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"You, citoyen, in the meanwhile," he said to Desgas, "go back
to Captain Jutley as fast as you can, and tell him to let you have another
dozen men, and bring them with you along the St. Martin Road, where I daresay
you will soon overtake the Jew's cart with myself in it. There will be hot work
presently, if I mistake not, in the Pere Blanchard's hut. We shall corner our
game there, I'll warrant, for this impudent Scarlet Pimpernel has had the
audacity--or the stupidity, I hardly know which--to adhere to his original
plans. He has gone to meet de Tournay, St. Just and the other traitors, which
for the moment, I thought, perhaps, he did not intend to do. When we find them,
there will be a band of desperate men at bay. Some of our men will, I presume,
be put HORS DE COMBAT. These royalists are good swordsmen, and the Englishman
is devilish cunning, and looks very powerful. Still, we shall be five against
one at least. You can follow the cart closely with your men, all along the St.
Martin Road, through Miquelon. The Englishman is ahead of us, and not likely to
look behind him."
Whilst he gave these curt and concise orders, he had completed his change of
attire. The priest's costume had been laid aside, and he was once more dressed
in his usual dark, tight-fitting clothes. At last he took up his hat.
"I shall have an interesting prisoner to deliver into your hands,"
he said with a chuckle, as with unwonted familiarity he took Desgas' arm, and
led him towards the door. "We won't kill him outright, eh, friend Desgas?
The Pere Blanchard's hut is--an I mistake not--a lonely spot upon the beach,
and our men will enjoy a bit of rough sport there with the wounded fox. Choose
your men well, friend Desgas. . .of the sort who would enjoy that type of
sport--eh? We must see that Scarlet Pimpernel wither a bit--what?--shrink and
tremble, eh?. . .before we finally. . ." He made an expressive gesture,
whilst he laughed a low, evil laugh, which filled Marguerite's soul with
sickening horror.
"Choose your men well, Citoyen Desgas," he said once more, as he
led his secretary finally out of the room.
CHAPTER XXVII ON THE TRACK
Never for a moment did Marguerite Blakeney hesitate. The last sounds outside
the "Chat Gris" had died away in the night. She had heard Desgas
giving orders to his men, and then starting off towards the fort, to get a
reinforcement of a dozen more men: six were not thought sufficient to capture
the cunning Englishman, whose resourceful brain was even more dangerous than
his valour and his strength.
Then a few minutes later, she heard the Jew's husky voice again, evidently
shouting to his nag, then the rumble of wheels, and noise of a rickety cart
bumping over the rough road.
Inside the inn, everything was still. Brogard and his wife, terrified of
Chauvelin, had given no sign of life; they hoped to be forgotten, and at any
rate to remain unperceived: Marguerite could not even hear their usual volleys
of muttered oaths.
She waited a moment or two longer, then she quietly slipped down the broken
stairs, wrapped her dark cloak closely round her and slipped out of the inn.
The night was fairly dark, sufficiently so at any rate to hide her dark
figure from view, whilst her keen ears kept count of the sound of the cart
going on ahead. She hoped by keeping well within the shadow of the ditches
which lined the road, that she would not be seen by Desgas' men, when they
approached, or by the patrols, which she concluded were still on duty.
Thus she started to do this, the last stage of her weary journey, alone, at
night, and on foot. Nearly three leagues to Miquelon, and then on to the Pere
Blanchard's hut, wherever that fatal spot might be, probably over rough roads:
she cared not.
The Jew's nag could not get on very fast, and though she was wary with
mental fatigue and nerve strain, she knew that she could easily keep up with
it, on a hilly road, where the poor beast, who was sure to be half-starved,
would have to be allowed long and frequent rests. The road lay some distance
from the sea, bordered on either side by shrubs and stunted trees, sparsely
covered with meagre foliage, all turning away from the North, with their
branches looking in the semi-darkness, like stiff, ghostly hair, blown by a
perpetual wind.
Fortunately, the moon showed no desire to peep between the clouds, and
Marguerite hugging the edge of the road, and keeping close to the low line of
shrubs, was fairly safe from view. Everything around her was so still: only
from far, very far away, there came like a long soft moan, the sound of the
distant sea.
The air was keen and full of brine; after that enforced period of
inactivity, inside the evil-smelling, squalid inn, Marguerite would have
enjoyed the sweet scent of this autumnal night, and the distant melancholy
rumble of the autumnal night, and the distant melancholy rumble of the waves;
she would have revelled in the calm and stillness of this lonely spot, a calm,
broken only at intervals by the strident and mournful cry of some distant gull,
and by the creaking of the wheels, some way down the road: she would have loved
the cool atmosphere, the peaceful immensity of Nature, in this lonely part of
the coast: but her heart was too full of cruel foreboding, of a great ache and
longing for a being who had become infinitely dear to her.
Her feet slipped on the grassy bank, for she thought it safest not to walk
near the centre of the road, and she found it difficult to keep up a sharp pace
along the muddy incline. She even thought it best not to keep too near to the
cart; everything was so still, that the rumble of the wheels could not fail to
be a safe guide.
The loneliness was absolute. Already the few dim lights of Calais lay far
behind, and on this road there was not a sign of human habitation, not even the
hut of a fisherman or of a woodcutter anywhere near; far away on her right was
the edge of the cliff, below it the rough beach, against which the incoming
tide was dashing itself with its constant, distant murmur. And ahead the rumble
of the wheels, bearing an implacable enemy to his triumph.
Marguerite wondered at what particular spot, on this lonely coast, Percy
could be at this moment. Not very far surely, for he had had less than a
quarter of an hour's start of Chauvelin. She wondered if he knew that in this
cool, ocean-scented bit of France, there lurked many spies, all eager to sight
his tall figure, to track him to where his unsuspecting friends waited for him,
and then, to close the net over him and them.
Chauvelin, on ahead, jolted and jostled in the Jew's vehicle, was nursing
comfortable thoughts. He rubbed his hands together, with content, as he thought
of the web which he had woven, and through which that ubiquitous and daring
Englishman could not hope to escape. As the time went on, and the old Jew drove
him leisurely but surely along the dark road, he felt more and more eager for
the grand finale of this exciting chase after the mysterious Scarlet Pimpernel.
The capture of the audacious plotter would be the finest leaf in Citoyen
Chauvelin's wreath of glory. Caught, red-handed, on the spot, in the very act
of aiding and abetting the traitors against the Republic of France, the
Englishman could claim no protection from his own country. Chauvelin had, in
any case, fully made up his mind that all intervention should come too late.
Never for a moment did the slightest remorse enter his heart, as to the
terrible position in which he had placed the unfortunate wife, who had
unconsciously betrayed her husband. As a matter of fact, Chauvelin had ceased
even to think of her: she had been a useful tool, that was all.
The Jew's lean nag did little more than walk. She was going along at a slow
jog trot, and her driver had to give her long and frequent halts.
"Are we a long way yet from Miquelon?" asked Chauvelin from time
to time.
"Not very far, your Honour," was the uniform placid reply.
"We have not yet come across your friend and mine, lying in a heap in
the roadway," was Chauvelin's sarcastic comment.
"Patience, noble Excellency," rejoined the son of Moses,
"they are ahead of us. I can see the imprint of the cart wheels, driven by
that traitor, that son of the Amalekite."
"You are sure of the road?"
"As sure as I am of the presence of those ten gold pieces in the noble
Excellency's pockets, which I trust will presently be mine."
"As soon as I have shaken hands with my friend the tall stranger, they
will certainly be yours."
"Hark, what was that?" said the Jew suddenly.
Through the stillness, which had been absolute, there could now be heard
distinctly the sound of horses' hoofs on the muddy road.
"They are soldiers," he added in an awed whisper.
"Stop a moment, I want to hear," said Chauvelin.
Marguerite had also heard the sound of galloping hoofs, coming towards the
cart and towards herself. For some time she had been on the alert thinking that
Desgas and his squad would soon overtake them, but these came from the opposite
direction, presumably from Miquelon. The darkness lent her sufficient cover.
She had perceived that the cart had stopped, and with utmost caution, treading
noiselessly on the soft road, she crept a little nearer.
Her heart was beating fast, she was trembling in every limb; already she had
guessed what news these mounted men would bring. "Every stranger on these
roads or on the beach must be shadowed, especially if he be tall or stoops as
if he would disguise his height; when sighted a mounted messenger must at once
ride back and report." Those had been Chauvelin's orders. Had then the
tall stranger been sighted, and was this the mounted messenger, come to bring
the great news, that the hunted hare had run its head into the noose at
last?"
Marguerite, realizing that the cart had come to a standstill, managed to
slip nearer to it in the darkness; she crept close up, hoping to get within
earshot, to hear what the messenger had to say.
She heard the quick words of challenge--
"Liberte, Fraternite, Egalite!" then Chauvelin's quick query:--
"What news?"
Two men on horseback had halted beside the vehicle.
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