|
M. des Amis gripped him by the shoulders, and looked into his face.
"Is this true, my friend?" he asked.
"Not a word of it," said Andre-Louis, wrecking his chances on an
irresistible impulse to say the unexpected. But he didn't wreck them. M. des
Amis burst into laughter; and having laughed his fill, confessed himself
charmed by his applicant's fundamental honesty.
"Take off your coat," he said, "and let us see what you can
do. Nature, at least, designed you for a swordsman. You are light, active, and
supple, with a good length of arm, and you seem intelligent. I may make
something of you, teach you enough for my purpose, which is that you should
give the elements of the art to new pupils before I take them in hand to finish
them. Let us try. Take that mask and foil, and come over here.
He led him to the end of the room, where the bare floor was scored with
lines of chalk to guide the beginner in the management of his feet.
At the end of a ten minutes' bout, M. des Amis offered him the situation,
and explained it. In addition to imparting the rudiments of the art to
beginners, he was to brush out the fencing-room every morning, keep the foils
furbished, assist the gentlemen who came for lessons to dress and undress, and
make himself generally useful. His wages for the present were to be forty
livres a month, and he might sleep in an alcove behind the fencing-room if he
had no other lodging.
The position, you see, had its humiliations. But, if Andre-Louis would hope
to dine, he must begin by eating his pride as an hors d'oeuvre.
"And so," he said, controlling a grimace, "the robe yields
not only to the sword, but to the broom as well. Be it so. I stay."
lt is characteristic of him that, having made that choice, he should have
thrown himself into the work with enthusiasm. It was ever his way to do
whatever he did with all the resources of his mind and energies of his body.
When he was not instructing very young gentlemen in the elements of the art,
showing them the elaborate and intricate salute - which with a few days' hard
practice he had mastered to perfection - and the eight guards, he was himself
hard at work on those same guards, exercising eye, wrist, and knees.
Perceiving his enthusiasm, and seeing the obvious possibilities it opened
out of turning him into a really effective assistant, M. des Amis presently
took him more seriously in hand.
"Your application and zeal, my friend, are deserving of more than forty
livres a month," the master informed him at the end of a week. "For
the present, however, I will make up what else I consider due to you by
imparting to you secrets of this noble art. Your future depends upon how you
profit by your exceptional good fortune in receiving instruction from me."
Thereafter every morning before the opening of the academy, the master would
fence for half an hour with his new assistant. Under this really excellent
tuition Andre-Louis improved at a rate that both astounded and flattered M. des
Amis. He would have been less flattered and more astounded had he known that at
least half the secret of Andre-Louis' amazing progress lay in the fact that he
was devouring the contents of the master's library, which was made up of a
dozen or so treatises on fencing by such great masters as La Bessiere, Danet,
and the syndic of the King's Academy, Augustin Rousseau. To M. des Amis, whose
swordsmanship was all based on practice and not at all on theory, who was
indeed no theorist or student in any sense, that little library was merely a
suitable adjunct to a fencing-academy, a proper piece of decorative furniture.
The books themselves meant nothing to him in any other sense. He had not the
type of mind that could have read them with profit nor could be understand that
another should do so. Andre-Louis, on the contrary, a man with the habit of
study, with the acquired faculty of learning from books, read those works with
enormous profit, kept their precepts in mind, critically set off those of one
master against those of another, and made for himself a choice which he
proceeded to put into practice.
At the end of a month it suddenly dawned upon M. des Amis that his assistant
had developed into a fencer of very considerable force, a man in a bout with whom
it became necessary to exert himself if he were to escape defeat.
"I said from the first," he told him one day, "that Nature
designed you for a swordsman. See how justified I was, and see also how well I
have known how to mould the material with which Nature has equipped you."
"To the master be the glory," said Andre-Louis.
His relations with M. des Amis had meanwhile become of the friendliest, and
he was now beginning to receive from him other pupils than mere beginners. In
fact Andre-Louis was becoming an assistant in a much fuller sense of the word.
M. des Amis, a chivalrous, open-handed fellow, far from taking advantage of
what he had guessed to be the young man's difficulties, rewarded his zeal by
increasing his wages to four louis a month.
>From the' earnest and thoughtful study of the theories of others, it
followed now - as not uncommonly happens - that Andre-Louis came to develop
theories of his own. He lay one June morning on his little truckle bed in the
alcove behind the academy, considering a passage that he had read last night in
Danet on double and triple feints. It had seemed to him when reading it that
Danet had stopped short on the threshold of a great discovery in the art of
fencing. Essentially a theorist, Andre-Louis perceived the theory suggested,
which Danet himself in suggesting it had not perceived. He lay now on his back,
surveying the cracks in the ceiling and considering this matter further with
the lucidity that early morning often brings to an acute intelligence. You are to
remember that for close upon two months now the sword had been Andre-Louis'
daily exercise and almost hourly thought. Protracted concentration upon the
subject was giving him an extraordinary penetration of vision. Swordsmanship as
he learnt and taught and saw it daily practised consisted of a series of
attacks and parries, a series of disengages from one line into another. But
always a limited series. A half-dozen disengages on either side was, strictly
speaking, usually as far as any engagement went. Then one recommenced. But even
so, these disengages were fortuitous. What if from first to last they should be
calculated?
That was part of the thought - one of the two legs on which his theory was
to stand; the other was: what would happen if one so elaborated Danet's ideas
on the triple feint as to merge them into a series of actual calculated
disengages to culminate at the fourth or fifth or even sixth disengage? That is
to say, if one were to make a series of attacks inviting ripostes again to be
countered, each of which was not intended to go home, but simply to play the
opponent's blade into a line that must open him ultimately, and as
predetermined, for an irresistible lunge. Each counter of the opponent's would
have to be preconsidered in this widening of his guard, a widening so gradual
that he should himself be unconscious of it, and throughout intent upon getting
home his own point on one of those counters.
Andre-Louis had been in his time a chess-player of some force, and at chess
he had excelled by virtue of his capacity for thinking ahead. That virtue
applied to fencing should all but revolutionize the art. It was so applied
already, of course, but only in an elementary and very limited fashion, in mere
feints, single, double, or triple. But even the triple feint should be a clumsy
device compared with this method upon which he theorized.
He considered further, and the conviction grew that he held the key of a
discovery. He was impatient to put his theory to the test.
That morning he was given a pupil of some force, against whom usually he was
hard put to it to defend himself. Coming on guard, he made up his mind to hit
him on the fourth disengage, predetermining the four passes that should lead up
to it. They engaged in tierce, and Andre-Louis led the attack by a beat and a
straightening of the arm. Came the demi-contre he expected, which he promptly
countered by a thrust in quinte; this being countered again, he reentered still
lower, and being again correctly parried, as he had calculated, he lunged
swirling his point into carte, and got home full upon his opponent's breast.
The ease of it surprised him.
They began again. This time he resolved to go in on the fifth disengage, and
in on that he went with the same ease. Then, complicating the matter further,
he decided to try the sixth, and worked out in his mind the combination of the
five preliminary engages. Yet again he succeeded as easily as before.
The young gentleman opposed to him laughed with just a tinge of
mortification in his voice.
"I am all to pieces this morning," he said.
"You are not of your usual force," Andre-Louis politely agreed.
And then greatly daring, always to test that theory of his to the uttermost:
"So much so," he added, "that I could almost be sure of hitting
you as and when I declare."
The capable pupil looked at him with a half-sneer. "Ah, that, no,"
said he.
"Let us try. On the fourth disengage I shall touch you. Allons! En
garde!"
And as he promised, so it happened.
The young gentleman who, hitherto, had held no great opinion of Andre-Louis'
swordsmanship, accounting him well enough for purposes of practice when the
master was otherwise engaged, opened wide his eyes. In a burst of mingled
generosity and intoxication, Andre-Louis was almost for disclosing his method -
a method which a little later was to become a commonplace of the fencing-rooms.
Betimes he checked himself. To reveal his secret would be to destroy the
prestige that must accrue to him from exercising it.
At noon, the academy being empty, M. des Amis called Andre-Louis to one of
the occasional lessons which he still received. And for the first time in all
his experience with Andre-Louis, M. des Amis received from him a full hit in
the course of the first bout. He laughed, well pleased, like the generous
fellow he was.
|