There was no choice for him; he must tramp as far as Chavagne, find a bed
there, and leave to-morrow until it dawned. On the resolve he set his face in
the direction whence he had come. But again he paused. Chavagne lay on the road
to Rennes. To go that way was to plunge further into danger. He would strike
south again. At the foot of some meadows on this side of the village there was
a ferry that would put him across the river. Thus he would avoid the village;
and by placing the river between himself and the immediate danger, he would
obtain an added sense of security.
A lane, turning out of the highroad, a quarter of a mile this side of
Gavrillac, led down to that ferry. By this lane some twenty minutes later came
Andre-Louis with dragging feet. He avoided the little cottage of the ferryman,
whose window was alight, and in the dark crept down to the boat, intending if
possible to put himself across. He felt for the chain by which the boat was
moored, and ran his fingers along this to the point where it was fastened. Here
to his dismay he found a padlock.
He stood up in the gloom and laughed silently. Of course he might have known
it. The ferry was the property of M. de La Tour d'Azyr, and not likely to be
left unfastened so that poor devils might cheat him of seigneurial dues.
There being no possible alternative, he walked back to the cottage, and
rapped on the door. When it opened, he stood well back, and aside, out of the
shaft of light that issued thence.
"Ferry!" he rapped out, laconically.
The ferryman, a burly scoundrel well known to him, turned aside to pick up a
lantern, and came forth as he was bidden. As he stepped from the little porch, he
levelled the lantern so that its light fell on the face of this traveller.
"My God!" he ejaculated.
"You realize, I see, that I am pressed," said Andre-Louis, his
eyes on the fellow's startled countenance.
"And well you may be with the gallows waiting for you at Rennes,"
growled the ferryman. "Since you've been so foolish as to come back to
Gavrillac, you had better go again as quickly as you can. I will say nothing of
having seen you."
"I thank you, Fresnel. Your advice accords with my intention. That is
why I need the boat."
"Ah, that, no," said Fresnel, with determination. "I'll hold
my peace, but it's as much as my skin is worth to help you.
"You need not have seen my face. Forget that you have seen it."
"I'll do that, monsieur. But that is all I will do. I cannot put you
across the river."
"Then give me the key of the boat, and I will put myself across."
"That is the same thing. I cannot. I'll hold my tongue, but I will not
- I dare not - help you."
Andre-Louis looked a moment into that sullen, resolute face, and understood.
This man, living under the shadow of La Tour d'Azyr, dared exercise no will
that might he in conflict with the will of his dread lord.
"Fresnel," he said, quietly, "if, as you say, the gallows
claim me, the thing that has brought me to this extremity arises out of the
shooting of Mabey. Had not Mabey been murdered there would have been no need
for me to have raised my voice as I have done. Mabey was your friend, I think.
Will you for his sake lend me the little help I need to save my neck?"
The man kept his glance averted, and the cloud of sullenness deepened on his
face.
"I would if I dared, but I dare not." Then, quite suddenly he
became angry. It was as if in anger he sought support. "Don't you
understand that I dare not? Would you have a poor man risk his life for you?
What have you or yours ever done for me that you should ask that? You do not
cross to-night in my ferry. Understand that, monsieur, and go at once - go
before I remember that it may be dangerous even to have talked to you and not
give information. Go!"
He turned on his heel to reenter his cottage, and a wave of hopelessness
swept over Andre-Louis.
But in a second it was gone. The man must be compelled, and he had the
means. He bethought him of a pistol pressed upon him by Le Chapelier at the
moment of his leaving Rennes, a gift which at the time he had almost disdained.
True, it was not loaded, and he had no ammunition. But how was Fresnel to know
that?
He acted quickly. As with his right hand he pulled it from his pocket, with
his left he caught the ferryman by the shoulder, and swung him round.
"What do you want now?" Fresnel demanded angrily. "Haven't I
told you that I... "
He broke off short. The muzzle of the pistol was within a foot of his eyes.
"I want the key of the boat. That is all, Fresnel. And you can either
give it me at once, or I'll take it after I have burnt your brains. I should
regret to kill you, but I shall not hesitate. It is your life against mine,
Fresnel; and you'll not find it strange that if one of us must die I prefer
that it shall be you."
Fresnel dipped a hand into his pocket, and fetched thence a key. He held it
out to Andre-Louis in fingers that shook - more in anger than in fear.
"I yield to violence," he said, showing his teeth like a snarling
dog. "But don't imagine that it will greatly profit you."
Andre-Louis took the key. His pistol remained levelled.
"You threaten me, I think," he said. "It is not difficult to
read your threat. The moment I am gone, you will run to inform against me. You
will set the marechaussee on my heels to overtake me."
"No, no!" cried the other. He perceived his peril. He read his
doom in the cold, sinister note on which Andre-Louis addressed him, and grew
afraid. "I swear to you, monsieur, that I have no such intention."
"I think I had better make quite sure of you."
"0 my God! Have mercy, monsieur!" The knave was in a palsy of
terror. "I mean you no harm - I swear to Heaven I mean you no harm. I will
not say a word. I will not... "
"I would rather depend upon your silence than your assurances. Still,
you shall have your chance. I am a fool, perhaps, but I have a reluctance to
shed blood. Go into the house, Fresnel. Go, man. I follow you."
In the shabby main room of that dwelling, Andre-Louis halted him again.
"Get me a length of rope," he commanded, and was readily obeyed.
Five minutes later Fresnel was securely bound to a chair, and effectively
silenced by a very uncomfortable gag improvised out of a block of wood and a
muffler.
On the threshold the departing Andre-Louis turned.
"Good-night, Fresnel," he said. Fierce eyes glared mute hatred at
him. "It is unlikely that your ferry will be required again to-night. But
some one is sure to come to your relief quite early in the morning. Until then
bear your discomfort with what fortitude you can, remembering that you have
brought it entirely upon yourself by your uncharitableness. If you spend the
night considering that, the lesson should not be lost upon you. By morning you
may even have grown so charitable as not to know who it was that tied you up.
Good-night."
He stepped out and closed the door.
To unlock the ferry, and pull himself across the swift-running waters, on
which the faint moonlight was making a silver ripple, were matters that engaged
not more than six or seven minutes. He drove the nose of the boat through the
decaying sedges that fringed the southern bank of the stream, sprang ashore,
and made the little craft secure. Then, missing the footpath in the dark, he
struck out across a sodden meadow in quest of the road.
BOOK II:
CHAPTER I. THE TRESPASSERS
Coming presently upon the Redon road, Andre-Louis, obeying instinct rather
than reason, turned his face to the south, and plodded wearily and mechanically
forward. He had no clear idea of whither he was going, or of whither he should
go. All that imported at the moment was to put as great a distance as possible
between Gavrillac and himself.
He had a vague, half-formed notion of returning to Nantes; and there, by
employing the newly found weapon of his oratory, excite the people into
sheltering him as the first victim of the persecution he had foreseen, and
against which he had sworn them to take up arms. But the idea was one which he
entertained merely as an indefinite possibility upon which he felt no real
impulse to act.
Meanwhile he chuckled at the thought of Fresnel as he had last seen him,
with his muffled face and glaring eyeballs. "For one who was anything but
a man of action," he writes, "I felt that I had acquitted myself none
so badly." It is a phrase that recurs at intervals in his sketchy
"Confessions." Constantly is he reminding you that he is a man of
mental and not physical activities, and apologizing when dire neccessity drives
him into acts of violence. I suspect this insistence upon his philosophic
detachment - for which I confess he had justification enough - to betray his
besetting vanity.
With increasing fatigue came depression and self-criticism. He had stupidly
overshot his mark in insultingly denouncing M. de Lesdiguieres. "It is
much better," he says somewhere, "to be wicked than to be stupid.
Most of this world's misery is the fruit not as priests tell us of wickedness,
but of stupidity." And we know that of all stupidities he considered anger
the most deplorable. Yet he had permitted himself to be angry with a creature
like M. de Lesdiguieres - a lackey, a fribble, a nothing, despite his
potentialities for evil. He could perfectly have discharged his self-imposed
mission without arousing the vindictive resentment of the King's Lieutenant.
He beheld himself vaguely launched upon life with the riding-suit in which
he stood, a single louis d'or and a few pieces of silver for all capital, and a
knowledge of law which had been inadequate to preserve him from the
consequences of infringing it.
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