,at last,he slowly let down the trap-door,and I heard himchuckle as he went down the ladder.Before he reached the bottom I was at the window.The woman,whom I had seen,still s
140、tood below in the same place,and beside her was aman in a peasants dress,holding a lanthorn.But the man,the man Iwanted to see,was no longer there.He was gone,and it was evident thatthe others no longer feared me;for while I gazed the landlord came out tothem with another lanthorn swinging in his ha
141、nd,and said something toUNDER THE RED ROBE23the lady,and she looked up at my window and laughed.It was a warm night,and she wore nothing over her white dress.Icould see her tall,shapely figure and shining eyes,and the firm contour ofher beautiful face,which,if any fault might be found with it,erred
142、inbeing too regular.She looked like a woman formed by nature to meetdangers and difficulties,and to play a great part;even here,at midnight,inthe midst of these desperate men,she did not seem out of place.I couldfancy-I did not find it impossible to fancy-that under her queenlyexterior,and behind th
143、e contemptuous laugh with which she heard thelandlords story,there lurked a womans soul,a soul capable of folly andtenderness.But no outward sign betrayed its presence-as I saw her then.I scanned her very carefully;and secretly,if the truth be told,I wasglad to find that Madame de Cocheforet was suc
144、h a woman.I was gladthat she had laughed as she had-with a ring of disdain and defiance;gladthat she was not a little,tender,child-like woman,to be crushed by thefirst pinch of trouble.For if I succeeded in my task,if I contrived to-but,pish!Women,I told myself,were all alike.She would find consolat
145、ionquickly enough.I watched until the group broke up,and Madame,with one of the men,went her way round the corner of the inn,and out of my sight.Then Iretired to bed again,feeling more than ever perplexed what course Ishould adopt.It was clear that to succeed I must obtain admission to thehouse,whic
146、h was garrisoned,according to my instructions,by two orthree old men-servants only,and as many women;since Madame,todisguise her husbands visits the more easily,lived,and gave out that shelived,in great retirement.To seize her husband at home,therefore,mightbe no impossible task;though here,in the h
147、eart of the village,a troop ofhorse might make the attempt,and fail.But how was I to gain admission to the house-a house guarded byquick-witted women,and fenced with all the precautions love could devise?That was the question;and dawn found me still debating it,still as far asever from an answer.Anx
148、ious and feverish,I was glad when the lightcame,and I could get up.I thought that the fresh air might inspire me,and I was tired of my stuffy closet.I crept stealthily down the ladder,UNDER THE RED ROBE24and managed to pass unseen through the lower room,in which severalpersons were snoring heavily.T
149、he outer door was not fastened,and in ahand-turn I was in the street.It was still so early that the trees stood up black against the reddeningsky,but the bough upon the post before the door was growing green,andin a few minutes the grey light would be everywhere.Already,even inthe roadway,there was
150、a glimmering of it;and as I stood at the corner ofthe house-where I could command both the front and the side on whichthe stable opened-sniffing the fresh air,and looking for any trace of themidnight departure,my eyes detected something light-coloured lying onthe ground.It was not more than two or t
151、hree paces from me,and Istepped to it and picked it up curiously,hoping that it might be a note.Itwas not a note,however,but a tiny orange-coloured sachet such as womencarry in the bosom.It was full of some faintly-scented powder,and boreon one side the initial E,worked in white silk;and was altoget
152、her a daintylittle toy,such as women love.Doubtless Madame de Cocheforet had dropped it in the night.Iturned it over and over;and then I put it in my pouch with a smile,thinking that it might be useful sometime,and in some way.I hadscarcely done this,and turned with the intention of exploring the st
153、reet,when the door behind me creaked on its leather hinges,and in a momentthe host stood at my elbow,and gave me a surly greeting.Evidently his suspicions were again aroused,for from this time hemanaged to be with me,on one pretence or another until noon.Moreover,his manner grew each moment more chu
154、rlish,his hints plainer;until Icould scarcely avoid noticing the one or the other.About mid-day,having followed me for the twentieth time into the street,he came to thepoint by asking me rudely if I did not need my horse.No,I said.Why do you ask?Because,he answered,with an ugly smile,this is not a v
155、ery healthyplace for strangers.Ah!I retorted.But the border air suits me,you see,It was alucky answer,for,taken with my talk the night before,it puzzled him,bysuggesting that I was on the losing side,and had my reasons for lying nearUNDER THE RED ROBE25Spain.Before he had done scratching his head ov
156、er it,the clatter ofhoofs broke the sleepy quiet of the village street,and the lady I had seenthe night before rode quickly round the corner,and drew her horse on toits haunches.Without looking at me,she called to the innkeeper to cometo her stirrup.He went.The moment his back was turned,I slipped a
157、way,and in atwinkling was hidden by a house.Two or three glum-looking fellowsstared at me as I passed down the street,but no one moved;and in twominutes I was clear of the village,and in a half-worn track which ranthrough the wood,and led-if my ideas were right-to the Chateau.Todiscover the house an
158、d learn all that was to be learned about its situationwere my most pressing needs;and these,even at the risk of a knife thrust,I was determined to satisfy.I had not gone two hundred paces along the path,however,before Iheard the tread of a horse behind me,and I had just time to hide myselfbefore Mad
159、ame came up and rode by me,sitting her horse gracefully,andwith all the courage of a northern woman.I watched her pass,and then,assured by her presence that I was in the right road,I hurried after her.Two minutes walking at speed brought me to a light wooden bridgespanning a stream.I crossed this,an
160、d,as the wood opened,saw beforeme first a wide,pleasant meadow,and beyond this a terrace.On theterrace,pressed upon on three sides by thick woods,stood a grey mansion,with the corner tourelles,steep,high roofs,and round balconies,that menloved and built in the days of the first Francis.It was of goo
161、d size,but wore a gloomy aspect.A great yew hedge,which seemed to enclose a walk or bowling-green,hid the ground floor ofthe east wing from view,while a formal rose garden,stiff even in neglect,lay in front of the main building.The west wing,of which the lower roofsfell gradually away to the woods,p
162、robably contained the stables andgranaries.I stood a moment only,but I marked all,and noted how the roadreached the house,and which windows were open to attack;then I turnedand hastened back.Fortunately,I met no one between the house and thevillage,and was able to enter my hosts with an air of the m
163、ost completeUNDER THE RED ROBE26innocence.Short as had been my absence,however,I found things altered there.Round the door lounged three strangers-stout,well-armed fellows,whosebearing,as they loitered and chattered,suggested a curious mixture ofsmugness and independence.Half a dozen pack-horses sto
164、od tethered tothe post in front of the house;and the landlords manner,from being rudeand churlish only,had grown perplexed and almost timid.One of thestrangers,I soon found,supplied him with wine;the others were travellingmerchants,who rode in the first ones company for the sake of safety.Allwere su
165、bstantial men from Tarbes-solid burgesses;and I was not long inguessing that my host,fearing what might leak out before them,and,particularly,that I might refer to the previous nights disturbance,was ontenter-hooks while they remained.For a time this did not suggest anything to me.But when we had al
166、ltaken our seats for supper,there came an addition to the party.The dooropened,and the fellow whom I had seen the night before with Madame deCocheforet entered and took a stool by the fire.I felt sure that he wasone of the servants at the Chateau;and in a flash his presence inspired mewith the most
167、feasible plan for obtaining admission which I had yet hitupon.I felt myself grow hot at the thought-it seemed so full of promise,yet so doubtful-and,on the instant,without giving myself time to thinktoo much,I began to carry it into effect.I called for two or three bottles of better wine,and,assumin
168、g a jovialair,passed it round the table.When we had drunk a few glasses I fell totalking,and,choosing politics,took the side of the Languedoc party andthe malcontents in so reckless a fashion that the innkeeper was besidehimself at my imprudence.The merchants,who belonged to the class withwhom the C
169、ardinal was always most popular,looked first astonished andthen enraged.But I was not to be checked;hints and sour looks were lostupon me.I grew more outspoken with every glass,I drank to theRochellois,I swore it would not be long before they raised their headsagain;and,at last,while the innkeeper a
170、nd his wife were engaged lightingthe lamp,I passed round the bottle and called on all for a toast.Ill give you one to begin,I bragged noisily.A gentlemans toast!UNDER THE RED ROBE27A southern toast!Here is confusion to the Cardinal,and a health to allwho hate him!MON DIEU!one of the strangers cried,
171、springing from his seat in arage.I am not going to stomach that!Is your house a commontreason-hole,he continued,turning furiously on the landlord,that yousuffer this?Hoity-toity!I answered,coolly keeping my seat.What is all this?Dont you relish my toast,little man?No-nor you!he retorted hotly;whoeve
172、r you may be!Then I will give you another,I answered,with a hiccough.Perhaps itwill be more to your taste.Here is the Duke of Orleans,and may he soonbe King!UNDER THE RED ROBE28CHAPTER IIITHE HOUSE IN THE WOODWords so reckless fairly shook the three men out of their anger.For amoment they glared at
173、me as if they had seen a ghost.Then the winemerchant clapped his hand on the table.That is enough,he said,with a look at his companions.I think thatthere can be no mistake about that.As damnable treason as ever I heardwhispered!I congratulate you,sir,on your boldness.As for you,hecontinued,turning w
174、ith an ugly sneer to the landlord,I shall know nowthe company you keep!I was not aware that my wine wet whistles tosuch a tune!But if he was startled,the innkeeper was furious,seeing his characterthus taken away;and,being at no time a man of many words,he ventedhis rage exactly in the way I wished,r
175、aising in a twinkling such an uproaras can scarcely be conceived.With a roar like a bulls,he ran headlong atthe table,and overturned it on the top of me.Fortunately the womansaved the lamp,and fled with it into a corner,whence she and the manfrom the Chateau watched the skirmish in silence;but the p
176、ewter cups andplatters flew spinning across the floor,while the table pinned me to theground among the ruins of my stool.Having me at this disadvantage-forat first I made no resistance the landlord began to belabour me with thefirst thing he snatched up,and when I tried to defend myself,cursed mewit
177、h each blow for a treacherous rogue and a vagrant.Meanwhile thethree merchants,delighted with the turn things had taken,skipped roundus laughing,and now hounded him on,now bantered me with how is thatfor the Duke of Orleans?and How now,traitor?When I thought that this had lasted long enough-or,to sp
178、eak moreplainly,when I could stand the innkeepers drubbing no longer-I threwhim off,and struggled to my feet;but still,though the blood was tricklingdown my face,I refrained from drawing my sword.I caught up instead aleg of the stool which lay handy,and,watching my opportunity,dealt thelandlord a sh
179、rewd blow under the ear,which laid him out in a moment onthe wreck of his own table.UNDER THE RED ROBE29Now,I cried,brandishing my new weapon,which fitted the hand to anicety,come on!Come on!if you dare to strike a blow,you peddling,truckling,huckstering knaves!A fig for you and your shavelingCardin
180、al!The red-faced wine merchant drew his sword in a one-two.Why,you drunken fool,he said wrathfully,put that stick down,or Iwill spit you like a lark!Lark in your teeth!I cried,staggering as if the wine were in myhead.And cuckoo,too!Another word,and I-He made a couple ofsavage passes at me,but in a t
181、winkling his sword flew across the room.VOILA!I shouted,lurching forward,as if I had luck and not skill tothank for my victory.Now,the next!Come on,come on-you white-livered knaves!And,pretending a drunken frenzy,I flung my weaponbodily amongst them,and seizing the nearest,began to wrestle with him.
182、In a moment they all threw themselves upon me,and,swearingcopiously,bore me back to the door.The wine merchant criedbreathlessly to the woman to open it,and in a twinkling they had methrough it,and half-way across the road.The one thing I feared was aknife-thrust in the MELEE;but I had to run that r
183、isk,and the men werehonest,and,thinking me drunk,indulgent.In a trice I found myself on myback in the dirt,with my head humming;and heard the bars of the doorfall noisily into their places.I got up and went to the door,and,to play out my part,hammered on itfrantically;crying out to them to let me in
184、.But the three travellers onlyjeered at me,and the landlord,coming to the window,with his headbleeding,shook his fist at me,and cursed me for a mischief-maker.Baffled in this,I retired to a log which lay in the road a few paces fromthe house,and sat down on it to await events.With torn clothes andbl
185、eeding face,hatless and covered with dirt,I was in little better case thanmy opponent.It was raining,too,and the dripping branches swayed overmy head.The wind was in the south-the coldest quarter.I began tofeel chilled and dispirited.If my scheme failed,I had forfeited roof andbed to no purpose,and
186、placed future progress out of the question.It wasa critical moment.UNDER THE RED ROBE30But at last that happened for which I had been looking.The doorswung open a few inches,and a man came noiselessly out;it was quicklybarred behind him.He stood a moment,waiting on the threshold andpeering into the
187、gloom;and seemed to expect to be attacked.Findinghimself unmolested,however,and all quiet,he went off steadily down thestreet-towards the Chateau.I let a couple of minutes go by,and then I followed.I had nodifficulty in hitting on the track at the end of the street,but when I hadonce plunged into th
188、e wood,I found myself in darkness so intense that Isoon strayed from the path,and fell over roots,and tore my clothes withthorns,and lost my temper twenty times before I found the path again.However,I gained the bridge at last,and thence caught sight of a lighttwinkling before me.To make for it acro
189、ss the meadow and terrace wasan easy task;yet,when I had reached the door and had hammered upon it,I was so worn out,and in so sorry a plight that I sank down,and had littleneed to play a part,or pretend to be worse than I was.For a long time no one answered.The dark house towering above meremained
190、silent.I could hear,mingled with the throbbings of my heart,the steady croaking of the frogs in a pond near the stables;but no othersound.In a frenzy of impatience and disgust,I stood up again andhammered,kicking with my heels on the nail-studded door,and crying outdesperately,-A MOI!A MOI!Then,or a
191、 moment later,I heard a remote door opened;footsteps as ofmore than one person drew near.I raised my voice and cried again,-A MOI!Who is there?a voice asked.A gentleman in distress,I answered piteously,moving my handsacross the door.For Gods sake open and let me in.I am hurt,anddying of cold.What br
192、ings you here?the voice asked sharply.Despite itstartness,I fancied that it was a womans.Heaven knows!I answered desperately.I cannot tell.Theymaltreated me at the inn,and threw me into the street.I crawled away,UNDER THE RED ROBE31and have been wandering in the wood for hours.Then I saw a light her
193、e.On that some muttering took place on the other side of the door-towhich I had my ear.It ended in the bars being lowered.The doorswung partly open,and a light shone out,dazzling me.I tried to shademy eyes with my fingers,and,as did so,fancied I heard a murmur of pity.But when I looked in under scre
194、en of my hand,I saw only one person-theman who held the light,and his aspect was so strange,so terrifying,that,shaken as I was by fatigue,I recoiled a step.He was a tall and very thin man,meanly dressed in a short,scantyjacket and well-darned hose.Unable,for some reason,to bend his neck,he carried h
195、is head with a strange stiffness.And that head-never did living man show a face so like death.Hisforehead was bald and yellow,his cheek-bones stood out under thestrained skin,all the lower part of his face fell in,his jaws receded,hischeeks were hollow,his lips and chin were thin and fleshless.He se
196、emedto have only one expression-a fixed grin.While I stood looking at this formidable creature,he made a quickmovement to shut the door again,smiling more widely.I had thepresence of mind to thrust in my foot,and,before he could resent the act,avoice in the background cried,-For shame,Clon!Stand bac
197、k,stand back!do you hear?I amafraid,Monsieur,that you are hurt.Those words were my welcome to that house;and,spoken at an hourand in circumstances so gloomy,they made a lasting impression.Roundthe hall ran a gallery,and this,the height of the apartment,and the darkpanelling seemed to swallow up the
198、light.I stood within the entrance(as itseemed to me)of a huge cave;the skull-headed porter had the air of anogre.Only the voice which greeted me dispelled the illusion.I turnedtrembling towards the quarter whence it came,and,shading my eyes,made out a womans form standing in a doorway under the gall
199、ery.Asecond figure,which I took to be that of the servant I had seen at the inn,loomed uncertainly beside her.I bowed in silence.My teeth were chattering.I was faint withoutfeigning,and felt a kind of terror,hard to explain,at the sound of thisUNDER THE RED ROBE32womans voice.One of our people has t
200、old me about you,she continued,speaking outof the darkness.I am sorry that this has happened to you here,but I amafraid that you were indiscreet.I take all the blame,Madame,I answered humbly.I ask only shelterfor the night.The time has not yet come when we cannot give our friends that!sheanswered wi
201、th noble courtesy.When it does,Monsieur,we shall behomeless ourselves.I shivered,looking anywhere but at her;for,if the truth be told,I hadnot sufficiently pictured this scene of my arrival-I had not foredrawn itsdetails;and now I took part in it I felt a miserable meanness weigh medown.I had never
202、from the first liked the work,but I had had no choice,and I had no choice now.Luckily,the guise in which I came,my fatigue,and wound were a sufficient mask,or I should have incurred suspicion atonce.For I am sure that if ever in this world a brave man wore a hang-dogair,or Gil de Berault fell below
203、himself,it was then and there-on Madamede Cocheforets threshold,with her welcome sounding in my ears.One,I think,did suspect me.Clon,the porter,continued to hold thedoor obstinately ajar and to eye me with grinning spite,until his mistress,with some sharpness,bade him drop the bars and conduct me to
204、 a room.Do you go also,Louis,she continued,speaking to the man beside her,and see this gentleman comfortably disposed.I am sorry,she added,addressing me in the graceful tone she had before used,and I thought thatI could see her head bend in the darkness,that our present circumstancesdo not permit us
205、 to welcome you more fitly,Monsieur.But the troublesof the times-however,you will excuse what is lacking.Until to-morrow,I have the honour to bid you good-night.Good-night,Madame,I stammered,trembling.I had not been ableto distinguish her face in the gloom of the doorway,but her voice,hergreeting,he
206、r presence unmanned me.I was troubled and perplexed;Ihad not spirit to kick a dog.I followed the two servants from the hallwithout heeding how we went;nor was it until we came to a full stop at adoor in a white-washed corridor,and it was forced upon me thatUNDER THE RED ROBE33something was in questi
207、on between my two conductors that I began totake notice.Then I saw that one of them,Louis,wished to lodge me here where westood.The porter,on the other hand,who held the keys,would not.Hedid not speak a word,nor did the other-and this gave a queer ominouscharacter to the debate;but he continued to j
208、erk his head towards thefarther end of the corridor;and,at last,he carried his point.Louisshrugged his shoulders,and moved on,glancing askance at me;and I,notunderstanding the matter in debate,followed the pair in silence.We reached the end of the corridor,and there for an instant the monsterwith th
209、e keys paused and grinned at me.Then he turned into a narrowpassage on the left,and after following it for some paces,halted before asmall,strong door.His key jarred in the lock,but he forced it shriekinground,and with a savage flourish threw the door open.I walked in and saw a mean,bare chamber wit
210、h barred windows.Thefloor was indifferently clean,there was no furniture.The yellow light ofthe lanthorn falling on the stained walls gave the place the look of adungeon.I turned to the two men.This is not a very good room,I said.And it feels damp.Have you no other?Louis looked doubtfully at his com
211、panion.But the porter shook hishead stubbornly.Why does he not speak?I asked with impatience.He is dumb,Louis answered.Dumb!I exclaimed.But he hears.He has ears,the servant answered drily.But he has no tongue,Monsieur.I shuddered.How did he lose it?I asked.At Rochelle.He was a spy,and the kings peop
212、le took him the daythe town surrendered.They spared his life,but cut out his tongue.Ah!I said.I wished to say more,to be natural,to show myself atmy ease.But the porters eyes seemed to burn into me,and my owntongue clave to the roof of my mouth.He opened his lips and pointed tohis throat with a horr
213、id gesture,and I shook my head and turned from him-You can let me have some bedding?I murmured hastily,for the sake ofUNDER THE RED ROBE34saying something,and to escape.Of course,Monsieur,Louis answered.I will fetch some.He went away,thinking doubtless that Clon would stay with me.Butafter waiting a
214、 minute the porter strode off also with the lanthorn,leavingme to stand in the middle of the damp,dark room and reflect on theposition.It was plain that Clon suspected me.This prison-like room,with its barred window,at the back of the house,and in the wing farthestfrom the stables,proved so much.Cle
215、arly,he was a dangerous fellow,ofwhom I must beware.I had just begun to wonder how Madame couldkeep such a monster in her house,when I heard his step returning.Hecame in,lighting Louis,who carried a small pallet and a bundle ofcoverings.The dumb man had,besides the lanthorn,a bowl of water and a pie
216、ceof rag in his hand.He set them down,and going out again,fetched in astool.Then he hung up the lanthorn on a nail,took the bowl and rag,andinvited me to sit down.I was loth to let him touch me;but he continued to stand over me,pointing and grinning with dark persistence,and rather than stand on atr
217、ifle I sat down at last and gave him his way.He bathed my headcarefully enough,and I daresay did it good;but I understood.I knew thathis only desire was to learn whether the cut was real or a pretence,and Ibegan to fear him more and more;until he was gone from the room,Idared scarcely lift my face l
218、est he should read too much in it.Alone,even,I felt uncomfortable,this seemed so sinister a business,and so ill begun.I was in the house.But Madames frank voicehaunted me,and the dumb mans eyes,full of suspicion and menace.When I presently got up and tried my door,I found it locked.The roomsmelt dan
219、k and close-like a vault.I could not see through the barredwindow,but I could hear the boughs sweep it in ghostly fashion;and Iguessed that it looked out where the wood grew close to the walls of thehouse,and that even in the day the sun never peeped through it.Nevertheless,tired and worn out,I slep
220、t at last.When I awoke theroom was full of grey light,the door stood open,and Louis,lookingashamed of himself,waited by my pallet with a cup of wine in his hand,UNDER THE RED ROBE35and some bread and fruit on a platter.Will Monsieur be good enough to rise?he said.It is eightoclock.Willingly,I answer
221、ed tartly.Now that the door is unlocked.He turned red.It was an oversight,he stammered Clon isaccustomed to lock the door,and he did it inadvertently,forgetting thatthere was anyone-Inside,I said drily.Precisely,Monsieur.Ah!I replied.Well,I do not think the oversight would pleaseMadame de Cocheforet
222、 if she heard of it?If Monsieur would have the kindness not to-Mention it,my good fellow?answered,looking at him withmeaning as I rose.No.But it must not occur again.I saw that this man was not like Clon.He had the instincts of thefamily servant,and freed from the influences of fear and darkness fel
223、tashamed of his conduct.While he arranged my clothes,he looked roundthe room with an air of distaste,and muttered once or twice that thefurniture of the principal chambers was packed away.M.de Cocheforet is abroad,I think?I said as I dressed.And likely to remain there,the man answered carelessly,shr
224、ugginghis shoulders.Monsieur will doubtless have heard that he is in trouble.In the meantime,the house is TRISTE,and Monsieur must overlook much,if he stays.Madame lives retired,and the roads are ill-made and visitorsfew.When the lion was ill the jackals left him,I said.Louis nodded.It is true,he an
225、swered simply.He made no boast orbrag on his own account,I noticed;and it came home to me that he was afaithful fellow,such as I love.I questioned him discreetly,and learnedthat he and Clon and an older man who lived over the stables were theonly male servants left of a great household.Madame,her si
226、ster-in-law,and three women completed the family.It took me some time to repair my wardrobe,so that I daresay it wasnearly ten when I left my dismal little room.I found Louis waiting in theUNDER THE RED ROBE36corridor,and he told me that Madame de Cocheforet and Mademoisellewere in the rose garden,a
227、nd would be pleased to receive me.I nodded,and he guided me through several dim passages to a parlour with an opendoor,through which the sun shone gaily on the floor.Cheered by themorning air and this sudden change to pleasantness and life,I steppedlightly out.The two ladies were walking up and down
228、 a wide path which bisectedthe garden.The weeds grew rankly in the gravel underfoot,the rosebushes which bordered the walk thrust their branches here and there inuntrained freedom,a dark yew hedge which formed the backgroundbristled with rough shoots and sadly needed trimming.But I did not seeany of
229、 these things.The grace,the noble air,the distinction of the twowomen who paced slowly to meet me-and who shared all these qualities,greatly as they differed in others-left me no power to notice trifles.Mademoiselle was a head shorter than her BELLE-SOEUR-a slenderwoman and petite,with a beautiful f
230、ace and a fair complexion;a womanwholly womanly.She walked with dignity,but beside Madames statelyfigure she had an air almost childish.And it was characteristic of the twothat Mademoiselle as they drew near to me regarded me with sorrowfulattention,Madame with a grave smile.I bowed low.They returne
231、d the salute.This is my sister,Madamede Cocheforet said,with a very slight air of condescension,Will youplease to tell me your name,Monsieur?I am M.de Barthe,a gentlemanof Normandy,I said,taking on impulse the name of my mother.My own,by a possibility,might be known.Madames face wore a puzzled look.
232、I do not know that name,Ithink,she said thoughtfully.Doubtless she was going over in her mindall the names with which conspiracy had made her familiar.That is my misfortune,Madame,I said humbly.Nevertheless I am going to scold you,she rejoined,still eyeing mewith some keenness.I am glad to see that
233、you are none the worse foryour adventure-but others may be.And you should have borne that inmind,sir.I do not think that I hurt the man seriously,I stammered.UNDER THE RED ROBE37I do not refer to that,she answered coldly.You know,or shouldknow,that we are in disgrace here;that the Government regards
234、 us alreadywith an evil eye,and that a very small thing would lead them to garrisonthe village,and perhaps oust us from the little the wars have left us.Youshould have known this,and considered it,she continued.Whereas-Ido not say that you are a braggart,M.de Barthe.But on this oneoccasion you seem
235、to have played the part of one.Madame,I did not think,I stammered.Want of thought causes much evil,she answered,smiling.However,Ihave spoken,and we trust that while you stay with us you will be morecareful.For the rest,Monsieur,she continued graciously,raising herhand to prevent me speaking,we do no
236、t know why you are here,or whatplans you are pursuing.And we do not wish to know.It is enough thatyou are of our side.This house is at your service as long as you please touse it.And if we can aid you in any other way we will do so.Madame!I exclaimed;and there I stopped.I could say no more.The rose
237、garden,with its air of neglect,the shadow of the quiet house thatfell across it,the great yew hedge which backed it,and was the pattern ofone under which I had played in childhood-all had points that pricked me.But the womens kindness,their unquestioning confidence,the noble air ofhospitality which
238、moved them!Against these and their placid beauty inits peaceful frame I had no shield,no defence.I turned away,andfeigned to be overcome by gratitude.I have no words-to thank you!I muttered presently.I am a littleshaken this morning.I-pardon me.We will leave you for a while,Mademoiselle de Cochefore
239、t said ingentle pitying tones.The air will revive you.Louis shall call youwhen we go to dinner,M.de Barthe.Come,Elise.I bowed low to hide my face,and they nodded pleasantly-not lookingclosely at me-as they walked by me to the house.I watched the twogracious,pale-robed figures until the doorway swall
240、owed them,and then Iwalked away to a quiet corner where the shrubs grew highest and the yewhedge threw its deepest shadow,and I stood to think.And,MON DIEU,strange thoughts.If the oak can think at theUNDER THE RED ROBE38moment the wind uproots it,or the gnarled thorn-bush when the landsliptears it f
241、rom the slope,they may have such thoughts,I stared at the leaves,at the rotting blossoms,into the dark cavities of the hedge;I staredmechanically,dazed and wondering.What was the purpose for which Iwas here?What was the work I had come to do?Above all,how-myGod!how was I to do it in the face of thes
242、e helpless women,who trustedme,who believed in me,who opened their house to me?Clon had notfrightened me,nor the loneliness of the leagued village,nor theremoteness of this corner where the dread Cardinal seemed a name,andthe Kings writ ran slowly,and the rebellion long quenched elsewhere,stillsmoul
243、dered.But Madames pure faith,the younger womans tenderness-how was I to face these?I cursed the Cardinal-would he had stayed at Luchon.I cursed theEnglish fool who had brought me to this,I cursed the years of plenty andscarceness,and the Quartier Marais,and Zatons,where I had lived like apig,and-A t
244、ouch fell on my arm.I turned.It was Clon.How he had stolenup so quietly,how long he had been at my elbow,I could not tell.But hiseyes gleamed spitefully in their deep sockets,and he laughed with hisfleshless lips;and I hated him.In the daylight the man looked more likea deaths-head than ever.I fanci
245、ed that I read in his face that he knew mysecret,and I flashed into rage at sight of him.What is it?I cried,with another oath.Dont lay your corpse-clawson me!He mowed at me,and,bowing with ironical politeness,pointed to thehouse.Is Madame served?I said impatiently,crushing down my anger.Isthat what
246、you mean,fool?He nodded,Very well,I retorted.I can find my way then.You may go!He fell behind,and I strode back through the sunshine and flowers,and along the grass-grown paths,to the door by which I had come Iwalked fast,but his shadow kept pace with me,driving out theunaccustomed thoughts in which
247、 I had been indulging.Slowly but surely itUNDER THE RED ROBE39darkened my mood.After all,this was a little,little place;the peoplewho lived here-I shrugged my shoulders.France,power,pleasure,life,everything worth winning,worth having,lay yonder in the great city.Aboy might wreck himself here for a f
248、ancy;a man of the world,never.When I entered the room,where the two ladies stood waiting for me bythe table,I was nearly my old self again.And a chance word presentlycompleted the work.Clon made you understand,then?the young woman said kindly,as Itook my seat.Yes,Mademoiselle,I answered.On that I sa
249、w the two smile at oneanother,and I added:He is a strange creature.I wonder that you canbear to have him near you.Poor man!You do not know his story?Madame said.I have heard something of it,I answered.Louis told me.Well,I do shudder at him sometimes,she replied,in a low voice.He has suffered-and hor
250、ribly,and for us.But I wish that it had been onany other service.Spies are necessary things,but one does not wish tohave to do with them!Anything in the nature of treachery is so horrible.Quick,Louis!Mademoiselle exclaimed,the cognac,if you haveany there!I am sure that you are-still feeling ill,Mons
251、ieur.No,I thank you,I muttered hoarsely,making an effort to recovermyself.I am quite well.It was-an old wound that sometimes touchesme.UNDER THE RED ROBE40CHAPTER IVMADAME AND MADEMOISELLETo be frank,however,it was not the old wound that touched me sonearly,but Madames words;which,finishing what Clo
252、ns suddenappearance in the garden had begun,went a long way towards hardeningme and throwing me back into myself.I saw with bitterness-what I hadperhaps forgotten for a moment-how great was the chasm that separatedme from these women;how impossible it was that we could long thinkalike;how far apart
253、in views,in experience,in aims we were.And whileI made a mock in my heart of their high-flown sentiments-or thought Idid-I laughed no less at the folly which had led me to dream,even for a,moment,that I could,at my age,go back-go back and risk all for a whim,a scruple,the fancy of a lonely hour.I da
254、resay something of this showed in my face;for Madames eyesmirrored a dim reflection of trouble as she looked at me,andMademoiselle talked nervously and at random.At any rate,I fancied so,and I hastened to compose myself;and the two,in pressing upon me thesimple dainties of the table soon forgot,or a
255、ppeared to forget,the incident.Yet in spite of this CONTRETEMPS,that first meal had a strangecharm for me.The round table whereat we dined was spread inside theopen door which led to the garden,so that the October sunshine fell full onthe spotless linen and quaint old plate,and the fresh balmy air f
256、illed theroom with the scent of sweet herbs.Louis served us with the mien of amajor-domo,and set on each dish as though it had been a peacock or amess of ortolans.The woods provided the larger portion of our meal;thegarden did its part;the confections Mademoiselle had cooked with herown hand.By-and-
257、by,as the meal went on,as Louis trod to and fro across thepolished floor,and the last insects of summer hummed sleepily outside,and the two gracious faces continued to smile at me out of the gloom-forthe ladies sat with their backs to the door-I began to dream again,I beganto sink again into folly,t
258、hat was half-pleasure,half-pain.The fury of thegaming-house and the riot of Zatons seemed far away.The triumphs ofUNDER THE RED ROBE41the fencing-room-even they grew cheap and tawdry.I thought ofexistence as one outside it,I balanced this against that,and wonderedwhether,after all,the red soutane we
259、re so much better than the homelyjerkin,or the fame of a day than ease and safety.And life at Cocheforet was all after the pattern of this dinner.Each day,I might almost say each meal,gave rise to the same sequence of thoughts.In Clons presence,or when some word of Madames,unconsciously harsh,remind
260、ed me of the distance between us,I was myself.At other times,inface of this peaceful and intimate life,which was only rendered possibleby the remoteness of the place and the peculiar circumstances in which theladies stood,I felt a strange weakness,The loneliness of the woods thatencircled the house,
261、and only here and there afforded a distant glimpse ofsnow-clad peaks;the absence of any link to bind me to the old life,so thatat intervals it seemed unreal;the remoteness of the great world,all tendedto sap my will and weaken the purpose which had brought me to thisplace.On the fourth day after my
262、coming,however,something happened tobreak the spell.It chanced that I came late to dinner,and entered theroom hastily and without ceremony,expecting to find Madame and hersister already seated.Instead,I found them talking in a low tone by theopen door,with every mark of disorder in their appearance;
263、while Clonand Louis stood at a little distance with downcast faces and perplexedlooks.I had time to see all this,and then my entrance wrought a suddenchange.Clon and Louis sprang to attention;Madame and her sister cameto the table and sat down,and all made a shallow pretence of being at theirease.Bu
264、t Mademoiselles face was pale,her hand trembled;and thoughMadames greater self-command enabled her to carry off the matter better,I saw that she was not herself.Once or twice she spoke harshly to Louis;she fell at other times into a brown study;and when she thought that I wasnot watching her,her fac
265、e wore a look of deep anxiety.I wondered what all this meant;and I wondered more when,after themeal,the two walked in the garden for an hour with Clon.Mademoisellecame from this interview alone,and I was sure that she had been weeping.UNDER THE RED ROBE42Madame and the dark porter stayed outside som
266、e time longer;then she,too,came in,and disappeared.Clon did not return with her,and when I went into the garden fiveminutes later,Louis also had vanished.Save for two women who satsewing at an upper window,the house seemed to be deserted.Not asound broke the afternoon stillness of room or garden,and
267、 yet I felt thatmore was happening in this silence than appeared on the surface.I beginto grow curious-suspicious,and presently slipped out myself by way ofthe stables,and skirting the wood at the back of the house,gained with alittle trouble the bridge which crossed the stream and led to the villag
268、e.Turning round at this point I could see the house,and I moved a littleaside into the underwood,and stood gazing at the windows,trying tounriddle the matter.It was not likely that M.de Cocheforet would repeathis visit so soon;and,besides,the womens emotions had been those ofpure dismay and grief,un
269、mixed with any of the satisfaction to which sucha meeting,though snatched by stealth,must give rise.I discarded myfirst thought therefore-that he had returned unexpectedly-and I soughtfor another solution.But no other was on the instant forthcoming.The windows remainedobstinately blind,no figures ap
270、peared on the terrace,the garden laydeserted,and without life.My departure had not,as I half expected itwould,drawn the secret into light.I watched awhile,at times cursing my own meanness;but theexcitement of the moment and the quest tided me over that.Then Idetermined to go down into the village an
271、d see whether anything wasmoving there.I had been down to the inn once,and had been receivedhalf sulkily,half courteously,as a person privileged at the great house,andtherefore to be accepted.It would not be thought odd if I went again,andafter a moments thought,I started down the track.This,where i
272、t ran through the wood,was so densely shaded that thesun penetrated to it little,and in patches only.A squirrel stirred at times,sliding round a trunk,or scampering across the dry leaves.Occasionallya pig grunted and moved farther into the wood.But the place was veryquiet,and I do not know how it wa
273、s that I surprised Clon instead of beingUNDER THE RED ROBE43surprised by him.He was walking along the path before me with his eyes on the ground-walking so slowly,and with his lean frame so bent that I might havesupposed him ill if I had not remarked the steady movement of his headfrom right to left
274、,and the alert touch with which he now and againdisplaced a clod of earth or a cluster of leaves.By-and-by he rose stiffly,and looked round him suspiciously;but by that time I had slipped behind atrunk,and was not to be seen;and after a brief interval he went back to histask,stooping over it more cl
275、osely,if possible,than before,and applyinghimself with even greater care.By that time I had made up my mind that he was tracking someone.But whom?I could not make a guess at that.I only knew that the plotwas thickening,and began to feel the eagerness of the chase.Of course,if the matter had not to d
276、o with Cocheforet,it was no affair of mine;butthough it seemed unlikely that anything could bring him back so soon,hemight still be at the bottom of this.And,besides,I felt a natural curiosity.When Clon at last improved his pace,and went on to the village,I took uphis task.I called to mind all the w
277、ood-lore I had ever learned,andscanned trodden mould and crushed leaves with eager eyes.But in vain.I could make nothing of it all,and rose at last with an aching back and noadvantage.I did not go on to the village after that,but returned to the house,where I found Madame pacing the garden.She looke
278、d up eagerly onhearing my step;and I was mistaken if she was not disappointed-if shehad not been expecting someone else.She hid the feeling bravely,however,and met me with a careless word;but she turned to the housemore than once while we talked,and she seemed to be all the while on thewatch,and une
279、asy.I was not surprised when Clons figure presentlyappeared in the doorway,and she left me abruptly,and went to him.Ionly felt more certain than before that there was something strange on foot.What it was,and whether it had to do with M.de Cocheforet,I could nottell.But there it was,and I grew more
280、curious the longer I remainedalone.She came back to me presently,looking thoughtful and a trifleUNDER THE RED ROBE44downcast.That was Clon,was it not?I said,studying her face,Yes,she answered.She spoke absently,and did not look at me.How does he talk to you?I asked,speaking a trifle curtly.As I inte
281、nded,my tone roused her.By signs,she said.Is he-is he not a little mad?I ventured.I wanted to make her talkand forget herself.She looked at me with sudden keenness,then dropped her eyes,You do not like him?she said,a note of challenge in her voice.Ihave noticed that,Monsieur.I think he does not like
282、 me,I replied.He is less trustful than we are,she answered naively.It is naturalthat he should be.He has seen more of the world.That silenced me for a moment,but she did not seem to notice it.I was looking for him a little while ago,and I could not find him,Isaid,after a pauseHe has been into the vi
283、llage,she answered.I longed to pursue the matter further;but though she seemed toentertain no suspicion of me,I dared not run the risk.I tried her,instead,on another tack.Mademoiselle de Cocheforet does not seem very well to-day?Isaid.No?she answered carelessly.Well,now you speak of it,I do notthink
284、 that she is.She is often anxious about-one we love.She uttered the last words with a little hesitation,and looked at mequickly when she had spoken them.We were sitting at the moment on astone seat which had the wall of the house for a back;and,fortunately,Iwas toying with the branch of a creeping p
285、lant that hung over it,so thatshe could not see more than the side of my face.For I knew that italtered.Over my voice,however,I had more control,and I hastened toanswer,Yes,I suppose so,as innocently as possible.He is at Bosost,in Spain.You knew that,I conclude?she said,with a certain sharpness.And
286、she looked me in the face again verydirectly.UNDER THE RED ROBE45Yes,I answered,beginning to tremble.I suppose you have heard,too,that he-that he sometimes crosses theborder?she continued in a low voice,but with a certain ring ofinsistence in her tone.Or,if you have not heard it,you guess it?I was i
287、n a quandary,and grew,in one second,hot all over.Uncertainwhat amount of knowledge I ought to admit,I took refuge in gallantry.I should be surprised if he did not,I answered,with a bow,being,ashe is,so close,and having such an inducement to return,Madame.She drew a long,shivering sigh,at the thought
288、 of his peril,I fancied,and she sat back against the wall.Nor did she say any more,though Iheard her sigh again.Is a moment she rose.The afternoons are growing chilly,she said;I will go in and see howMademoiselle is.Sometimes she does not come to supper.If she cannotdescend this evening,I am afraid
289、that you must excuse me too,Monsieur.I said what was right,and watched her go in;and,as I did so,I loathedmy errand,and the mean contemptible curiosity which it had planted inmy mind,more than at any former time.These women-I could find it inmy heart to hate them for their frankness,for their foolis
290、h confidence,andthe silly trustfulness that made them so easy a prey!NOM DE DIEU!What did the woman mean by telling me all this?To meet me in such a way,to disarm one by such methods,was to take anunfair advantage.It put a vile-ay,the vilest-aspect,on the work I had todo.Yet it was very odd!What cou
291、ld M.de Cocheforet mean byreturning so soon,if M.de Cocheforet was here?And,on the other hand,if it was not his unexpected presence that had so upset the house,what wasthe secret?Whom had Clon been tracking?And what was the cause ofMadames anxiety?In a few minutes I began to grow curious again;and,a
292、s the ladies did not appear at supper,I had leisure to give my brain fulllicence,and,in the course of an hour,thought of a hundred keys to themystery.But none exactly fitted the lock,or laid open the secret.A false alarm that evening helped to puzzle me still more.I wassitting about an hour after su
293、pper,on the same seat in the garden-I had mycloak and was smoking-when Madame came out like a ghost,and,UNDER THE RED ROBE46without seeing me,flitted away through the darkness toward the stables.For a moment I hesitated,and then I followed her.She went down thepath and round the stables,and,so far,I
294、 saw nothing strange in her actions;but when she had in this way gained the rear of the west wing,she took atrack through the thicket to the east of the house again,and so came backto the garden.This gained,she came up the path and went in through theparlour door,and disappeared-alter making a clear
295、 circuit of the house,and not once pausing or looking to right or left!I confess I was fairlybaffled.I sank back on the seat I had left,and said to myself that thiswas the lamest of all conclusions.I was sure that she had exchanged noword with anyone.I was equally sure that she had not detected mypr
296、esence behind her.Why,then,had she made this strange promenade,alone,unprotected,an hour after nightfall?No dog had bayed,no onehad moved,she had not once paused,or listened,like a person expecting arencontre.I could not make it out.And I came no nearer to solving it,though I lay awake an hour beyon
297、d my usual time.In the morning,neither of the ladies descended to dinner,and I heardthat Mademoiselle was not so well.After a lonely meal,therefore Imissed them more than I should have supposed-I retired to my favouriteseat and fell to meditating.The day was fine,and the garden pleasant.Sitting ther
298、e with myeyes on the old fashioned herb-beds,with the old-fashioned scents in theair,and the dark belt of trees bounding the view on either side,I couldbelieve that I had been out of Paris not three weeks,but three months.The quiet lapped me round.I could fancy that I had never lovedanything else.Th
299、e wood-doves cooed in the stillness;occasionally theharsh cry of a jay jarred the silence.It was an hour after noon,and hot.I think I nodded.On a sudden,as if in a dream,I saw Clons face peering at me roundthe angle of the parlour door.He looked,and in a moment withdrew,andI heard whispering.The doo
300、r was gently closed.Then all was still again.But I was wide awake now,and thinking.Clearly the people of thehouse wished to assure themselves that I was asleep and safely out of theway.As clearly,it was to my interest to be in the way.Giving place toUNDER THE RED ROBE47the temptation,I rose quietly,
301、and,stooping below the level of thewindows,slipped round the east end of the house,passing between it andthe great yew hedge.Here I found all still and no one stirring;so,keepinga wary eye about me,I went on round the house-reversing the routewhich Madame had taken the night before-until I gained th
302、e rear of thestables.Here I had scarcely paused a second to scan the ground beforetwo persons came out of the stable-court.They were Madame and theporter.They stood a brief while outside and looked up and down.ThenMadame said something to the man,and he nodded.Leaving himstanding where he was,she cr
303、ossed the grass with a quick,light step,andvanished among the trees.In a moment my mind was made up to follow;and,as Clon turned atonce and went in,I was able to do so before it was too late.Bending lowamong the shrubs,I ran hotfoot to the point where Madame had enteredthe wood.Here I found a narrow
304、 path,and ran nimbly along it,andpresently saw her grey robe fluttering among the trees before me.It onlyremained to keep out of her sight and give her no chance of discoveringthat she was followed;and this I set myself to do.Once or twice sheglanced round,but the wood was of beech,the light which p
305、assed betweenthe leaves was mere twilight,and my clothes were dark-coloured.I hadevery advantage,therefore,and little to fear as long as I could keep her inview and still remain myself at such a distance that the rustle of my treadwould not disturb her.Assured that she was on her way to meet her hus
306、band,whom mypresence kept from the house,I felt that the crisis had come at last,and Igrew more excited with each step I took.I detested the task of watchingher;it filled me with peevish disgust.But in proportion as I hated it Iwas eager to have it done and be done with it,and succeed,and stuff myea
307、rs and begone from the scene.When she presently came to the vergeof the beech wood,and,entering a little open clearing,seemed to loiter,Iwent cautiously.This,I thought,must be the rendezvous;and I held backwarily,looking to see him step out of the thicket.But he did not,and by-and-by she quickened h
308、er pace.She crossedUNDER THE RED ROBE48the open and entered a wide ride cut through a low,dense wood of alderand dwarf oak-a wood so closely planted and so intertwined with hazeland elder and box that the branches rose like a solid wall,twelve feet high,on either side of the track.Down this she pass
309、ed,and I stood and watched her go,for I dared notfollow.The ride stretched away as straight as a line for four or fivehundred yards,a green path between green walls.To enter it was to beimmediately detected,if she turned,while the thicket itself permitted nopassage.I stood baffled and raging,and wat
310、ched her pass along.Itseemed an age before she at last reached the end,and,turning sharply tothe right,was in an instant gone from sight.I waited then no longer.I started off,and,running as lightly andquietly as I could,I sped down the green alley.The sun shone into it,thetrees kept off the wind,and
311、 between heat and haste I sweated finely.Butthe turf was soft,and the ground fell slightly,and in little more than aminute I gained the end.Fifty yards short of the turning I stopped,and,stealing on,looked cautiously the way she had gone.I saw before me a second ride,the twin of the other,and a hund
312、red andfifty paces down it her grey figure tripping on between the green hedges.I stood and took breath,and cursed the wood and the heat and Madameswariness.We must have come a league,or two-thirds of a league,at least.How far did the man expect her to plod to meet him?I began to growangry.There is
313、moderation even in the cooking of eggs,and this woodmight stretch into Spain,for all I knew!Presently she turned the corner and was gone again,and I had to repeatmy manoeuvre.This time,surely,I should find a change.But no!Another green ride stretched away into the depths of the forest,withhedges of
314、varying shades-here light and there dark,as hazel and elder,orthorn,and yew and box prevailed-but always high and stiff andimpervious.Halfway down the ride Madames figure tripped steadily on,the only moving thing in sight.I wondered,stood,and,when shevanished,followed-only to find that she had enter
315、ed another track,a littlenarrower but in every other respect alike.And so it went on for quite half an hour.Sometimes Madame turnedUNDER THE RED ROBE49to the right,sometimes to the left.The maze seemed to be endless.Once or twice I wondered whether she had lost her way,and was merelyseeking to retur
316、n.But her steady,purposeful gait,her measured pace,forbade the idea.I noticed,too,that she seldom looked behind her-rarely to right or left.Once the ride down which she passed was carpetednot with green,but with the silvery,sheeny leaves of some creeping plantthat in the distance had a shimmer like
317、that of water at evening.As shetrod this,with her face to the low sun,her tall grey figure had a pure airthat for the moment startled me-she looked unearthly.Then I swore inscorn of myself,and at the next corner I had my reward.She was nolonger walking on.She had stopped,I found,and seated herself o
318、n afallen tree that lay in the ride.For some time I stood in ambush watching her,and with each minute Igrew more impatient.At last I began to doubt-to have strange thoughts.The green walls were growing dark.The sun was sinking;a sharp,whitepeak,miles and miles away,which closed the vista of the ride
319、,began toflush and colour rosily.Finally,but not before I had had leisure to growuneasy,she stood up and walked on more slowly.I waited,as usual,untilthe next turning hid her.Then I hastened after her,and,warily passinground the corner came face to face with her!I knew all in a moment saw all in a f
320、lash:that she had fooled me,tricked me,lured me away.Her face was white with scorn,her eyesblazed;her figure,as she confronted me,trembled with anger and infinitecontempt.You spy!she cried.You hound!You-gentleman!Oh,MONDIEU!if you are one of us-if you are really not of the CANAILLE-weshall pay for t
321、his some day!We shall pay a heavy reckoning in the timeto come!I did not think,she continued,and her every syllable was likethe lash of a whip,that there was anything so vile as you in this world!I stammered something-I do not know what.Her words burned intome-into my heart!Had she been a man,I woul
322、d have struck her dead!You thought that you deceived me yesterday,she continued,loweringher tone,but with no lessening of the passion,the contempt,theindignation,which curled her lip and gave fullness to her voice.YouUNDER THE RED ROBE50plotter!You surface trickster!You thought it an easy task to de
323、lude awoman-you find yourself deluded.God give you shame that you maysuffer!she continued mercilessly.You talked of Clon,but Clon besideyou is the most spotless,the most honourable of men!Madame,I said hoarsely-and I know that my face was grey as ashes-let us understand one another.God forbid!she cr
324、ied on the instant.I would not soil myself!Fie!Madame,I said,trembling.But then,you are a woman.Thatshould cost a man his life!She laughed bitterly.You say well,she retorted.I am not a man-and if you are one,thank God for it.Neither am I Madame.Madame de Cocheforet hasspent this afternoon-thanks to
325、your absence and your imbecility-with herhusband.Yes,I hope that hurts you!she went on,savagely snapping herlittle white teeth together.I hope that stings you;to spy and do vile work,and do it ill,Monsieur Mouchard-Monsieur de Mouchard,I should say-Icongratulate you!You are not Madame de Cocheforet?
326、I cried,stunned,even in themidst of my shame and rage,by this blow.No,Monsieur!she answered grimly.I am not!I am not.Andpermit me to point out-for we do not all lie easily-that I never said I was.You deceived yourself so skilfully that we had no need to trick you.Mademoiselle,then?I muttered.Is Mada
327、me!she cried.Yes,and I am Mademoiselle de Cocheforet.And in that character,and in all others,I beg from this moment to closeour acquaintance,sir.When we meet again-if we ever do meet,whichGod forbid!she went on,her eyes sparkling-do not presume to speakto me,or I will have you flogged by the grooms.
328、And do not stain ourroof by sleeping under it again.You may lie to-night in the inn.It shallnot be said that Cocheforet,she continued proudly,returned eventreachery with inhospitality;and I will give orders to that end.But to-morrow begone back to your master,like the whipped cur you are!Spyand cowa
329、rd!With those last words she moved away.I would have said something,UNDER THE RED ROBE51I could almost have found it in my heart to stop her and make her hear.Nay,I had dreadful thoughts;for I was the stronger,and I might have donewith her as I pleased.But she swept by me so fearlessly,as I might pa
330、sssome loathsome cripple on the road,that I stood turned to stone.Withoutlooking at me,without turning her head to see whether I followed orremained,or what I did,she went steadily down the track until the treesand the shadow and the growing darkness hid her grey figure from me;and I found myself al
331、one.UNDER THE RED ROBE52CHAPTER VREVENGEAnd full of black rage!Had she only reproached me,or,turning onme in the hour of MY victory,said all that she had now said in the momentof her own,I could have borne it.She might have shamed me then,and Imight have taken the shame to myself and forgiven her.Bu
332、t,as it was,Istood there in the gathering dusk,between the darkening hedges,baffled,tricked,defeated!And by a woman!She had pitted her wits againstmine,her womans will against my experience,and she had come off thevictor.And then she had reviled me!As I took it all in,and began tocomprehend also the
333、 more remote results,and how completely her movehad made further progress on my part impossible,I hated her.She hadtricked me with her gracious ways and her slow-coming smile.And,after all-for what she had said-it was this mans life or mine.What hadI done that another man would not do?MON DIEU!in th
334、e future therewas nothing I would not do.I would make her smart for those words ofhers!I would bring her to her knees!Still,hot as I was,an hour might have restored me to coolness.Butwhen I started to return,I fell into a fresh rage,for I remembered that I didnot know my way out of the maze of rides
335、 and paths into which she haddrawn me;and this and the mishaps which followed,kept my rage hot.For a full hour I wandered in the wood,unable,though I knew where thevillage lay,to find any track which led continuously in one direction.Whenever,at the end of each attempt,the thicket brought me up shor
336、t,Ifancied that I heard her laughing on the farther side of the brake;and theignominy of this chance punishment,and the check which the confinementplaced on my rage,almost maddened me.In the darkness I fell,and rosecursing;I tore my hands with thorns;I stained my suit,which had sufferedsadly once be
337、fore.At length,when I had almost resigned myself to lie inthe wood,I caught sight of the lights of the village,and,tremblingbetween haste and anger,pressed towards them.In a few minutes I stoodin the little street.The lights of the inn shone only fifty yards away;but before I couldUNDER THE RED ROBE
338、53show myself even there pride suggested that I should do something torepair my clothes.I stopped,and scraped and brushed them;and,at thesame time,did what I could to compose my features.Then I advanced tothe door and knocked.Almost on the instant the landlords voice criedfrom the inside,Enter,Monsi
339、eur!I raised the latch and went in.The man was alone,squatting over thefire warming his hands.A black pot simmered on the ashes,As I enteredhe raised the lid and peeped inside.Then he glanced over his shoulder.You expected me?I said defiantly,walking to the hearth,and settingone of my damp boots on
340、the logs.Yes,he answered,nodding curtly.Your supper is just ready.Ithought that you would be in about this time.He grinned as he spoke,and it was with difficulty I suppressed mywrath.Mademoiselle de Cocheforet told you,I said,affecting indifference,where I was?Ay,Mademoiselle-or Madame,he replied,gr
341、inning afresh.So she had told him;where she had left me,and how she had trickedme!She had,made me the village laughing-stock!My rage flashedout afresh at the thought,and,at the sight of his mocking face,I raised myfist.But he read the threat in my eyes,and was up in a moment,snarling,with his hand o
342、n his knife.Not again,Monsieur!he cried,in his vile patois.My head is sorestill.raise your hand and I will rip you up as I would a pig!Sit down,fool,I said.I am not going to harm you.Where is yourwife?About her business.Which should be getting my supper,I retorted.He rose sullenly,and,fetching a pla
343、tter,poured the mess of broth andvegetables into it.Then he went to a cupboard and brought out a loaf ofblack bread and a measure of wine,and set them also on the table.You see it,he said laconically.And a poor welcome!I replied.UNDER THE RED ROBE54He flamed into sudden passion at that.Leaning with
344、both his handson the table he thrust his rugged face and blood-shot eyes close to mine.His moustachios bristled,his beard trembled.Hark ye,sirrah!he muttered,with sullen emphasis,be content!Ihave my suspicions.And if it were not for my ladys orders I would put aknife into you,fair or foul,this very
345、night.You would lie snug outside,instead of inside,and I do not think anyone would be the worse.But as itis,be content.Keep a still tongue;and when you turn your back onCocheforet to-morrow keep it turned.Tut!tut!I said-but I confess that I was a little out of countenance.Threatened men live long,yo
346、u rascal!In Paris!he answered significantly.Not here,Monsieur.He straightened himself with that,nodded once,and went back to thefire;and I shrugged my shoulders and began to eat,affecting to forget hispresence.The logs on the hearth burned sullenly,and gave no light.The poor oil-lamp,casting weird s
347、hadows from wall to wall,served onlyto discover the darkness.The room,with its low roof and earthen floor,and foul clothes flung here and there,reeked of stale meals and garlic andvile cooking.I thought of the parlour at Cocheforet,and the dainty table,and the stillness,and the scented pot-herbs;and
348、 though I was too old asoldier to eat the worse because my spoon lacked washing,I felt thechange,and laid it savagely at Mademoiselles door.The landlord,watching me stealthily from his place by the hearth,readmy thoughts and chuckled aloud.Palace fare,palace manners!he muttered scornfully.Set a begg
349、aron horseback,and he will ride-back to the inn!Keep a civil tongue,will you!I answered,scowling at him.Have you finished?he retorted.I rose,without deigning to reply,and,going to the fire,drew off myboots,which were wet through.He,on the instant,swept off the wineand loaf to the cupboard,and then,c
350、oming back for the platter I had used,took it,opened the back door,and went out,leaving the door ajar.Thedraught which came in beat the flame of the lamp this way and that,andgave the dingy,gloomy room an air still more miserable.I rose angrilyUNDER THE RED ROBE55from the fire,and went to the door,i
351、ntending to close it with a bang.But when I reached it,I saw something,between door and jamb,whichstayed my hand.The door led to a shed in which the housewife washedpots and the like.I felt some surprise,therefore,when I found a lightthere at this time of night;still more surprise when I saw what sh
352、e wasdoing.She was seated on the mud floor,with a rush-light before her,and oneither side of her a high-piled heap of refuse and rubbish.From one ofthese,at the moment I caught sight of her,she was sorting things-horriblefilthy sweepings of road or floor-to the other;shaking and sifting eacharticle
353、as she passed it across,and then taking up another and repeating theaction with it,and so on-all minutely,warily,with an air of so muchpatience and persistence that I stood wondering.Some things-rags-sheheld up between her eyes and the light,some she passed through herfingers,some she fairly tore in
354、 pieces.And all the time her husbandstood watching her greedily,my platter still in his hand,as if her strangeoccupation fascinated him.I stood looking,also,for half a minute,perhaps;then the mans eye,raised for a single second to the door-way,met mine.He started,muttered something to his wife,and,q
355、uick as thought,he kicked the lightout,leaving the shed in darkness.Cursing him for an ill-conditionedfellow,I walked back to the fire,laughing.In a twinkling he followed me,his face dark with rage.VENTRE-SAINT-GRIS!he exclaimed,thrusting himself close to me.Is not a mans house his own?It is,for me,
356、I answered coolly,shrugging my shoulders.And hiswife:if she likes to pick dirty rags at this hour,that is your affair.Pig of a spy!he cried,foaming with rage.I was angry enough at bottom,but I had nothing to gain by quarrellingwith the fellow;and I curtly bade him remember himself.Your mistress gave
357、 you orders,I said contemptuously.Obey them.He spat on the floor,but at the same time he grew calmer.You are right there,he answered spitefully.What matter,after all,since you leave to-morrow at six?Your horse has been sent down,andyour baggage is above.UNDER THE RED ROBE56I will go to it,I retorted
358、.I want none of your company.Give me alight,fellow!He obeyed reluctantly,and,glad to turn my back on him,I went up theladder,still wondering faintly,in the midst of my annoyance,what hiswife was about that my chance detection of her had so enraged him.Even now he was not quite himself.He followed me
359、 with abuse,and,deprived by my departure of any other means of showing his spite,fell toshouting through the floor,bidding me remember six oclock,and bestirring;with other taunts,which did not cease until he had tired himselfout.The sight of my belongings-which I had left a few hours before at theCh
360、ateau-strewn about the floor of this garret,went some way towardsfiring me again.But I was worn out.The indignities and mishaps ofthe evening had,for once,crushed my spirit,and after swearing an oath ortwo I began to pack my bags.Vengeance I would have;but the time andmanner I left for daylight thou
361、ght.Beyond six oclock in the morning Idid not look forward;and if I longed for anything it was for a little of thegood Armagnac I had wasted on those louts of merchants in the kitchenbelow.It might have done me good now.I had wearily strapped up one bag,and nearly filled the other,when Icame upon so
362、mething which did,for the moment,rouse the devil in me.This was the tiny orange-coloured sachet which Mademoiselle haddropped the night I first saw her at the inn,and which,it will beremembered,I picked up.Since that night I had not seen it,and had asgood as forgotten it.Now,as I folded up my other
363、doublet,the one I hadthen been wearing,it dropped from my pocket.The sight of it recalled all-that night,and Mademoiselles face in thelantern light,and my fine plans,and the end of them;and,in a fit ofchildish fury,the outcome of long suppressed passion,I snatched up thesachet from the floor and tor
364、e it across and across,and flung the piecesdown.As they fell,a cloud of fine pungent dust burst from them,andwith the dust,something more solid,which tinkled sharply on the boards,as it fell.I looked down to see what this was-perhaps I already repentedof my act;but for a moment I could see nothing.T
365、he floor was grimyUNDER THE RED ROBE57and uninviting,the light bad.In certain moods,however,a man is obstinate about small things,and Imoved the taper nearer.As I did so a point of light,a flashing sparklethat shone for a second among the dirt and refuse on the floor,caught myeye.It was gone in a mo
366、ment,but I had seen it.I stared,and moved thelight again,and the spark flashed out afresh,this time in a different place.Much puzzled,I knelt,and,in a twinkling,found a tiny crystal.Hard byit lay another-and another;each as large as a fair-sized pea.I took upthe three,and rose to my feet again,the l
367、ight in one hand,the crystals inthe palm of the other.They were diamonds!Diamonds of price!I knew it in a moment.As I moved the taper to and fro above them,and watched the fire glow andtremble in their depths,I knew that I held in my hand that which wouldbuy the crazy inn and all its contents a doze
368、n times over!They werediamonds!Gems so fine,and of so rare a water-or I had never seengems-that my hand trembled as I held them,and my head grew hot andmy heart beat furiously.For a moment I thought that I dreamed,that myfancy played me some trick;and I closed my eyes and did not open themagain for
369、a minute.But when I did,there they were,hard,real,andangular.Convinced at last,in a maze of joy and fear,I closed my handupon them,and,stealing on tip-toe to the trap-door,laid first my saddle onit and then my bags,and over all my cloak,breathing fast the while.Then I stole back,and,taking up the li
370、ght again,began to search thefloor,patiently,inch by inch,with naked feet,every sound making metremble as I crept hither and thither over the creaking boards.And neverwas search more successful or better paid.In the fragments of the sachetI found six smaller diamonds and a pair of rubies.Eight large
371、 diamondsI found on the floor.One,the largest and last found,had bounded away,and lay against the wall in the farthest corner.It took me an hour to runthat one to earth;but afterwards I spent another hour on my hands andknees before I gave up the search,and,satisfied at last that I had collectedall,
372、sat down on my saddle on the trap-door,and,by the last flickeringlight of a candle which I had taken from my bag,gloated over mytreasure-a treasure worthy of fabled Golconda.UNDER THE RED ROBE58Hardly could I believe in its reality,even now.Recalling the jewelswhich the English Duke of Buckingham wo
373、re on the occasion of his visitto Paris in 1625,and whereof there was so much talk,I took these to be asfine,though less in number.They should be worth fifteen thousandcrowns,more or less.Fifteen thousand crowns!And I held them in thehollow of my hand-I,who was scarcely worth ten thousand sous.The c
374、andle going out cut short my admiration.Left in the dark withthese precious atoms,my first thought was hour I might dispose of themsafely;which I did,for the time,by secreting them in the lining of my boot.My second thought turned on the question how they had come where I hadfound them,among the pow
375、dered spice and perfumes in Mademoiselle deCocheforets sachet.A minutes reflection enabled me to come very near the secret,and atthe same time shed a flood of light on several dark places,What Clon hadbeen seeking on the path between the house and the village,what thegoodwife of the inn had sought a
376、mong the sweepings of yard and floor,Iknew now the sachet-knew,too,what had caused the marked and suddenanxiety I had noticed at the Chateau-the loss of this sachet.And there for a while I came to a check But one step more up theladder of thought brought all in view.In a flash I guessed how the jewe
377、lshad come to be in the sachet;and that it was not Mademoiselle but M.deCocheforet who had mislaid them.I thought this last discovery soimportant that I began to pace the room softly,unable,in my excitement,to remain still.Doubtless he had dropped the jewels in the hurry of his start from theinn tha
378、t night!Doubtless,too,he had carried them in that bizarre hiding-place for the sake of safety,considering it unlikely that robbers,if he fellinto their hands,would take the sachet from him;as still less likely thatthey would suspect it to contain anything of value.Everywhere it wouldpass for a love-
379、gift,the work of his mistress.Nor did my penetration stop there.I guessed that the gems werefamily property,the last treasure of the house;and that M.de Cocheforet,when I saw him at the inn,was on his way to convey them out of thecountry;either to secure them from seizure by the Government,or to rai
380、seUNDER THE RED ROBE59money by selling them-money to be spent in some last desperateenterprise.For a day or two,perhaps,after leaving Cocheforet,while themountain road and its chances occupied his thoughts,he had notdiscovered his loss.Then he had searched for the precious sachet,missed it,and retur
381、ned hot-foot on his tracks.The longer I considered the circumstances the more certain I was that Ihad hit on the true solution;and all that night I sat wakeful in the darkness,pondering what I should do.The stones,unset as they were,could neverbe identified,never be claimed.The channel by which they
382、 had come tomy hands could never be traced.To all intents they were mine;mine,to dowith as I pleased!Fifteen thousand crowns,perhaps twenty thousandcrowns,and I to leave at six in the morning,whether I would or no!Imight leave for Spain with the jewels in my pocket.Why not?I confess I was tempted.An
383、d indeed the gems were so fine that Idoubt not some indifferently honest men would have sold salvation forthem.But-a Berault his honour?No.I was tempted,I say;but notfor long.Thank God,a man may be reduced to living by the fortunes ofthe dice,and may even be called by a woman spy and coward,withoutb
384、ecoming a thief!The temptation soon left me-I take credit for it-and Ifell to thinking of this and that plan for making use of them.Once itoccurred to me to take the jewels to the Cardinal and buy my pardon withthem;again,to use them as a trap to capture Cocheforet;again,to-andthen,about five in the
385、 morning,as I sat up on my wretched pallet,whilethe first light stole slowly in through the cobwebbed,hay-stuffed lattice,there came to me the real plan,the plan of plans,on which I acted.It charmed me I smacked my lips over it,and hugged myself,and feltmy eyes dilate in the darkness,as I conned it.
386、It seemed cruel,it seemedmean;I cared nothing.Mademoiselle had boasted of her victory over me,of her womans wits and her acuteness and of my dullness.She had saidthat her grooms should flog me.She had rated me as if I had been a dog.Very well;we would see now whose brains were the better,whose was t
387、hemaster mind,whose should be the whipping.The one thing required by my plan was that I should get speech withher;that done,I could trust myself and my new-found weapon for the rest.UNDER THE RED ROBE60But that was absolutely necessary,and,seeing that there might be somedifficulty about it,I determi
388、ned to descend as if my mind were made up togo;then,on pretence of saddling my horse,I would slip away on foot,andlie in wait near the Chateau until I saw her come out.Or if I could noteffect my purpose in that way-either by reason of the landlords vigilance,or for any other cause-my course was stil
389、l easy.I would ride away,andwhen I had proceeded a mile or so,tie up my horse in the forest and returnto the wooden bridge.Thence I could watch the garden and front of theChateau until time and chance gave me the opportunity I sought.So I saw my way quite clearly;and when the fellow below called me,
390、reminding me rudely that I must be going,and that it was six oclock,Iwas ready with my answer.I shouted sulkily that I was coming,and,after a decent delay,I took up my saddle and bags and went down.Viewed by the light of a cold morning,the inn-room looked moresmoky,more grimy,more wretched than when
391、 I had last seen it.Thegoodwife was not visible.The fire was not lighted.No provision,notso much as a stirrup-cup or bowl of porridge cheered the heart.I looked round,sniffing the stale smell of last nights lamp,andgrunted.Are you going to send me out fasting?I said,affecting a worsehumour than I fe
392、lt.The landlord was standing by the window,stooping over a great pairof frayed and furrowed thigh-boots which he was labouring to soften withcopious grease.Mademoiselle ordered no breakfast,he answered,with a maliciousgrin.Well it does not much matter,I replied grandly.I shall be at Auchby noon.That
393、 is as may be,he answered with another grin.I did not understand him,but I had something else to think about,and Iopened the door and stepped out,intending to go to the stable.Then in asecond I comprehended.The cold air laden with woodland moisture metme and went to my bones;but it was not that whic
394、h made me shiver.Outside the door,in the road,sitting on horseback in silence,were twoUNDER THE RED ROBE61men.One was Clon.The other,who had a spare horse by the rein-myhorse-was a man I had seen at the inn,a rough,shock-headed,hard-bittenfellow.Both were armed,and Clon was booted.His mate rode bare
395、foot,with a rusty spur strapped to one heel.The moment I saw them a sure and certain fear crept into my mind:it was that which made me shiver But I did not speak to them.I went inagain and closed the door behind me.The landlord was putting on hisboots.What does this mean?I said hoarsely-though I had
396、 a clearprescience of what was coming.Why are these men here?Orders,he answered laconically.Whose orders?I retorted.Whose?he answered bluntly.Well,Monsieur,that is my business.Enough that we mean to see you out of the country,and out of harmsway.But if I will not go?I cried.Monsieur will go,he answe
397、red coolly.There are no strangers in thevillage to-day,he added,with a significant smile.Do you mean to kidnap me?I replied,in a rage.But behind the rage was something else-I will not call it terror,for thebrave feel no terror but it was near akin to it.I had had to do with roughmen all my life,but
398、there was a grimness and truculence in the aspect ofthese three that shook me.When I thought of the dark paths and narrowlanes and cliff sides we must traverse,whichever road we took,I trembled.Kidnap you,Monsieur?he answered,with an every-day air.Thatis as you please to call it.One thing is certain
399、,however,he continued,maliciously touching an arquebuss which he had brought out,and setupright against a chair while I was at the door;if you attempt the slightestresistance,we shall know how to put an end to it,either here or on theroad.I drew a deep breath,the very imminence of the danger restori
400、ng me tothe use of my faculties.I changed my tone and laughed aloud.So that is your plan,is it?I said.The sooner we start the better,then.And the sooner I see Auch and your back turned,the more I shallbe pleased.UNDER THE RED ROBE62He rose.After you,Monsieur,he said.I could not restrain a slight shi
401、ver.His new-born politeness alarmedme more than his threats.I knew the man and his ways,and I was surethat it boded ill to me.But I had no pistols,and only my sword and knife,and I knew thatresistance at this point must be worse than vain.I went out jauntily,therefore,the landlord coming after me wi
402、th my saddle and bags.The street was empty,save for the two waiting horsemen who sat intheir saddles looking doggedly before them,The sun had not yet risen,theair was raw.The sky was grey,cloudy,and cold.My thoughts flewback to the morning on which I had found the sachet-at that very spot,almost at
403、that very hour,and for a moment I grew warm again at thethought of the little packet I carried in my boot.But the landlords drymanner,the sullen silence of his two companions,whose eyes steadilyrefused to meet mine,chilled me again.For an instant the impulse torefuse to mount,to refuse to go,was alm
404、ost irresistible;then,knowing themadness of such a course,which might,and probably would,give the menthe chance they desired,I crushed it down and went slowly to my stirrup.I wonder you do not want my sword,I said by way of sarcasm,as Iswung myself up.We are not afraid of it,the innkeeper answered g
405、ravely.You maykeep it-for the present.I made no answer-what answer had I to make?-and we rode at afootpace down the street;he and I leading,Clon and the shock-headedman bringing up the rear.The leisurely mode of our departure,theabsence of hurry or even haste,the mens indifference whether they weres
406、een,or what was thought,all served to sink my spirits and deepen mysense of peril.I felt that they suspected me,that they more than halfguessed the nature of my errand at Cocheforet,and that they were notminded to be bound by Mademoiselles orders.In particular,I auguredthe worst from Clons appearanc
407、e.His lean malevolent face and sunkeneyes,his very dumbness chilled me.Mercy had no place there.We rode soberly,so that nearly half an hour elapsed before we gainedthe brow from which I had taken my first look at Cocheforet.Among theUNDER THE RED ROBE63dwarf oaks whence I had viewed the valley we pa
408、used to breathe ourhorses,and the strange feelings with which I looked back on the scenemay be imagined.But I had short time for indulging in sentiment orrecollections.A curt word,and we were moving again.A quarter of a mile farther on,the road to Auch dipped into the valley.When we were already hal
409、f way down this descent the innkeeper suddenlystretched out his hand and caught my rein.This way!he said.I saw that he would have me turn into a by-path leading south-westwards-a mere track,faint and little trodden and encroached on bytrees,which led I knew not whither.I checked my horse.Why?I said
410、rebelliously.Do you think I do not know the road?The road we are in is the way to Auch.To Auch-yes,he answered bluntly.But we are not going to Auch,Whither then?I said angrily.You will see presently,he replied with an ugly smile.Yes,but I will know now!I retorted,passion getting the better ofme.I ha
411、ve come so far with you.You will find it more easy to take mefarther if you tell me your plans.You are a fool!he cried with a snarl.Not so,I answered.I ask only to know whither I am going.Into Spain,he said.Will that satisfy you?And what will you do with me there?I asked,my heart giving agreat bound
412、.Hand you over to some friends of ours,he answered curtly,if youbehave yourself.If not,there is a shorter way,and one that will save ussome travelling.Make up your mind,Monsieur.Which shall it be?UNDER THE RED ROBE64CHAPTER VISo that was their plan.Two or three hours to the southward,thelong,white,g
413、littering wall stretched east and west above the brownwoods.Beyond that lay Spain.Once across the border,I might bedetained,if no worse happened to me,as a prisoner of war;for wewere then at war with Spain on the Italian side.Or I might behanded over to one of the savage bands,half smugglers,half br
414、igands,that held the passes;or be delivered,worse fate of all,into the powerof the French exiles,of whom some would be likely to recognise meand cut my throat.It is a long way into Spain,I muttered,watching in a kind offascination Clon handling his pistols.I think you will find the other road longer
415、 still,the landlord answeredgrimly.But choose,and be quick about it.They were three to one,and they had firearms.In effect I had nochoice.Well,if I must I must?I cried,making up my mind with seemingrecklessness.VOGUE LA GALERE!Spain be it.It will not be thefirst time I have heard the dons talk.The m
416、en nodded,as much as to say that they had known what the endwould be;the landlord released my rein;and in a trice we were ridingdown the narrow track,with our faces set towards the mountains.On one point my mind was now more easy.The men meant fairly byme,and I had no longer to fear,as I had feared,
417、a pistol-shot in the back atthe first convenient ravine.As far as that went,I might ride in peace.On the other hand,if I let them carry me across the border my fate wassealed.A man set down without credentials or guards among the wilddesperadoes who swarmed in war-time in the Asturian passes mightco
418、nsider himself fortunate if an easy death fell to his lot.In my case Icould make a shrewd guess what would happen.A single nod ofmeaning,one muttered word,dropped among the savage men with whomI should be left,and the diamonds hidden in my boot would go neither tothe Cardinal nor back to Mademoisell
419、e-nor would it matter to me whitherUNDER THE RED ROBE65they went.So while the others talked in their taciturn fashion,or sometimesgrinned at my gloomy face,I looked out over the brown woods with eyesthat saw yet did not see.The red squirrel swarming up the trunk,thestartled pigs that rushed away gru
420、nting from their feast of mast,thesolitary rider who met us,armed to the teeth,and passed northwards afterwhispering with the landlord-all these I saw.But my mind was not withthem.It was groping and feeling about like a hunted mole for some way ofescape.For time pressed.The slope we were on was grow
421、ing steeper.By-and-by we fell into a southward valley,and began to follow it steadilyupwards,crossing and recrossing a swiftly rushing stream.The snowpeaks began to be hidden behind the rising bulk of hills that overhung us,and sometimes we could see nothing before or behind but the woodedwalls of o
422、ur valley rising sheer and green a thousand paces high on eitherhand;with grey rocks half masked by fern and ivy jutting here and therethrough the firs and alders.It was a wild and sombre scene even at that hour,with the mid-daysun shining on the rushing water and drawing the scent out of the pines;
423、but I knew that there was worse to come,and sought desperately for someruse by which I might at least separate the men.Three were too many;with one I might deal.At last,when I had cudgelled my brain for an hour,and almost resigned myself to a sudden charge on the men single-handed-a last desperate r
424、esort-I thought of a plan:dangerous,too,and almostdesperate,but which still seemed to promise something.It came of myfingers resting,as they lay in my pocket,on the fragments of the orangesachet;which,without having any particular design in my mind,I hadtaken care to bring with me.I had torn the sac
425、het into four pieces-fourcorners.As I played mechanically with them,one of my fingers fittedinto one,as into a glove;a second finger into another.And the plancame.Before I could move in it,however,I had to wait until we stopped tobait the flagging horses,which we did about noon at the head of the va
426、lley.Then,pretending to drink from the stream,I managed to secure unseen ahandful of pebbles,slipping them into the same pocket with the morsels ofUNDER THE RED ROBE66stuff.On getting to horse again,I carefully fitted a pebble,not too tightly,into the largest scrap,and made ready for the attempt.The
427、 landlord rode on my left,abreast of me;the other two knavesbehind.The road at this stage favoured me,for the valley,which drainedthe bare uplands that lay between the lower hills and the base of the realmountains,had become wide and shallow.Here were no trees,and thepath was a mere sheep-track cove
428、red with short,crisp grass,and runningsometimes on this bank of the stream and sometimes on that.I waited until the ruffian beside me turned to speak to the men behind.The moment he did so,and his eyes were averted,I slipped out the scrapof satin in which I had placed the pebble,and balancing it car
429、efully on myright thigh as I rode,I flipped it forward with all the strength of my thumband finger.I meant it to fall a few paces before us in the path,where itcould be seen.But alas for my hopes!At the critical moment my horsestarted,my finger struck the scrap aslant,the pebble flew out,and the bit
430、of stuff fluttered into a whin-bush close to my stirrup-and was lost!I was bitterly disappointed,for the same thing might happen again,andI had now only three scraps left.But fortune favoured me,by putting itinto my neighbours head to plunge into a hot debate with the shock-headed man on the nature
431、of some animals seen on a distant brow;whichhe said were izards,while the other maintained that they were commongoats.He continued,on this account,to ride with his face turned fromme,and I had time to fit another pebble into the second piece of stuff.Sliding it on to my thigh,I poised it,and flipped
432、 it.This time my finger struck the tiny missile fairly in the middle,andshot it so far and so truly that it dropped exactly in the path ten paces infront of us.The moment I saw it fall I kicked my neighbours nag in theribs;it started,and he,turning in a rage,hit it.The next instant he pulledit almos
433、t on to its haunches.SAINT GRIS!he cried;and sat glaring at the bit of yellow satin,with his face turned purple and his jaw fallen.What is it!I said,staring at him in turn,What is the matter,fool?Matter?he blurted out.MON DIEU!But Clons excitement surpassed even his.The dumb man no soonerUNDER THE R
434、ED ROBE67saw what had attracted his comrades attention,than he uttered aninarticulate and horrible noise,and tumbling off his horse,more like abeast than a man threw himself bodily on the precious morsel.The innkeeper was not far behind him.An instant and he was down,too,peering at the thing;and for
435、 an instant I thought that they would fightover it.However,though their jealousy was evident,their excitementcooled a little when they discovered that the scrap of stuff was empty;for,fortunately,the pebble had fallen out of it.Still,it threw them into such afever of eagerness as it was wonderful to
436、 witness.They nosed theground where it had lain,they plucked up the grass and turf,and passed itthrough their fingers,they ran to and fro like dogs on a trail;and,glancingaskance at one another,came back always together to the point ofdeparture.Neither in his jealousy would suffer the other to be th
437、erealone.The shock-headed man and I sat our horses and looked on;hemarvelling,and I pretending to marvel.As the two searched up anddown the path,we moved a little out of it to give them space;andpresently,when all their heads were turned from me,I let a second morseldrop under a gorse-bush.The shock
438、-headed man,by-and-by,found this,and gave it to Clon;and as from the circumstances of the first discoveryno suspicion attached to me,I ventured to find the third and last scrapmyself.I did not pick it up,but I called the innkeeper,and he pouncedupon it as I have seen a hawk pounce on a chicken.They
439、hunted for the fourth morsel,but,of course,in vain,and in theend they desisted,and fitted the three they had together;but neither wouldlet his own portion out of his hands,and each looked at the other acrossthe spoil with eyes of suspicion.It was strange to see them in that wide-stretching valley,wh
440、ence grey boar-backs of hills swelled up into thesilence of the snow-it was strange,I say,in that vast solitude,to see thesetwo,mere dots on its bosom,circling round one another in fierceforgetfulness of the outside world,glaring and shifting their ground likecocks about to engage,and wholly engross
441、ed-by three scraps of orange-colour,invisible at fifty paces!At last the innkeeper cried with an oath,I am going back.This mustUNDER THE RED ROBE68be known down yonder.Give me your pieces,man,and do you go onwith Antoine.It will be all right.But Clon,waving a scrap of the stuff in either hand,and th
442、rusting hisghastly mask into the others face,shook his head in passionate denial.He could not speak,but he made it as clear as daylight that if anyone wentback with the news,he was the man to go.Nonsense!the landlord rejoined fiercely,We cannot leave Antoineto go on alone with him.Give me the stuff.
443、But Clon would not.He had no thought of resigning the credit of thediscovery;and I began to think that the two would really come to blows.But there was an alternative-an alternative in which I was concerned;andfirst one and then the other looked at me.It was a moment of peril,and Iknew it.My stratag
444、em might react on myself,and the two,to put an endto their difficulty,agree to put an end to me.But I faced them so coolly,and showed so bold a front,and the ground where we stood was so open,that the idea took no root.They fell to wrangling again more viciouslythan before.One tapped his gun and the
445、 other his pistols.The landlordscolded,the dumb man gurgled.At last their difference ended as I hadhoped it would.Very well then,we will both go back!the innkeeper cried in a rage.And Antoine must see him on.But the blame be on your head.Do yougive the lad your pistols.Clon took one pistol,and gave
446、it to the shock-headed man.The other!the innkeeper said impatiently.But Clon shook his head with a grim smile,and pointed to thearquebuss.By a sudden movement,the landlord snatched the pistol,and avertedClons vengeance by placing both it and the gun in the shock-headed manshands.There!he said,addres
447、sing the latter,now can you do?IfMonsieur tries to escape or turn back,shoot him!But four hours ridingshould bring you to the Roca Blanca.You will find the men there,andwill have no more to do with it.Antoine did not see things quite in that light,however.He looked atUNDER THE RED ROBE69me,and then
448、at the wild track in front of us;and he muttered an oath andsaid he would die if he would.But the landlord,who was in a frenzy of impatience,drew him asideand talked to him,and in the end seemed to persuade him;for in a fewminutes the matter was settled.Antoine came back,and said sullenly,Forward,Mo
449、nsieur,the twoothers stood on one side,I shrugged my shoulders and kicked up my horse,and in a twinkling we two were riding on together-man to man.Iturned once or twice to see what those we had left behind were doing,andalways found them standing in apparent debate;but my guard showed somuch jealous
450、y of these movements that I presently shrugged my shouldersagain and desisted.I had racked my brains to bring about this state of things.Strange tosay,now I had succeeded,I found it less satisfactory than I had hoped.Ihad reduced the odds and got rid of my most dangerous antagonists;butAntoine,left
451、to himself,proved to be as full of suspicion as an egg of meat.He rode a little behind me,with his gun across his saddlebow,and a pistolnear his hand;and at the slightest pause on my part,or if I turned to lookat him,he muttered his constant Forward,Monsieur!in a tone whichwarned me that his finger
452、was on the trigger.At such a distance he couldnot miss;and I saw nothing for it but to go on meekly before him to theRoca Blanca-and my fate.What was to be done?The road presently reached the end of thevalley and entered a narrow pine-clad defile,strewn with rocks andboulders,over which the torrent
453、plunged and eddied with a deafening roar.In front the white gleam of waterfalls broke the sombre ranks of climbingtrunks.The snow line lay less than half a mile away on either hand;andcrowning all-at the end of the pass,as it seemed to the eye-rose the purewhite pillar of the Pic du Midi shooting up
454、 six thousand feet into the blueof heaven.Such a scene so suddenly disclosed,was enough to drive thesense of danger from my mind;and for a moment I reined in my horse.But Forward,Monsieur!came the grating order.I fell to earth again,and went on.What was to be done?I was at my wits end to know.The ma
455、n refused to talk,refused toUNDER THE RED ROBE70ride abreast of me,would have no dismounting,no halting,nocommunication at all.He would have nothing but this silent,lonelyprocession of two,with the muzzle of his gun at my back.And meanwhilewe were fast climbing the pass.We had left the others an hou
456、r-nearlytwo.The sun was declining;the time,I supposed,about half-past three.If he would only let me come within reach of him!Or if anythingwould fall out to take his attention!When the pass presently widenedinto a bare and dreary valley,strewn with huge boulders and with snowlying here and there in
457、the hollows,I looked desperately before me,andscanned even the vast snow-fields that overhung us and stretched away tothe base of the ice-peak.But I saw nothing.No bear swung across thepath,no izard showed itself on the cliffs.The keen,sharp air cut ourcheeks and warned me that we were approaching t
458、he summit of the ridge.On all sides were silence and desolation.MON DIEU!And the ruffians on whose tender mercies I was to bethrown might come to meet us!They might appear at any moment.Inmy despair I loosened my hat on my head,and let the first gust carry it tothe ground,and then with an oath of an
459、noyance tossed my feet from thestirrups to go after it.But the rascal roared to me to keep my seat.Forward,Monsieur!he shouted brutally.Go on!But my hat!I cried.MILLE TONNERRES,man!I must-Forward,Monsieur,or I shoot!he replied inexorably raising his gun.One-two-And I went on.But,ah,I was wrathful!Th
460、at I,Gil de Berault,should be outwitted,and led by the nose like a ringed bull,by this Gasconlout!That I,whom all Paris knew and feared-if it did not love-theterror of Zatons,should come to my end in this dismal waste of snow androck,done to death by some pitiful smuggler or thief!It must not be.Sur
461、ely in the last resort I could give an account of one man,though hisbelt were stuffed with pistols.But how?Only,it seemed,by open force.My heart began to flutteras I planned it;and then grew steady again.A hundred paces before us agully or ravine on the left ran up into the snow-field.Opposite its m
462、outha jumble of stones and broken rocks covered the path,I marked this for theUNDER THE RED ROBE71place.The knave would need both his hands to hold up his nag over thestones,and,if I turned on him suddenly enough,he might either drop hisgun or fire it harmlessly.But,in the meantime,something happene
463、d;as,at the last moment,things do happen.While we were still fifty yards short of the place,Ifound his horses nose creeping forward on a level with my crupper;and,still advancing,still advancing,until I could see it out of the tail of my eye,and my heart gave a great bound.He was coming abreast of m
464、e:hewas going to deliver himself into my hands!To cover my excitement,Ibegan to whistle.Hush!he muttered fiercely,his voice sounding so strange andunnatural,that my first thought was that he was ill;and I turned to him.But he only said again,-Hush!Pass by here quietly,Monsieur.Why?I asked mutinously
465、,curiosity getting the better of me.For hadI been wise I had taken no notice;every second his horse was coming upwith mine.Its nose was level with my stirrup already.Hush,man!he said again.This time there was no mistake aboutthe panic in his voice.They call this the Devils Chapel,God send ussafe by
466、it!It is late to be here.Look at those!he continued,pointingwith a finger which visibly shook.I looked.At the mouth of the gully,in a small space partly cleared ofstones,stood three broken shafts,raised on rude pedestals.Well?I said in a low voice.The sun,which was near setting,flushed the great pea
467、k above to the colour of blood;but the valley wasgrowing grey and each moment more dreary.Well,what of those?Isaid.In spite of my peril and the excitement of the coming struggle I felt thechill of his fear.Never had I seen so grim,so desolate,so God-forsakena place!Involuntarily I shivered.They were
468、 crosses,he muttered in a voice little above a whisper,while his eyes roved this way and that in terror.The Cure of Gabasblessed the place,and set them up.But next morning they were as yousee them now.Come on,Monsieur;come on!he continued,pluckingUNDER THE RED ROBE72at my arm.It is not safe here aft
469、er sunset.Pray God,Satan be not athome!He had completely forgotten in his panic that he had anything to fearfrom me.His gun dropped loosely across his saddle,his leg rubbed mine.I saw this,and I changed my plan of action.As our horses reached thestones I stooped,as if to encourage mine,and,with a su
470、dden clutch,snatched the gun bodily from his hand,at the same time that I backed myhorse with all my strength.It was done in a moment!A second and Ihad him at the end of the gun,and my finger was on the trigger.Neverwas victory more easily gained.He looked at me between rage and terror,his jaw falle
471、n.Are you mad?he cried,his teeth chattering as he spoke.Even inthis strait his eyes left me and wandered round in alarm.No,sane!I retorted fiercely.But I do not like this place any betterthan you do.Which was true enough,if not quite true.So,by yourright,quick march!I continued imperatively.Turn you
472、r horse,myfriend,or take the consequences.He turned like a lamb,and headed down the valley again,withoutgiving a thought to his pistols.I kept close to him,and in less than aminute we had left the Devils Chapel well behind us,and were movingdown again as we had come up.Only now I held the gun.When w
473、e had gone have a mile or so-until then I did not feelcomfortable myself,and though I thanked heaven that the place existed,Ithanked heaven also that I was out of it-I bade him halt.Take off your belt,I said curtly,and throw it down.But,mark me,if you turn I fire.The spirit was quite gone out of him
474、,and he obeyed mechanically.Ijumped down,still covering him with the gun,and picked up the belt,pistols and all.Then I remounted,and we went on.By-and-by heasked me sullenly what I was going to do.Go back,I said,and take the road to Auch when I come to it.It will be dark in an hour,he answered sulki
475、ly.I know that,I retorted.We must camp and do the best we can.And as I said,we did.The daylight held until we gained the skirts ofUNDER THE RED ROBE73the pine-wood at the head of the pass.Here I chose a corner a little offthe track,and well sheltered from the wind,and bade him light a fire.Itethered
476、 the horses near this and within sight.Then it remained only tosup.I had a piece of bread:he had another and an onion.We ate insilence,sitting on opposite sides of the fire.But after supper I found myself in a dilemma;I did not see how I wasto sleep.The ruddy light which gleamed on the knaves swart
477、face andsinewy hands showed also his eyes,black,sullen,and watchful.I knewthat the man was plotting revenge;that he would not hesitate to plant hisknife between my ribs should I give him the chance;and I could find onlyone alternative to remaining awake.Had I been bloody-minded,I shouldhave chosen i
478、t and solved the question at once and in my favour byshooting him as he sat.But I have never been a cruel man,and I could not find it in my heartto do this.The silence of the mountain and the sky-which seemed a thingapart from the roar of the torrent and not to be broken by it-awed me.The vastness o
479、f the solitude in which we sat,the dark void above,throughwhich the stars kept shooting,the black gulf below in which the unseenwaters boiled and surged,the absence of other human company or othersigns of human existence,put such a face upon the deed that I gave up thethought of it with a shudder,an
480、d resigned myself,instead,to watchthrough the night-the long,cold,Pyrenean night.Presently he curledhimself up like a dog and slept in the blaze,and then for a couple of hoursI sat opposite him,thinking.It seemed years since I had seen Zatons orthrown the dice.The old life,the old employments-should
481、 I ever goback to them?-seemed dim and distant.Would Cocheforet,the forestand the mountain,the grey Chateau and its mistresses,seem one day asdim?And if one bit of life could fade so quickly at the unrolling ofanother,and seem in a moment pale and colourless,would all life someday and somewhere,and
482、all the things we-But enough!I was growingfoolish.I sprang up and kicked the wood together,and,taking up the gun,began to pace to and fro under the cliff.Strange that a little moonlight,afew stars,a breath of solitude should carry a man back to childhood andchildish things.UNDER THE RED ROBE74.It wa
483、s three in the afternoon of the next day,and the sun lay hot on theoak groves,and the air was full of warmth as we began to climb the slope,midway up which the road to Auch shoots out of the track.The yellowbracken and the fallen leaves underfoot seemed to throw up light ofthemselves;and here and th
484、ere a patch of ruddy beech lay like abloodstain on the hillside.In front a herd of pigs routed among the mast,and grunted lazily;and high above us a boy lay watching them.We parthere,I said to my companion.It was my plan to ride a little way along the road to Auch so as to blindhis eyes;then,leaving
485、 my horse in the forest,I would go on foot to theChateau.The sooner the better!he answered with a snarl.And Ihope I may never see your face again,Monsieur.But when we came to the wooden cross at the fork of the roads,andwere about to part,the boy we had seen leapt out of the fern and came tomeet us.
486、Hollo!he cried in a sing-song tone.Well,my companion answered,drawing rein impatiently.What isit?There are soldiers in the village.Soldiers Antoine cried incredulously.Ay,devils on horseback,the lad answered,spitting on the ground.Three score of them.From Auch.Antoine turned to me,his face transform
487、ed with fury.Curse you!he cried.This is some of your work.Now we are allundone.And my mistresses?SACRE!if I had that gun I would shootyou like a rat.Steady,fool,I answered roughly.I know no more of this than youdo.Which was so true that my surprise was at least as great as his,andbetter grounded.The
488、 Cardinal,who rarely made a change of front,hadsent me hither that he might not be forced to send soldiers,and run the riskof all that might arise from such a movement.What of this invasion,then,than which nothing could be less consistent with his plans?IUNDER THE RED ROBE75wondered.It was possible
489、that the travelling merchants,before whom Ihad played at treason,had reported the facts;and that on this theCommandant at Auch had acted.But it seemed unlikely since he had hadhis orders too,and under the Cardinals rule there was small place forindividual enterprise.Frankly I could not understand it
490、,and found onlyone thing clear;I might now enter the village as I pleased.I am going on to look into this,I said to Antoine.Come,my man.He shrugged his shoulders,and stood still.Not I!be answered,with an oath.No soldiers for me I have lainout one night,and I can lie out another.I nodded indifferentl
491、y,for I no longer wanted him;and we parted.After this,twenty minutes riding brought me to the entrance of the village,and here the change was great indeed.Not one of the ordinary dwellers inthe place was to be seen:either they had shut themselves up in their hovels,or,like Antoine,they had fled to t
492、he woods.Their doors were closed,their windows shuttered.But lounging about the street were a score ofdragoons,in boots and breastplates,whose short-barrelled muskets,withpouches and bandoliers attached,were piled near the inn door.In anopen space,where there was a gap in the street,a long row of ho
493、rses,linked head to head,stood bending their muzzles over bundles of roughforage;and on all sides the cheerful jingle of chains and bridles and thesound of coarse jokes and laughter filled the air.As I rode up to the inn door an old sergeant,with squinting eyes andhis tongue in his cheek,scanned me
494、inquisitively,and started to cross thestreet to challenge me.Fortunately,at that moment the two knaveswhom I had brought from Paris with me,and whom I had left at Auch toawait my orders,came up.I made them a sign not to speak to me,andthey passed on;but I suppose that they told the sergeant that I w
495、as not theman he wanted,for I saw no more of him.After picketing my horse behind the inn-I could find no better stable,every place being full-I pushed my way through the group at the door,and entered.The old room,with the low,grimy roof and the reekingfloor,was half full of strange figures,and for a
496、 few minutes I stood unseenin the smoke and confusion.Then the landlord came my way,and as heUNDER THE RED ROBE76passed me I caught his eye.He uttered a low curse,dropped the pitcher hewas carrying,and stood glaring at me like a man possessed.The soldier whose wine he was carrying flung a crust in h
497、is face,with,-Now,greasy fingers!What are you staring at?The devil!the landlord muttered,beginning to tremble.Then let me look at him!the man retorted,and he turned on hisstool.He started,finding me standing over him.At your service!I said grimly.A little time and it will be the otherway,my friend.U
498、NDER THE RED ROBE77CHAPTER VIIA MASTER STROKEI have a way with me which commonly commands respect;and whenthe landlords first terror was over and he would serve me,I managed toget my supper-the first good meal I had had in two days-prettycomfortably in spite of the soldiers presence.The crowd,too,wh
499、ichfilled the room,soon began to melt.The men strayed off in groups towater their horses,or went to hunt up their quarters,until only two or threewere left.Dusk had fallen outside;the noise in the street grew less.The firelight began to glow and flicker on the walls,and the wretchedroom to look as h
500、omely as it was in its nature to look.I was ponderingfor the twentieth time what step I should take next,and questioning whythe soldiers were here,and whether I should let the night pass before Imoved,when the door,which had been turning on its hinges almostwithout pause for an hour,opened again,and
501、 a woman came in.She paused a moment on the threshold looking round,and I saw thatshe had a shawl on her head and a milk-pitcher in her hand,and that herfeet and ankles were bare.There was a great rent in her coarse stuffpetticoat,and the hand which held the shawl together was brown and dirty.More I
502、 did not see:for,supposing her to be a neighbour stolen in,nowthat the house was quiet,to get some milk for her child or the like,I tookno farther heed of her.I turned to the fire again and plunged into mythoughts.But to get to the hearth where the goodwife was fidgeting the womanhad to pass in fron
503、t of me;and as she passed I suppose that she stole alook at me from under her shawl.For just when she came between meand the blaze she uttered a low cry and shrank aside-so quickly that shealmost stepped on the hearth.The next moment she turned her back to me,and was stooping whispering in the house
504、wifes ear.A stranger mighthave thought that she had trodden on a hot ember.But another idea,and a very strange one,came into my mind;and Istood up silently.The womans back was towards me,but something inher height,her shape,the pose of her head hidden as it was by her shawl,UNDER THE RED ROBE78seeme
505、d familiar.I waited while she hung over the fire whispering,andwhile the goodwife slowly filled her pitcher out of the great black pot.But when she turned to go,I took a step forward so as to bar her way.And our eyes met.I could not see her features;they were lost in the shadow of the hood.But I saw
506、 a shiver run through her from head to foot.And I knew thenthat I had made no mistake.That is too heavy for you,my girl,I said familiarly,as I might havespoken to a village wench.I will carry it for you.One of the men,who remained lolling at the table,laughed,and theother began to sing a low song.Th
507、e woman trembled in rage or fear;butshe kept silence and let me take the jug from her hands;and when I wentto the door and opened it,she followed mechanically.An instant,and thedoor fell to behind us,shutting off the light and glow,and we two stoodtogether in the growing dusk.It is late for you to b
508、e out,Mademoiselle,I said politely.You mightmeet with some rudeness,dressed as you are.Permit me to see youhome.She shuddered,and I thought that I heard her sob,but she did notanswer.Instead,she turned and walked quickly through the village in thedirection of the Chateau,keeping in the shadow of the
509、 houses.I carriedthe pitcher and walked close to her,beside her;and in the dark I smiled.I knew how shame and impotent rage were working in her.This wassomething like revenge!Presently I spoke.Well,Mademoiselle,I said,where are your grooms?She gave me one look,her eyes blazing with anger,her face li
510、ke hateitself;and after that I said no more,but left her in peace,and contentedmyself with walking at her shoulder until we came to the end of the village,where the track to the great house plunged into the wood.There shestopped,and turned on me like a wild creature at bay.What do you want?she cried
511、 hoarsely,breathing as if she had beenrunning.To see you safe to the house,I answered coolly.Alone you mightUNDER THE RED ROBE79be insulted.And if I will not?she retorted.The choice does not lie with you,Mademoiselle,I answered sternly,You will go to the house with me,and on the way you will give me
512、 aninterview-late as it is;but not here.Here we are not private enough.We may be interrupted at any moment,and I wish to speak to you atlength.At length?she muttered.Yes,Mademoiselle.I saw her shiver.What if I will not?she said again.I might call to the nearest soldiers and tell them who you are,Ian
513、swered coolly.I might do that,but I should not.That were a clumsyway of punishing you,and I know a better way.I should go to theCaptain,Mademoiselle,and tell him whose horse is locked up in the innstable.A trooper told me-as someone had told him-that it belonged toone of his officers;but I looked th
514、rough the crack,and I knew the horseagain.She could not repress a groan.I waited;still she did not speak.Shall I go to the Captain?I said ruthlessly.She shook the hood back from her face and looked at me.Oh,you coward!you coward!she hissed through her teeth.If Ihad a knife!But you have not,Mademoise
515、lle,I answered,unmoved.Be goodenough,therefore,to make up your mind which it is to be.Am I to gowith my news to the captain,or am I to come with you?Give me the pitcher,she said harshly.I did so,wondering.In a moment she flung it with a savage gesturefar into the bushes.Come!she said,if you will.But
516、 some day God will punish you!Without another word she turned and entered the path through the trees,and I followed her.I suppose that every one of its windings,everyhollow and broken place in it had been known to her from childhood,forshe followed it swiftly and unerringly,barefoot as she was.I had
517、 to walkfast through the darkness to keep up with her.The wood was quiet,butUNDER THE RED ROBE80the frogs were beginning to croak in the pool,and their persistent chorusreminded me of the night when I had come to the house-door,hurt andworn out,and Clon had admitted me,and she had stood under the ga
518、lleryin the hall.Things had looked dark then.I had seen but a very littleway ahead then.Now all was plain.The commandant might be herewith all his soldiers,but it was I who held the strings.We came to the little wooden bridge and saw beyond the darkmeadows the lights of the house.All the windows wer
519、e bright.Doubtlessthe troopers were making merry.Now,Mademoiselle,I said quietly,I must trouble you to stop here,and give me your attention for a few minutes.Afterwards you may goyour way.Speak!she said defiantly.And be quick!I cannot breathe the airwhere you are!It poisons me!Ah!I said slowly.Do yo
520、u think that you make things better bysuch speeches as those?Oh!she cried and I heard her teeth click together.Would youhave me fawn on you?Perhaps not,I answered.Still you make one mistake.What is it?she panted.You forget that I am to be feared as well as-loathed,Mademoiselle!Ay,Mademoiselle,to be
521、feared!I continued grimly.Do you think thatI do not know why you are here in this guise?Do you think that I do notknow for whom that pitcher of broth was intended?Or who will nowhave to fast to-night?I tell you I know all these things.Your housewas full of soldiers;your servants were watched and cou
522、ld not leave.You had to come yourself and get food for him?She clutched at the handrail of the bridge,and for an instant clung to itfor support.Her face,from which the shawl had fallen,glimmered whitein the shadow of the trees.At last I had shaken her pride.At last!What is your price?she murmured fa
523、intly.I am going to tell you,I replied,speaking so that every word mightfall distinctly on her ears,and sating my eyes the while on her proud face.I had never dreamed of such revenge as this!About a fortnight ago,M.deUNDER THE RED ROBE81Cocheforet left here at night with a little orange-coloured sac
524、het in hispossession.She uttered a stifled cry,and drew herself stiffly erect.It contained-but there,Mademoiselle,you know its contents,I wenton.Whatever they were,M.de Cocheforet lost it and them at starting.A week ago he came back-unfortunately for himself-to seek them.She was looking full in my f
525、ace now.She seemed scarcely to breathein the intensity of her surprise and expectation.You had a search made,Mademoiselle,I continued quietly.Yourservants left no place unexplored The paths,the roads,the very woodswere ransacked,But in vain,because all the while the orange sachet laywhole and unopen
526、ed in my pocket.No!she cried impetuously.There,you lie sir,as usual!The sachetwas found,torn open,many leagues from this place!Where I threw it,Mademoiselle,I replied,that I might mislead yourrascals and be free to return to you.Oh!believe me,I continued,letting something of my true self,something o
527、f my triumph,appear at lastin my voice.You have made a mistake!You would have done betterhad you trusted me.I am no bundle of sawdust,Mademoiselle,thoughonce you got the better of me,but a man;a man with an arm to shield anda brain to serve,and-as I am going to teach you-a heart also!Sheshivered.In
528、the orange-coloured sachet that you lost I believe that there wereeighteen stones of great value?She made no answer,but she looked at me as if I fascinated her.Hervery breath seemed to pause and wait on my words.She was so littleconscious of anything else,of anything outside ourselves,that a score o
529、fmen might have come up behind her,unseen and unnoticed.UNDER THE RED ROBE82CHAPTER VIIIA MASTER STROKE-ContinuedI took from my breast a little packet wrapped in soft leather,and I heldit towards her.Will you open this?I said.I believe that it contains what yourbrother lost.That it contains all I wi
530、ll not answer,Mademoiselle,because I spilled the stones on the floor of my room,and I may have failedto find some.But the others can be recovered;I know where they are.She took the packet slowly and began to unroll it,her fingers shaking.A few turns and the mild lustre of the stones shone out,making
531、 a kind ofmoonlight in her hands-such a shimmering glory of imprisoned light ashas ruined many a woman and robbed many a man of his honour.MORBLEU!as I looked at them and as she stood looking at them in dull,entranced perplexity-I wondered how I had come to resist the temptation.While I gazed her ha
532、nds began to waver.I cannot count,she muttered helplessly.How many are there?In all,eighteen.There should be eighteen,she said.She closed her hand on them with that,and opened it again,and did sotwice,as if to reassure herself that the stones were real and that she wasnot dreaming.Then she turned to
533、 me with sudden fierceness,and I sawthat her beautiful face,sharpened by the greed of possession,was grownas keen and vicious as before.Well?she muttered between her teeth.Your price,man?Your price?I am coming to it now,Mademoiselle,I said gravely.It is a simplematter.You remember the afternoon when
534、 I followed you-clumsily andthoughtlessly perhaps-through the wood to restore these things?Inseeming that happened about a month ago.I believe that it happened theday before yesterday.You called me then some very harsh names,whichI will not hurt you by repeating.The only price I ask for the restorat
535、ionof your jewels is that you on your part recall those names.How?she muttered.I do not understand.UNDER THE RED ROBE83I repeated my words very slowly.The only price or reward I ask,Mademoiselle,is that you take back those names and say that they werenot deserved.And the jewels?she exclaimed hoarsel
536、y.They are yours.They are not mine.They are nothing to me.Takethem,and say that you do not think of me-Nay,I cannot say the words,Mademoiselle.But there is something-else!What else?she cried,her headthrown back,her eyes,bright as any wild animals,searching mine.Ha!my brother?What of him?What of him,
537、sir?For him,Mademoiselle-I would prefer that you should tell me nomore than I know already,I answered in a low voice.I do not wish tobe in that affair.But yes;there is one thing I have not mentioned.Youare right.She sighed so deeply that I caught the sound.It is,I continued slowly,that you will perm
538、it me to remain atCocheforet for a few days while the soldiers are here.I am told that thereare twenty men and two officers quartered in your house.Your brother isaway.I ask to be permitted,Mademoiselle,to take his place for the time,and to be privileged to protect your sister and yourself from insu
539、lt.Thatis all.She raised her hand to her head.After a long pause,-The frogs!she muttered,they croak!I can not hear.Then,to my surprise,she turned quickly and suddenly on her heel,andwalked over the bridge,leaving me standing there.For a moment I stoodaghast,peering after her shadowy figure,and wonde
540、ring what had takenher.Then,in a minute or less,she came quickly back to me,and Iunderstood.She was crying.M.de Barthe,she said,in a trembling voice,which told me that thevictory was won,is there nothing else?Have you no other penance forme?None,Mademoiselle.She had drawn the shawl over her head,and
541、 I no longer saw her face.That is all you ask?she murmured.UNDER THE RED ROBE84That is all I ask-now,I answered.It is granted,she said slowly and firmly.Forgive me if I seem tospeak lightly-if I seem to make little of your generosity or my shame;butI can say no more now.I am so deep in trouble and s
542、o gnawed by terrorthat-I cannot feel anything keenly to-night,either shame or gratitude.Iam in a dream;God grant that it may pass as a dream!We are sunk introuble.But for you and what you have done,M.de Barthe-I-shepaused and I heard her fighting with the sobs which choked her-forgiveme.I am overwro
543、ught.And my-my feet are cold,she added,suddenlyand irrelevantly.Will you take me home?Ah,Mademoiselle,I cried remorsefully,I have been a beast!You arebarefoot,and I have kept you here.It is nothing,she said in a voice which thrilled me.My heart iswarm,Monsieur-thanks to you.It is many hours since it
544、 has been aswarm.She stepped out of the shadow as she spoke-and there,the thing wasdone.As I had planned,so it had come about.Once more I wascrossing the meadow in the dark to be received at Cocheforet,a welcomeguest.The frogs croaked in the pool and a bat swooped round us incircles;and surely never
545、-never,I thought,with a kind of exultation in mybreast-had man been placed in a stranger position.Somewhere in the black wood behind us-probably in the outskirts ofthe village-lurked M.de Cocheforet.In the great house before us,outlined by a score of lighted windows,were the soldiers come from Aucht
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2019届人教A版数学必修二同步课后篇巩固探究:2-1-1 平面 WORD版含解析.docx
