"It is you, Andre - at last!"
He drew rein, mildly surprised, to be assailed by another question,
impatiently, anxiously asked.
"Where have you been?"
"Where have I been, Cousin Aline? Oh... seeing the world."
"I have been patrolling this road since noon to-day waiting for
you." She spoke breathlessly, in haste to explain. "A troop of the
marechaussee from Rennes descended upon Gavrillac this morning in quest of you.
They turned the chateau and the village inside out, and at last discovered that
you were due to return with a horse hired from the Breton arme. So they have
taken up their quarters at the inn to wait for you. I have been here all the
afternoon on the lookout to warn you against walking into that trap."
"My dear Aline! That I should have been the cause of so much concern
and trouble!"
"Never mind that. It is not important."
"On the contrary; it is the most important part of what you tell me. It
is the rest that is unimportant."
"Do you realize that they have come to arrest you?" she asked him,
with increasing impatience. "You are wanted for sedition, and upon a
warrant from M. de Lesdiguieres."
"Sedition?" quoth he, and his thoughts flew to that business at
Nantes. It was impossible they could have had news of it in Rennes and acted
upon it in so short a time.
"Yes, sedition. The sedition of that wicked speech of yours at Rennes
on Wednesday."
"Oh, that!" said he. "Pooh!" His note of relief might
have told her, had she been more attentive, that he had to fear the
consequences of a greater wickedness committed since. "Why, that was
nothing."
"Nothing?"
"I almost suspect that the real intentions of these gentlemen of the
marechaussee have been misunderstood. Most probably they have come to thank me
on M. de Lesdiguieres' behalf. I restrained the people when they would have
burnt the Palais and himself inside it."
"After you had first incited them to do it. I suppose you were afraid
of your work. You drew back at the last moment. But you said things of M. de
Lesdiguieres, if you are correctly reported, which he will never forgive."
"I see," said Andre-Louis, and he fell into thought.
But Mlle. de Kercadiou had already done what thinking was necessary, and her
alert young mind had settled all that was to be done.
"You must not go into Gavrillac," she told him, "and you must
get down from your horse, and let me take it. I will stable it at the chateau
to-night. And sometime to morrow afternoon, by when you should be well away, I
will return it to the Breton arme."
"Oh, but that is impossible."
"Impossible? Why?"
"For several reasons. One of them is that you haven't considered what
will happen to you if you do such a thing."
"To me? Do you suppose I am afraid of that pack of oafs sent by M.
Lesdiguieres? I have committed no sedition."
"But it is almost as bad to give aid to one who is wanted for the
crime. That is the law."
"What do I care for the law? Do you imagine that the law will presume
to touch me?"
"Of course there is that. You are sheltered by one of the abuses I
complained of at Rennes. I was forgetting."
"Complain of it as much as you please, but meanwhile profit by it.
Come, Andre, do as I tell you. Get down from your horse." And then, as he
still hesitated, she stretched out and caught him by the arm. Her voice was
vibrant with earnestness. "Andre, you don't realize how serious is your
position. If these people take you, it is almost certain that you will be hanged.
Don't you realize it? You must not go to Gavrillac. You must go away at once,
and lie completely lost for a time until this blows over. Indeed, until my
uncle can bring influence to bear to obtain your pardon, you must keep in
hiding."
"That will be a long time, then," said Andre-Louis. M. de
Kercadiou has never cultivated friends at court."
"There is M. de La Tour d'Azyr," she reminded him, to his
astonishment.
"That man!" he cried, and then he laughed. "But it was
chiefly against him that I aroused the resentment of the people of Rennes. I
should have known that all my speech was not reported to you.
"It was, and that part of it among the rest."
"Ah! And yet you are concerned to save me, the man who seeks the life
of your future husband at the hands either of the law or of the people? Or is
it, perhaps, that since you have seen his true nature revealed in the murder of
poor Philippe, you have changed your views on the subject of becoming Marquise
de La Tour d'Azyr?"
"You often show yourself without any faculty of deductive
reasoning."
"Perhaps. But hardly to the extent of imagining that M. de La Tour
d'Azyr will ever lift a finger to do as you suggest."
"In which, as usual, you are wrong. He will certainly do so if I ask
him."
"If you ask him?" Sheer horror rang in his voice.
"Why, yes. You see, I have not yet said that I will be Marquise de La
Tour d'Azyr. I am still considering. It is a position that has its advantages.
One of them is that it ensures a suitor's complete obedience."
"So, so. I see the crooked logic of your mind. You might go so far as
to say to him: 'Refuse me this, and I shall refuse to be your marquise.' You
would go so far as that?"
"At need, I might."
"And do you not see the converse implication? Do you not see that your hands
would then be tied, that you would be wanting in honour if afterwards you
refused him? And do you think that I would consent to anything that could so
tie your hands? Do you think I want to see you damned, Aline?"
Her hand fell away from his arm.
"Oh, you are mad!" she exclaimed, quite out of patience.
"Possibly. But I like my madness. There is a thrill in it unknown to
such sanity as yours. By your leave, Aline, I think I will ride on to
Gavrillac."
"Andre, you must not! It is death to you!" In her alarm she backed
her horse, and pulled it across the road to bar his way.
It was almost completely night by now; but from behind the wrack of clouds
overhead a crescent moon sailed out to alleviate the darkness.
"Come, now," she enjoined him. "Be reasonable. Do as I bid
you. See, there is a carriage coming up behind you. Do not let us be found here
together thus."
He made up his mind quickly. He was not the man to be actuated by false
heroics about dying, and he had no fancy whatever for the gallows of M. de
Lesdiguieres' providing. The immediate task that he had set himself might be
accomplished. He had made heard - and ringingly - the voice that M. de La Tour
d'Azyr imagined he had silenced. But he was very far from having done with
life.
"Aline, on one condition only."
"And that?"
"That you swear to me you will never seek the aid of M. de La Tour
d'Azyr on my behalf."
"Since you insist, and as time presses, I consent. And now ride on with
me as far as the lane. There is that carriage coming up."
The lane to which she referred was one that branched off the road some three
hundred yards nearer the village and led straight up the hill to the chateau
itself. In silence they rode together towards it, and together they turned into
that thickly hedged and narrow bypath. At a depth of fifty yards she halted
him.
"Now!" she bade him.
Obediently he swung down from his horse, and surrendered the reins to her.
"Aline," he said, "I haven't words in which to thank
you."
"It isn't necessary," said she.
"But I shall hope to repay you some day."
"Nor is that necessary. Could I do less than I am doing? I do not want
to hear of you hanged, Andre; nor does my uncle, though he is very angry with
you.
"I suppose he is.
"And you can hardly be surprised. You were his delegate, his
representative. He depended upon you, and you have turned your coat. He is
rightly indignant, calls you a traitor, and swears that he will never speak to
you again. But he doesn't want you hanged, Andre."
"Then we are agreed on that at least, for I don't want it myself."
"I'll make your peace with him. And now - good-bye, Andre. Send me a
word when you are safe."
She held out a hand that looked ghostly in the faint light. He took it and
bore it to his lips.
"God bless you, Aline."
She was gone, and he stood listening to the receding clopper-clop of hooves
until it grew faint in the distance. Then slowly, with shoulders hunched and
head sunk on his breast, he retraced his steps to the main road, cogitating
whither he should go. Quite suddenly he checked, remembering with dismay that
he was almost entirely without money. In Brittany itself he knew of no
dependable hiding-place, and as long as he was in Brittany his peril must
remain imminent. Yet to leave the province, and to leave it as quickly as
prudence dictated, horses would be necessary. And how was he to procure horses,
having no money beyond a single louis d'or and a few pieces of silver?
There was also the fact that he was very weary. He had had little sleep
since Tuesday night, and not very much then; and much of the time had been
spent in the saddle, a wearing thing to one so little accustomed to long rides.
Worn as he was, it was unthinkable that he should go far to-night. He might get
as far as Chavagne, perhaps. But there he must sup and sleep; and what, then,
of to-morrow?
Had he but thought of it before, perhaps Aline might have been able to
assist him with the loan of a few louis. His first impulse now was to follow
her to the chateau. But prudence dismissed the notion. Before he could reach
her, he must be seen by servants, and word of his presence would go forth.
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