A COURIER OF FORTUNE GERARD, GERARD," CRIED GABRIELLE IN DIRE ALARM A Courier of Fortune By ARTHUR W. MARCH MONT Author of "By Wit of Woman, 11 "The Queen 1 s Advo- cate," "By Snare of Love," "In The Name of a Woman," "When I Was Czar," etc., etc. A. L. BURT COMPANY Publishers # * * f* NEW YORK * * f* * Copyright, 1904, by ARTHUR W. MARCHMONT Copyright, 1904, by FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY TO RALPH STUART, ESQ. MY DEAR MR. STUART : I dedicate this book to you as a memento of our delightful hours of travel and work together in writing the play "A Courier of Fortune" founded upon this story. The circum- stances of our joint literary work were as unusual to me as they were fascinating ; for, although the play was commenced in London, the last "curtain " was not written until my wife and I had crossed the Atlantic and journeyed with you on a tour of over ten thousand miles of railway travelling, through so many of the marvels of this wonderful Continent. St. Louis ; Denver ; Salt Lake City ; San Francisco ; the Pacific Sea- board north to Puget Sound; the fertile Palouse Country; Washington, Idaho, and Montana those wealthy States of boundless promise and marvellous scenic contrasts ; the cities of the Lakes, Duluth and Supe- rior ; then the young giant twins, St. Paul and Minneapolis ; and by way of Milwaukee and Chicago to New York. A tour of momentous interest and a collaboration of close-knit sympathy, cementing a friend- ship which, I assure you, is one of the pleasantest things of my life. Yours ever, ARTHUR W. MARCHMONT. 2137230 CONTENTS CHAPTER PACK I. THE " TIGER OF MORVAIX " . . i II. THE MAISON DE MALINCOURT . . .10 III. SINISTER HINTS 21 IV. THE DUKE'S PROPOSAL . . . -33 V. THE TIGER'S CLAWS 43 VI. " I AM KNOWN AS GERARD DE COBALT " .56 VII. AT MALINCOURT ...... 68 VIII. THE PLOT THICKENS 81 IX. WHAT DENYS KNEW . . . . .94 X. THE ACCUSATION 107 XI. THE DUKE'S SENTENCE . . . .118 XII. GABRIELLE'S FRIEND ..... 130 XIII. DISCOVERY 145 XIV. "I AM NOT GERARD DE COBALT" . . 156 XV. A PRISONER 168 XVI. PASCAL AND THE SPY . . . . .180 XVII. GABRIELLE PLEADS 190 XVIII. IN THE "TIGER'S DEN" . . . .201 XIX. A LIFE AND DEATH STRUGGLE . . .214 CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE XX. A DASH FOR THE WALLS . . . .226 XXI. AT MALINCOURT AGAIN . . . .237 XXII. PASCAL PLAYS SPY 248 XXIII. LUCETTE AS DECOY 259 XXIV. SUSPENSE 272 XXV. A RUSE 284 XXVI. AT THE CITY GATES . . . -295 XXVII. HUNTED 308 XXVIII. A RISING AND ITS SEQUEL . . .322 XXIX. IN THE HALL OF AUDIENCE . . . 333 XXX. THE TROOPS MARCH . . . 349 A COURIER OF FORTUNE CHAPTER I THE " TIGER OF MORVAIX " THE hot noontide sun was pouring down into the market place of Morvaix and in the shadow cast by the great Cross of St. Jean in the centre, a handsome but very soberly dressed cavalier was shelter- ing from the fierce July heat and closely observing the townspeople as they clustered here and there to engage in eager animated discussion. Every now and then he cast sweeping impatient glances in all directions in evi- dent search of some one whose delay irritated him. It was plain even to a stranger's eyes that the townsfolk were greatly excited, and that the reason which had drawn the people from their houses was both urgent and disturbing. All classes were present burghers, mer- chants, shopkeepers, workmen, 'prentices, down to the poorest of the labourers and peasants. Men, women and children alike were gathered there ; the men set-faced and bitter, the women sad and anxious. Discontent, anger, fear and sorrow were the emotions evinced among all save the many soldiers who moved among the excited knots, with leers for the women and oaths for the men, and jibes and ribald laughter one to another. The young cavalier's face darkened as he listened, and more than once he started as if he would interfere, but * A COURIER OF FORTUNE checked himself. His keen, quick blue eyes were every- where ; and presently catching sight of two closely-cowled monks clad in the black habit of their order, who showed at a secluded corner of the square, he left his shelter and went" toward them quickly but cautiously. As he reached them one gave him a monkish greeting and the other a military salute. "I half feared you had forgotten the appointment," he said, in a tone of authority ; " and you are certainly for- getting your part, Pascal. Monks don't salute like soldiers." " Don't I know it ? " was the reply, laughingly spoken. " I haven't trained all our tough fellows in the monkish drill for nothing. I'll tell my beads against Dubois here for a stoup of wine " ; and taking in hand the rosary which hung conspicuously at his side, he commenced to mumble a string of nonsense words, and laughed again. " Peace, man, peace ! " said the other monk, much older in years. " You'll be overheard and ruin all." " Tush ! they'll only think it's my priestly Latin." " I fear I ought to have left you in Paris, Pascal," said the cavalier. " I was warned your unruly tongue would play the mischief with a scheme that calls for tact and silence." " Nay, my lord ' " Not, my lord, here. I am not Gerard de Bourbon for a few days. I have borrowed the name of that dicing scoundrel, Raoul de Cobalt, and am Gerard de Cobalt. Remember that, and watch your words until you have learnt that lesson." " I shall not forget. This holy man here, Dubois, will keep me in order," answered Pascal with a smile. " Tell me the news, Dubois." " All has gone as you wished. The men have all arrived; and yesterday I sought an interview with the Governor and did all as you had directed." THE "TIGER OF MORVAIX " j " He swallowed the bait? " " Readily. I told him that the Cardinal Archbishop had sent him a hundred fighting men for his troops, and craved permission for the hundred begging friars to re- main in the city until the pilgrimage southward could be resumed." " Good." " I brought the monks in," interposed Pascal. " A hundred tough stalwarts, every man as sober as a begging friar should be ; all telling their beads with unctuous unanimity, uttering ' Pax Vobiscum ' with fervid zeal, and praying as only Bourbons can pray for a fight." " Have a care, brother," cried Dubois quickly, as a knot of the townsfolk passed. " Have I not always care, holy brother ? " cried Pascal, taking his rosary in hand again and mumbling his Pater- noster in tones loud enough to reach the passers' ears. " A fine achievement, M. de Cobalt, but it will not last." " What mean you ? " asked Gerard quickly. " Soldiers are soldiers, and it takes more than a monk's gabardine to change them. When pretty girls come buz- zing round, craving ' A blessing, holy father,' and look- ing so sweet and piteous, it's not in nature, at least in soldiers' nature, not to kiss 'em. Cherry lips lifted in supplication are strong enemies of this new discipline. I know it myself." " For shame, Pascal ! " cried Dubois sternly. " Are we to betray everything for a pair of laughing eyes ? " " Anything can happen when there's a shapely nose, a kissable mouth, and two soft cheeks to complete the face. Let there be haste, I say, or, Bourbons or no Bourbons, those lips will get kissed ; and then there may be the devil to pay." " There is reason in his madcap words, Dubois," said Gerard after a pause. " Aye, even a fool can tell the truth," laughed Pascal. 4 A COURIER OF FORTUNE " But we must wait till I have proofs. When the news of this governor's evil doings came to my father's ears he sent me to learn the truth ; and while bidding me act as I \vould, enjoined me to do nothing until I had clear proofs. A Bourbon does not act on mere rumours." " Proofs ! " broke in Pascal with a swift change to earnestness. " In the devil's name, w r hat better proof of the man's deeds could you find than that which is writ large on the wretched, starving faces of the people? Look at them faces that the devil grins to see when he would tempt men and women to sin." " I came in during the night only, and have seen little or nothing yet," said Gerard. " What is the meaning of this gathering? " " This devil spawn of a governor has a new ordinance to proclaim, a new tyranny to enact," said Pascal. " He will tax afresh to half its value every ounce of foodstuff that comes into the city. As if the poor wretches were not already half-starving. And this tax will finish them. Look at them and say if the Governor is not justly dubbed the Tiger of Morvaix ? They are waiting his com- ing now with the heralds. Of a truth I would as lief dwell in hell as in Morvaix under Bourbon sway though it be in name, and Bourbon as I am to the core." " We have had other and weightier matters to occupy us than the troubles of a small province so remote," said Gerard, with a frown at Pascal's words. " But if the tale of wrongs be warranted, the Governor, Duke de Rochelle though he be, will answer to me for them." " By all reports he will answer to no man but him- self." " Enough, Pascal," said Gerard, with a wave of the hand. " There appear to be over many soldiers, Dubois." " And report says theirs are the only mouths that take enough food," broke in Pascal. " Your fighting man must be fed, of course ; but when it comes to feed- THE 'TIGER OF MORVAIX " 5 ing him with the food for which all others starve, it is first cousin to cannibalism." " The number of the soldiery has surprised me," said Dubois seriously. " They are far too many for our small band to do much. It is well your cousin's army lies so close to Cambrai. This governor will fight hard." " If his soldiers are loyal to him, it argues in his favour," replied Gerard thoughtfully. " We know to what lengths the burghers of a town may be driven by their jealousy of us soldiers. We must wait." " And if we wait but a little while there will be no grievances left. Those who have them will be dead," cried Pascal with a shrug of the shoulders. " I need no taunts of yours, Pascal, to stir me to do great Bourbon's will," answered Gerard with some sternness. " I meant no taunt, and spoke only my mind as friend to friend," said Pascal. " The Governor is coming now," put in Dubois. " We had better not be seen longer together. Where shall I find you at need ? " " The Duke has lodged Pascal and myself in his castle," answered Dubois, and the two were turning away when Gerard exclaimed, in a tone of excitement " See, Dubois, see, that man riding by the side of the Governor. Do you recognize him ? " " It is that villain, de Proballe." " The old rat, so it is," declared Pascal. " If there is devil's work to be done in Morvaix he'll be in it. Paris was too hot for him. I thought he was in hell by now. By the saints, he is long overdue." Gerard did not wait to hear the conclusion of the speech, but mingling with the crowd watched the pro- ceedings with close interest. It was a very strong force of soldiery, both horse and foot, that gathered in the market place round the A COURIER OF FORTUNE statue, large enough to brush away like so many flies the crowd of citizens, who fell back hushed and awe- stricken before the muskets and halberds which were used with much wilful violence. The Governor of the city, the Duke Charles de Rochelle, seated on his charger, a magnificent coal black Flemish animal, drew up in the centre of the cleared space, and gazed with amused contemptuousness upon the shrinking burghers. He made a striking centre-piece. Short and slight of figure, yet suggesting suppleness and strength, his fifty years sat lightly on him. His fair hair had scarce a touch of grey, and his pointed auburn beard and flowing moustache might have belonged to a man twenty years his junior. His features, strong and regular, would have been handsome but for the small close-set grey eyes, whose cold, hawk-like glitter was ren- dered additionally repulsive by a strong cast. " The eyes of a wild beast," thought Gerard, who had been watching him intently. " Well named the Tiger." At a signal from the Governor, the herald stepped forward amid a blare of trumpets and read the procla- mation. The people listened in dead silence; but at the close, loud murmurs broke out which even the presence of the soldiery could not wholly check. " It means starvation to us," cried one lusty voice, and a powerful fellow, a smith, wielding the heavy hammer of his trade, broke through the ring of the soldiers and made as if to approach the Governor. " What dog is this that dares to bay ? " It was the Duke who spoke. " I am no dog, my lord, but a burgher of Morvaix, and I do but speak what all here know," answered the smith sturdily. The Duke fixed his keen eyes on the man's face, and THE 'TIGER OF MORVAIX " 7 without a word signed to some of those about him. Three soldiers sprang toward the smith, who faced them fearlessly, and lifted his hammer. " I have done no wrong. No man shall touch me,'* he said threateningly. " Down with the rebel dog," cried the Duke ; and at the words the soldiers, who had hesitated, rushed upon the smith. Two went down with broken heads from blows of the terrible hammer; but the third got his halberd in, and as the man lay on the ground some others dashed forward and one of them thrust home to his heart. " So perish all rebels," cried the Governor, in a ringing tone to the crowd; and at the threat and the: sight of the smith's blood the people shrank together and cowered. The Duke smiled coldly on the crowd, and without another word signed for the procession to reform and march on, the people shrinking and cowering in silence from the troops as they passed. Gerard's hot blood had fired at the scene, and he stood looking after the Governor with a heart hot with indignant anger at the foul injustice he had wit- nessed. His two followers in monkish garb crossed to him and as the three whispered together, they were startled by the sound of a woman's wailing. It was the dead man's wife. She had heard the news and came rushing upon the scene in wild disordered distress, carrying her babe in her arms. As she was nearing the body, a girl attended by a page, whose attire evidenced his mistress' high station, met her and with tender solicitude offered such consola- tion as was possible. Gerard's gaze, attracted by the girl's beauty, followed the couple as together they approached the body, which 8 A COURIER OF FORTUNE had now been lifted by some of the sympathizing towns- folk; and then with a cry of anger he dashed hotly toward them, followed by his companions. There was indeed cause for his anger. Several of the brutal soldiers had rushed upon the men carrying the corpse, and with oaths and blows and threats of the Duke's anger, seized the body from them and flung it on the ground. The girl, courageously placing herself between the soldiers and the frightened townsfolk, had turned upon the former and ordered them away; but the bullies, strong in the protection of their tyrant master and presuming on their license to deal as they would with the people, first jeered at her coarsely and then thrust her roughly aside while one of them ran and kicked the corpse with wanton brutality. It was the attack on the girl which drove Gerard to interfere. He was by her side in an instant, flung the man who had touched her to the ground, and with eyes flashing and hand on his sword, dared the men to interfere further. The soldiers were still present in the square in great force, however, and attracted by the tumult many came rallying to the side of their comrades. At the same time, inspirited by Gerard's daring, a great crowd of the townsfolk closed up behind him ; and it seemed im- possible that a conflict could be avoided. There was a moment of hesitation, however, while the two opposing bodies glared angrily at one another, and Pascal with ready wit seized it to step between them, and with uplifted crucifix threatened the soldiers with the ban of Holy Church if they attempted further violence to either dead or living. While he was haranguing them in loud and vehement tones, a number of men in monkish dress appeared almost as if by magic, and pushing through the citizens THE 'TIGER OF MORVAIX " 9 ranged themselves at his side, thus giving an impressive background to his exhortation. The soldiers, abashed by this strange opposition, hung lack in doubt, and the citizens having in the mean- v, hile borne the dead body away, the trouble ended in nothing more serious than muttered threats and oaths from the soldiers and stern remonstrances from the monks. When the soldiers had drawn off, Gerard turned to seek the girl the attack on whom had provoked him to interfere, but she had vanished. With an eagerness which brought a smile to Pascal's face, Gerard plied those about him with questions regarding her, and learnt that she was Mademoiselle de Malincourt, and had gone away to comfort the trouble- stricken woman whose husband had been the victim of the morning's tragedy. " You did shrewdly, Pascal," said Dubois, when the two were alone. " Our good fellows won't thank me, for, like myself, their fingers were tingling to be at some of the rascals' throats. Where's the young lord, Gerard ? " " Gone in search of " Pascal's laugh interposed to finish the sentence. " Aye, aye. We can understand. There's a woman in the thing now, of course. And we shall hear more of her, or I am a monk indeed, and no soldier, which God forefend." CHAPTER II THE MAISON DE MALINCOURT SOME two or three hours after the scene in the market place a girl sat at her spinning wheel on the terrace of the Maison de Malincourt, opposite the head of the stately flight of steps leading down to the wide gardens. She had placed her wheel in an angle of the southern turret so that she could ply her task in comfort, protected from the rays of the July sun. She was Lucette de Boisdegarde, the foster-sister and close friend of Mademoiselle de Malincourt, for whose coming she was now waiting with as much patience as her quick vivacious temperament permitted. Her industry was only fitful. At times her shapely little foot pressed with insistent vigour upon the treadle and the wheel flew round rapidly, as if keeping pace with the thoughts that drew her dark pretty face into a frown of petulance and made her large eyes flash with gathering purpose. But the wheel was often still and she would sit back, idly fingering the threads of gleaming flax and thinking, while her gaze would roam over the blaze of lovely flowers in the garden, or stray away to the red roofs of the city which showed through the skirting trees beyond, or rest curiously on the vacant seat at her side on the cushions of which lay some needlework. She was in one of these preoccupied moods when her sharp ear caught the sound of a footstep. In a moment she set the treadle of her wheel whirling swiftly, while 10 MAISON DE MALINCOURT n she crooned to herself the air of a ballad of the time, and appeared too deeply engrossed in her work and song to have eyes or ears for anything else. Yet young Denys St. Jean was worth looking at. Well-built he was, soldierly in bearing and self-reliant in mien, with a fair frank honest face, though now grave with thought and purpose, as he turned the corner of the Maison at a slow deliberate pace. Seeing Lucette he started and his face brightened; and he smiled as he perceived her absorption in her task was overacted. He hesitated just an instant as if about to speak to her, but with a slight frown checked the inclination, walked on a few paces, lingered again, and then stopped. Lucette meanwhile was treading her wheel vigor- ously and singing sweetly to herself There was once a maiden in Arcady, Whose lover so feal and true Came riding forth from the sullen north Her sweet white hand to woo. During the verse Denys stood with his back to the singer, his arms folded in an attitude suggestive of antagonism; but once or twice, when he half-turned toward her, the smile on his lips and the light in his eyes told of very different feelings. When the song ceased he maintained his attitude of indifference, keeping his back to her and his arms still folded, waiting for her to speak ; but when she gave no sign that she knew of his presence, he turned and stole up behind her softly, with a smile of expectation, and bent over her. Her industry and absorption appeared to increase, however, and her foot pressed the treadle, the wheel flew round, and her white fingers flashed hither and 12 A COURIER OF FORTUNE thither, tending the flax, gathering the thread, adjusting this and smoothing that, while all the while she crooned the old ballad. Her patience beat him at length. " You know I'm here," he whispered. " Ah, Antoine, I knew your tread." " Antoine ! " exclaimed Denys with an angry start, " what do you mean by that, Lucette ? " The wheel stopped and she looked round, her face a pretty mask of coquettish surprise and her eyes beaming with mischief. "So, it is not Antoine!" with just a suggestion of disappointment in the tone, a little shrug of the shapely shoulders, and a pout. " Only you. I thought you were gone for ever." " You will drive me away, if you treat me like this. What did you mean about knowing Antoine's tread ? " For a second she let her roguish eyes rest on his, and then she smiled. " His feet are so big and so clumsy," she said, and turned again to her wheel. " Do you mean you meet him so often you can recognize them ? " " Recognize them ! Mon Dieu, they are not feet to forget when once seen," she cried lightly. " You can't pass it off like that, Lucette. Were you expecting him here this afternoon? Is that what you mean?" He was still angry and his tone very earnest. " I didn't expect you, Monsieur Catechist." " And you meant to amuse yourself with him in my absence ? " She turned and made a pretty grimace of dismay and spread out her hands. " Is it an hour since you said you would never speak to me again ? What then does it matter to you ? Would you play the dog in the manger ? " MAISON DE MALINCOURT 13 " Will you answer my question ? " " Why do you come back at all when all is at an end between us? You said so." "Don't you know why I come back?" The tone was full of feeling; but Lucette merely shrugged her shoulders. " To see if you had made me miserable, I suppose ? You have not ; " and she burst again into her song, when Denys caught her by the wrist, and looked in- tently into her face. " Do you mean you don't care, Lucette? " " I care not to have my arm bruised with your great clumsy hands. Antoine would never " " To hell with your Antoine ! " he burst in vehe- mently. " You play with me as a cat with a bird ; " and throwing her hand from him he turned and strode away. He got no farther than the corner of the house, and looking back saw her leaning against the wall nursing her arm as if in pain. " Forgive me, Lucette," he cried remorsefully, hastening back. " I am a brute ; you fire my blood when you make me jealous. If you love Antoine de Cavannes better than me, say so now, and let me go. But don't torture me." She stood nursing her arm and looking up at him. "Torture you, is it? Torture you?" and she held her arm up in reproach. '' You have only to say the word, and 111 never trouble you again. It can't be both Antoine and me. Choose ! " " Choose ! " she repeated, mocking his serious tone. Then with a laugh and a change to coquettish hesita- tion : " Hot-tempered, handsome Denys or splay-footed, ugly Antoine, eh? It can't be both of you, eh? And if " She paused teasingly. " In God's name, can't you be serious ? " " When I am, I'll choose neither of you, but just i 4 A COURIER OF FORTUNE bury myself in a nunnery. So good-bye, my lord surly-face ; " and she burst into a laugh. " You mean that good-bye ? " " When did I wish you anything but good ? " " You'll drive me away from you and from Mor- vaix," he said angrily. " Oh, you'll soon be back again." " You think you can play with me as you will." " Stupid ! As if I cared where you go ! But you can't leave Gabrielle. You can be many nasty things, but at least you can't be untrue to your trust." His angry features relaxed somewhat at this. " I wish I could read your heart." " So does Antoine." Angered again at this, a hot retort was stayed on his lips as Gabrielle de Malincourt stepped out of one of the tall windows of the terrace close to them. " Ah, my good Denys, and, of course, Lucette," she said with a smile. " It should be the other order, mademoiselle, I fear," he answered. " Lucette, and of course, Denys. It is Denys who is ' of course.' " Gabrielle glanced at them both and understood. " Quarrelling again ! Lucette, Lucette. You treat him villainously. But never mind, Denys. I know what's in her heart whatever her lips may say." " Gabrielle, I " began Lucette in protest, when Gabrielle interposed. " Yes, yes, I know what you would say. But I am not Denys. When the sea is very calm some people like to rock a boat to make pretence; but when the storm comes in reality it's all very different. Wait till there comes a bit of a storm, Denys, and you'll see the truth. If Lucette had been I just now in the market place and you had been at hand, you would have seen to whom she would have turned." MAISON DE MALINCOURT 15 " Has anything chanced, mademoiselle ? " asked Denys quickly. " That which made me wish for you, good Denys. I had visited poor old Jacques Boulanger and was re- turning through the market place just when the heralds has proclaimed this new and shameful ordinance of the Governor's a tax so cruel that it makes my blood boil. A terrible thing occurred. Babillon, the smith, sprang forward to protest, and the Governor, holding him for a rebel, had him done to death there on the spot by his brutal soldiers." " How horrible ! " exclaimed Lucette. " But you, mademoiselle ? " asked Denys. " I had just heard the news when his wife came rushing through the place like one distraught, and I was seeking to comfort her in her anguish when the soldiers oh, they are fiends, those men ! attacked the citizens who had lifted the smith's body to bear it home, flung the dead on the ground, and when, burning with indignation, I ordered them to desist, they turned on me, one of them thrust me violently aside, and would have done I know not what next, had not a cavalier, a stranger, rushed up to help me." " Would I had been there, mademoiselle ! " exclaimed Denys angrily. " Would you know the fellow again ? " " Do you mean the stranger cavalier ? " asked Lucette, with a light of mischief in her eyes. " Nay, Lucette, do not jest," said Gabrielle earnestly. " The man was punished for his act, Denys. The cavalier struck him to the ground and faced the whole of them fearlessly; and I dreaded for a moment that a conflict would follow, for there are not many in Mor- vaix who would see me harmed. But a monk inter- vened then and the danger was averted. Babillon's body was carried away, and I went with the wretched woman whom I have but now left, all desolate, broken 1 6 A COURIER OF FORTUNE and whelmed by her sorrow. These are ill days in- deed for Morvaix." " But the men who maltreated you, mademoiselle, can be found, nay, must be found and punished," cried Denys warmly. " It is of no matter now, Denys. It is over ; beside the cruel wrongs done to the people, my little hurt is nothing. These soldiers, moreover, are but hirelings, and do no more than hirelings' work. But there is one quest you must find the cavalier who served me." Lucette looked up. " You learnt his name, Gabrielle ? " she asked quickly. " Nay, for I left the place with Babillon's wife wife alas ! no more, but widow, poor soul." " The cavalier, Gabrielle, was he handsome as well as brave ? " asked Lucette after a pause. A faint tinge of colour tinted Gabrielle's cheeks as she answered. " In truth, I scarce had time to see, Lucette ; but he seemed in all respects a manly man, a figure of dis- tinction truly. Tall and knightly in mien ; his face unbearded and full of strength, yet kindly and courteous ; fair in colouring; and his blue eyes, keen and flashing fire as he faced the soldiery, were gentle and solicitous when viewing my plight; his voice resolute with the tone of one accustomed to command ; yet tuned to gentle accents, as it seemed to me. I much mistake me if he be not a knight of loftier station than his sober brown attire would seem to bespeak him. A most gallant gentleman and a brave heart." " You saw much, cousin, it seems, although you had no time, as you say ; " and Lucette, with a smile to herself, turned to her spinning wheel. " I will seek him out, mademoiselle," said Denys, " and no doubt shall find him. Shall I give him any message ? " MAISON DE MALINCOURT 17 " I could not even stay to thank him, and would wish to do so. Let him know as much." " Before I go, there is a grave matter on which I would speak with you." " Not now, Denys, but afterward. He must not think Gabrielle de Malincourt ungrateful. I beg you hasten at once in quest of him." " I will go," he answered, and turning toward Lucette, * said nervously : " Lucette, I " " We can finish our quarrel when you return," she interposed. " I may forgive you if you do Gabrielle's service quickly." Her tone was one of indifference, but he read the smile in her eyes and went with a light quick step upon his errand. Gabrielle had dropped into the vacant seat by Lucette and now leant back thinking, her lips slightly parted and her eyes dreamy. " He was a handsome man, coz, this cavalier of yours ? " Gabrielle started at the question and then met her friend's half-quizzing look calmly. " I have never seen a nobler, Lucette. I hope our good Denys will find him. Why do you plague that good fellow so sorely ? " " Nay, it is he plagues me. He is always quarrel- ling." " You are always finding cause to make him, you mean ? " " He is a man, and must be kept in his place ; " and Lucette shrugged her shoulders. " By bickering and teasing and wrangling? Docs it please you ? " " There is always the making up again ; " and Lucette laughed roguishly. " Beware how you try him too much. He is sterling mettle." She paused and suppressed a sigh as she added : " How happy you should be ! " 1 8 A COURIER OF FORTUNE Lucette glanced across at her and her manner changed. " You are thinking again, Gabrielle. You are not sad?" " Yes, I was thinking. I ought not to be sad, to-day of all days; and yet " The rest of the sentence was an unmistakable sigh, deep and sincere. " He may prove a gallant cavalier, Gabrielle, your Gerard; as gallant maybe as your hero of the market place. Don't look like that, dear." " I am afraid, Lucette, horribly afraid. You cannot tell how it is with me. I am perhaps overwrought by this terrible scene in the market place, and oh, I know not what I feel ; " and with a shudder she covered her face with her hands. " It will all come right, dear," whispered Lucette gently, after a pause; but the words seemed to jar upon Gabrielle, who lowered her hands, and with a look of irritation replied almost petulantly. " You judge from your own little outlook. You tease Denys and force a sham quarrel, knowing he will make it up and all will come right, as you say. But how would it be with you if you were in my place, given to a man you had not seen since you were a child ; be- trothed to one you know nothing about, and who may turn out to be oh, what am I saying ? " " I should hate him before he came to claim me, Gabrielle," said Lucette vigourously, tearing at the flax she held in her fingers. " Claim me ! " she added, in- censed by her own word. " I would make him feel that the claiming was no easy task. Oh, I should hate him! But you need not wed him. You are the mistress of Malincourt." " You do not understand, Lucette." The girl looked up in genuine surprise at the change in Gabrielle's tone, -suddenly calm, proud and cold. " It is my duty to my MAISON DE MALINCOURT 19 family. My parents ordered it so, and it is not for me to disobey. I owe it to my house." " I can't understand you, Gabrielle. At one moment you are a girl with all a girl's heart and feelings, and the next, you are the grand dame, cold, passionless, proud just the embodied spirit of the traditions of your house." " Were you a Malincourt you would understand. I have to live my life and must perforce be content." " But pride makes an ill substitute for love in a mar- riage, Gabrielle. And your motive is pride. If this M. Gerard de Cobalt, this distant kinsman and unseen betrothed, should turn out to be a hideous depraved wretch " " Peace, Lucette ; you do but plague me. M. de Cobalt will be here to-day or to-morrow ; and you will re- member he is my affianced husband." " I am sorry my reckless tongue wounds you, Ga- brielle. I love you so dearly ; " and Lucette bent across- and kissed her tenderly. " Pray God it may all be well with you. Forgive me." " There is nothing to forgive, dear," answered Gabrielle sweetly. " You are right. I have two na- tures ; and if the girl in me rebels sometimes, it is kinder to check than to encourage rebellion. To-day, somehow, it is harder than usual to check it. I shall be glad when M. de Cobalt comes. My uncle gives me good account of him, and speaks jof him as brave and gallant." " Does M. de Proballe know him ? " " No, he has never seen him at least not for many years ; but he has heard much of him, and from what he says all should be well." " From what he says," commented Lucette, with a little frown of disdain. " You trouble me, Lucette, with these reflections on ^o A COURIER OF FORTUNE my uncle. You do not like him, and so would have me share your feeling. We'll say no more ; " and with a sigh she leant back to think. Lucette, seeing her mood, resumed her work and set her wheel speeding busily on; but chancing to glance round a moment later she stopped abruptly with an exclamation of surprise which attracted Gabrielle's attention. A man was standing close behind Gabrielle's chair in an attitude of excessive humility. He bowed low and spread out his hands as she turned to him, while an expressive curl of contempt drew down the corners of Lucette's mouth. " What is it ? Why did you not say you were here ? " asked Gabrielle sharply. " I feared to interrupt miladi, and was awaiting your permission to speak my errand." His voice was soft and his manner deferential. "What is it? Speak." " My master, the Baron de Proballe, desires to know if it is convenient for him to wait upon you, miladi ? " " My uncle ? Certainly. Where is he ? " " At present in his apartments, miladi." " Tell him I will see him at once." " I am miladi's most humble servant," was the reply with another deep bow, as he went. " What a loathsome snake is that Master Dauban," exclaimed Lucette, looking after him. " My uncle says he is a very honest fellow and as faithful as a man can be." " I should need a higher character than that," said Lucette with another very expressive shrug. " The Baron de Proballe is my uncle, Lucette," re- plied Gabrielle in a tone of reproach, as she rose to go into the house. And Lucette, by way of reply, turned her head away with a toss and made a grimace to herself as she bent over her wheel. CHAPTER III SINISTER HINTS SCARCELY had Gabrielle left the terrace before Lucette's wheel stopped and she began to think instead of work. Little frowns and smiles chased each other alternately across her dark expressive face, and here even pearly teeth showed ever and again between the full, mobile lips. "Has the day's adventure changed everything?" she mused. " He seems to have been very handsome, this gallant cavalier. I wonder. It would be a hard fight. I know how her pride can stand like a fortress; and I know how love can pull and pull and pull. Don't I know it ? " and she smiled and sighed in turn. " Poor Gabrielle ! What a struggle ! Heart whispers, * I love him' ; pride answers, ' My pledge is given.' Ah me ! he will have to be a manly man, as she says, if he will win her. But she will have a traitor in the fortress after all, if she really love him. Ah me! I know how it would end with me. But Gabrielle well, she is Gabrielle." At that moment a frown chased away the smiles, for Master Dauban, the man she had dubbed a snake, came out from the Maison and approached her. He was one of those creatures on whom nature sets the outward marks of his inward character. His whole appearance and manner suggested slyness and secre- tiveness. His light brown shifty eyes were deep set in his sallow face, his cheeks smooth and round, and 21 22 A COURIER OF FORTUNE his lips thin and straight ; while his voice, unctuous and oily, and his glances, always quick and restlessly furtive, no less than the fawning gestures of his hands and his soft tread proclaimed him a born spy. At least so Lucette thought, and she hated him accordingly, as she hated all things mean and base. But his feeling for her was very far removed from hatred, and as he came up now his glance was full of admiration. " I am the happiest of men to find you alone, Mistress Lucette." " I am not the happiest of women to find you any- where near me, Master Dauban," she retorted. "You are as cruel to me as you are beautiful." " And you are as handsome as you are honest," she cried with a shrug. He winced. " Why do you always wrong me so ? " " In calling you honest, you mean ? " " You are in truth a sweet rose, Mistress Lucette, tut the thorns of your wit are sharp and draw blood." " They are meant to prevent snails and slugs from crawling too near me, Master Dauban." " I take all you say in good part." " In ' good part/ And what good part is there in you, I pray? I have never seen it." " I can be a firm friend." " To yourself, maybe." " And an ugly enemy, too, at times." Lucette looked him up and down, and her lip curled as she answered with almost savage contempt " Who has fallen so low as to fear you, Master Dauban? Have you been trounced by some scullion of the kitchen? You should beware how you offend any one with hands to strike with." " It is easy to scoff, mistress," he returned sullenly, stung by her words. SINISTER HINTS 23 " Aye, truly, where you are the object. If you da not like the truth, go away; you came of your own will and do not stay by mine. In truth, Malincourt would be none the worse for your going altogether." " I have a strong reason for wishing to stay. You are the reason," he said, shooting a glance at her. " Why won't you let me be your friend? " " There is but one act of friendship you could show to me." "What is it?" he asked eagerly. "Try me; try me." " Put a hundred leagues between us and never lessen the distance. It would indeed be an act of true friend- ship if you would never let my eyes rest on your face again." " That is a hard saying. I could not live apart from you," he declared with much earnestness. " I see no reason in that why you should not go away," she laughed. " The world could manage to exist without you; although your master might miss you." He looked at her cunningly. " You do not like my master, I fear, Mistress Lucette." " Ah, has he set you to find out what I think of him?" " I could tell you things," he said slyly, lowering his tone and glancing about him. She paused a moment and her eyes questioned him. She checked the mocking reply which was on her lips, and asked, as if with an assumed indifference, covering real curiosity " What could you tell me ? " " I have eyes to see, ears to hear, and I know what I know of his plans and you would like to know, too." Lucette started and bent her head over her wheel that her face might not be seen by his ferrety eyes. She resolved to get it from him. "Bah! Am I a fool, Master Dauban, that you would fill my ears with lies about a good man? You say truly, the Baron de Proballe is in no favour of mine, but at least I know him to be an honest, fair-speaking, straight-dealing gentleman." The man laughed unctuously, as from the enjoyable vantage point of superior knowledge. " I know what I know," he said cunningly. " You know no ill of him, and I will hear none. He is Mademoiselle Gabrielle's uncle and protecting friend, and a good man." Lucette's tone was full of reproach- ful indignation. " Yes, he is miladi's uncle, and a good man." He laughed again with the same unctuous suggestion of intense enjoyment. " And all you people here in Malin- court are so sharp and clever so sharp and clever as clever as he is good." " We are sharp enough to know an honest man when we see him, and clever enough not to listen to the tales of a maligner, Master Dauban," retorted Lucette with an appearance of great warmth. Her anger so de- lighted the man that he threw himself into the seat near her and laughed till his sides shook. " What fools women are ! " " They are a match for a man's brilliant wits any time," cried Lucette very sharply. " Go away and leave me in peace." " A match for us ! ho, ho ! a match," he laughed. Presently he grew serious, leaned forward and said in a lone tone : " You love miladi ; you think my master a good man, eh? What would you give to know what I know?" " I wouldn't know all the wickedness you know for SINISTER HINTS 25 a duke's ransom," declared Lucette sharply. "I should have to hang myself if I did, in sheer self-shame." " Pouf ! women are worse than men ; and you're no better than the rest, I'd be sworn. But you're such a pretty spitfire and say such waspish things; that's what I like in you. But for all your sharp tongue you are as blind as a three-day kitten, and can't tell milk from vinegar when it's under your very nose. You can't even smell it ; " and he laughed again. " Better a blind kitten than a wideawake rat with a keen scent for garbage, Master Dauban," she retorted with a shrug of her shoulders. " Rats can find other things than garbage, Mistress Lucette. Shall I ask you a question ? " He paused, and then with an accent of great cunning, asked " Why do you think my good master is so interested in this marriage of miladi with M. de Cobalt ? " Lucette laughed airily. "That's easy to answer, of a surety. Because he is the brother of Mistress Gabrielle's late mother, and it is a family affair." " There mewed the blind kitten," he cried with an- other of his triumphant laughs. " And there squeaked a rat ! " " Does a good man like to see his niece, a pure woman, mated with a scoundrel? Does he work and scheme and strive and plot to force it on? Answer me that, kitten." "Does even a rat seek to bite the hand that feeds it ? Answer me that, rat." " Feeds it ? Out on such feeding," he cried with sud- den malevolence. " Uses it, fools it, kicks it, and throws a fe\v husks to it, keeping all the grain for himself. I know what I know, I tell you. And you should know it too if you but never mind. Go on with your mewing, and when your gay gallant comes, set him a6 A COURIER OF FORTUNE on another pedestal as high as my noble master's and fawn on him." " What grudge have you against M. de Cobalt that you would set us against him ? " " Grudge ? I have no grudge. I have never even set eyes on him. But I know what I know. And when your eyes get opened, remember to-day." " And why should a rat squeak against a man he has never seen ? " But he was quick to discern the earnestness which Lucette allowed to appear in her tone; and he got up and smiled cunningly. , " I am not a well to be emptied by a woman's bucket, Mistress Lucette. You will see, some day." " I don't believe a word you've said," she replied with a shrug of indifference. " I could say much more if " he paused. "If what?" He leered at her cunningly, and bending down close to her shoulder, whispered " If you'd give me such a kiss as I saw you give Antoine de Cavannes in the wood yonder when Denys St. Jean was at Courtal. ' Splay-footed Antoine/ as you called him to-day." Lucette flushed with anger and vexation, genuine enough now, and a passionate retort rose to her lips, but did not pass them. She had to fight down her anger in a pause which he mistook for confusion. " You have indeed both eyes and ears, Master Dauban," she answered with a quick glance of coquetry. " But you will not tell on me ? " she added, as if in dis- may and fear of him. " I may," he replied, enjoying her fear. " You must not. You must not." Her accents were those of quick alarm. " Do you love either of them ? " SINISTER HINTS . 27 " A poor girl must have friends." " Yet you would drive me away." " Ah, Master Dauban, do you believe all a poor girl says?" and she sighed and cast a languishing look on him. " You hate me and wish never to see me again. You said so." " Must every maiden wear her heart on her sleeve, Master Dauban, for you handsome gallants to trifle with ? " " My name is Jacques, by your leave." " Tis the sweetest of names ; " and Lucette sighed and looked down; then started and dashed a look at him and cried as if in distress " Go away, Master Dauban. You make me so oh, I don't know how to say it. I feel oh, do go away. You make me feel so serious and so so sad. Ah me ! " " You say those things to Denys and Antoine and others." For answer Lucette fixed her eyes upon him re- proachfully and then sighed again; and her eyes could speak in a language few men could read unmoved. " I knew you were cruel, but oh, do leave me." His hand sought hers. She let him take it and re- turned the pressure of his fingers, which trembled. " You have never met me in the wood, Lucette," he whispered. " You have never asked me, Jacques. I never thought " and she faltered and broke down. " Be there at set of sun this evening." " No, no, I could not ; I dare not. I could never do that but I often walk there Jacques." "And this evening?" He was trembling again in his eagerness. Her eyes said yes, the pressure of her tell-tale fingers confirmed it, and the sigh she gave sent him into an ecstasy. 28 A COURIER OF FORTUNE " I believe you do but play with poor me," she whispered. " I swear on my soul I am in earnest. I love you, Lucette, I " " Hush, not now, not now ; " and she snatched her hand quickly from him as if in great confusion and picked up her spinning wheel. "I shall count the minutes till the sun sets nova, Jacques," she cried with a bright laughing smile, and passed into the house. " Blind kittens are we, Master Rat ? " she said to herself as she went to her apartment. " If I do not know all you have to tell me of this villainy against Gabrielle before the dusk is dark, may I never know a rogue when I see one." And then her fears on Gabri- elle's account having been excited, her quick wits busied themselves with all manner of fanciful conjectures as to what the vaguely shadowed danger could be; and her impatience could scarce be held in check until the time arrived for her meeting with Dauban. Meanwhile the interview between Gabrielle and her uncle had taken place and he had brought her news which for the moment had both deeply interested and greatly excited her. The Baron de Proballe was a man whose aim in life had been to fill to the brim the cup of self-indulgent pleasures. Handsome, rich, unscrupulous and talented, he was endowed with most of the vices except cowardice, and while yet a young man he had soon made himself a reputation as a profligate among profligates until his excesses had ruined him. His fortune de- clined as his reputation grew, and for some years he had been driven to live upon his wits, which meant trading upon his skill as a gambler until a particularly disgraceful scandal had driven him from Paris, bank- rupt in pocket and much broken in health, to seek refuge with his younp; kinswoman at Morvaix. SINISTER HINTS 29 There his evil fame was unknown, and Gabrielle had welcomed him for her dead mother's sake; and in the small provincial city he had passed two hateful years, brooding upon the pleasures which were now denied to him and devising means to rehabilitate his shattered fortunes and recover some of his lost health. Outwardly he had hitherto shown himself a model of a courteous gentleman and had lived almost an ex- emplary life in Morvaix, having put away from him with iron firmness the dissolute habits and evil practices of the old life in Paris. The desire for them burnt as strongly as ever in his blood, and his sole object in re- sisting it so strenuously was the hope of regaining such health, fortune and position as would enable him once more to indulge them freely. But there was a flaw in his plans which threatened to ruin everything. He had ingratiated himself with the Governor, and the Duke, as keen a gambler as de Proballe himself, had won very heavy sums of money which could not be paid; and he had in this way ob- tained a hold over him which threatened to have critical consequences to all concerned. The Duke had acted with deliberate intention. A man of reckless life and licentious nature, he had been fascinated by Gabrielle de Malincourt's beauty, and he had formed a scheme in regard to her which made her uncle's assistance of the utmost value and consequence. De Proballe himself, despite his evil past and seared conscience, had at first refused indignantly to have any hand in the vile matter; but the Governor, never nice in his methods, had found means to over-ride this opposition ; and then de Proballe sought to justify his act to himself by forming a counter-scheme against the Governor. To further the plan, Gabrielle's uncle had concocted the story and fabricated the proofs supporting it, of 30 A COURIER OF FORTUNE her parents' wish that she should marry a distant kins- man, Gerard de Cobalt, a young reprobate whose life had been if anything more disgraceful than that of de Proballe himself. His culminating act of villainy had been the treacherous murder of a friend at Casibrai, a town within the Governor's province, and for this lie was a fugitive from justice. De Cobalt's reward for his part in the infamous scheme was to be a pardon for the affair at Cambrai ; and he was to come to Morvaix and marry Gabrielle to provide a complacent cloak for the Governor's scheme. Gabrielle, suspecting nothing of the intrigue which was in progress about her, and deceived by her uncle's consistently considerate and courteous demeanour to herself, had grown both to trust and like him, and met him now with a smile. He noticed her disquiet and remarked on her troubled looks. " It was the scene in the market place," she said, and told him what had occurred. " I was there and saw it all, Gabrielle. I fear Babillon brought it upon himself. We live in troubled times, child, and authority must be maintained. The Duke is hasty in temper, and he thought, I am sure, as did I and others, that the smith meant to attack him. It is only in the first moments of an outbreak that it can be quelled ; had this gone further much more blood than the smith's would have been shed. Remember that." " He was but protesting," said Gabrielle. " He nearly killed two of the soldiery with his pro- test, child." " Not until they were ordered to attack him." " Who raises his hand in violence must look for violence in return. I am not defending the act. Had I been Governor I would have listened first and pun- ished afterwards, but that is not de Rochelle's method." SINISTER HINTS 31 " It was a foul murder, and I care not who hears r.ie say it," exclaimed Gabrielle vehemently. " And this infamous tax caused it." " It is about that I have news for you. The Duke is considering your request to him and will wait upon you here at Malincourt, to-morrow. He is a staunch friend to you, Gabrielle, and your lightest word has weight with him." " He should need no one's word to induce him to do justly," she said. " He grinds the face of the people with his hideous tyranny." " You have this influence with him and can best use it in the people's cause. That is a great thought for you to ponder. You will not do best for them by in- censing it, but rather by leading him to see these things as you see them." He watched her very closely as he said this in his gentlest and most persuasive tone. " But I despise him," she said with a shudder. " I loathe him, indeed." '' In this world we cannot choose the means we would, but must use those which lie to our hands. Yours is a heavy load of responsibility for such young shoulders to bear, my child. The head of a great house, alone with none to advise save an unworthy old man who has wearied of the affairs of the world, and with the cares of an army of suffering people to plague and oppress you. Let us hope that your marriage will prove the relief it should. Gerard de Cobalt should be here to-day or to-morrow. Pray Heaven he carries a steady head on worthy shoulders as indeed I hear he does." Gabrielle sighed and lifted and let fall her hand ; a half-despairing gesture suggestive of her distracted thoughts. " You should be all smiles, Gabrielle. My dear sis- ter, your mother, and your father, too, built so much upon this marriage. The Governor also is profoundly 3* A COURIER OF FORTUNE interested in it, and will welcome your husband and give him an honoured place in his favour and esteem. You two are destined to do great things for Morvaix." " Please God it may be so," returned Gabrielle earn- estly. " But to take a husband I have never seen is " The sentence ended in another gesture as hopeless as the first. " I have made many searching inquiries concerning him, Gabrielle. A handsome gallant and as brave and fearless as comely." " It may be for the best," she said lifelessly. " It must and will be for the best," he returned. " To- morrow you will hear from the Duke how he proposes to honour the man of your choice." " Choice ? " echoed Gabrielle, catching at the word. " Yes, choice ; what else ? Whom else in Morvaix would you choose? You would not choose to disobey your dear mother's last earthly wish. And the obliga- tions of a girl placed as you are at the head of a house such as ours might well have compelled a marriage with a far less welcome groom. I could tell you of scores of such ill-fated unions. Keep a light heart, child ; for you may face the future fearlessly a brilliant future too." " I am foolish and rebellious at times, I know. But I am not unmindful of my duty to my house," she said proudly. " Spoken like a Malincourt ; like my sainted sister's own child. Keep that face for the Governor to-morrow, Gabrielle. Smile to him and upon him, and the rule of Morvaix and all in it will be inspired by your gentle heart." And with that thought he deemed it judicious to end the interview. CHAPTER IV THE DUKE'S PROPOSAL THERE was one very bitter heart in the maison on the following morning. Jacques Dauban had spent a bad night, groaning over aching bones and head, brooding over his wrongs and setting his cunning wits to work to devise a scheme of revenge. Very ill results had followed that meeting with Lu- cette in the pine walk. She had kept the tryst and had wheedled out of him a part of what he knew. He had not told her much ; only warned her to do her utmost to prevent the marriage between Gabrielle and Gerard de Cobalt, hinting at dark deeds of which he dared not speak, and denouncing Gerard as both an unscrupulous scoundrel and a tool in the hands of others greater and more villainous even than he. She might have got more from him, but it chanced that Denys St. Jean had also conceived a fancy for a stroll in the wood, and had come suddenly upon the pair in close and intimate talk. His quick temper had fired instantly, and the consequences to Jacques Dauban had been serious. Denys was strong in the arm, and his cudgel, snatched hastily from a tree, thick and heavy ; and there was scarcely a bone in the writhing, wriggling spy's body which did not ache and stab and pain. And Lucette had laughed. The laugh was the worst of all. It was in his ears all through the paining hours of the night ; maddening him, taunting him, and goading him almost to a frenzy of wrath and spite. He read it as the proof that she had fooled him ; that she had laid the trap to bring the 33 .34 A COURIER OF FORTUNE hot-headed devil upon him; and had planned his humiliation and beating. He would be revenged ; and as he twisted and turned and groaned in an anguish of mind even more than of body, a scheme came to him ; and in the congenial task of working it out and maturing it, his own sufferings were more than half forgotten. His first thought had been to lay in wait for Denys and, catching him unawares, to thrust a dagger between his ribs swiftly from behind; but there was too much risk. He might fail to strike true, and then the hor- rible fear of what would happen to himself in such a case killed the plan at once. The next thought was to hire some one in Morvaix to do what he with his own hand was afraid to attempt, but his cunning made him hesitate to place himself in any other's power. And so that idea had in its turn to be abandoned. But out of it had come the scheme which he saw was at once safe and sure. He would remain in the back- ground all unsuspected even by Lucette, and might mask his work in any way he wished ; and yet Denys would die as surely as if his was the hand which plunged the dagger home to his heart. Aye, much more surely. He would tell the Baron de Proballe that Denys had in some way got scent of the scheme which had been laid against Gabrielle and that he meant to divulge it to her. He had some ground to believe this, moreover. Earlier in the day Denys had put some searching questions to him, had hinted at ugly rumours, and asked signifi- cantly about strange letters which had passed between de Cobalt and his master. And Dauban knew the latter well enough to be sure what would happen. The Baron would tell the Duke, and the tiger of a Governor would find means to silence Denys for ever. THE DUKE'S PROPOSAL 35 And when Denys was dead, he would tell Lucette that it was his hand that secretly had killed him; and that mocking laugh of hers would change to a gasp of fear of him. That would be something like a revenge, and he gloated in fancy over the picture of Lucette's fear- stricken face when she knew. " Let her laugh then, if she can;" he said to himself ; and when the hour came for him to go to his master, he had his tale ready and told it artfully with a hundred touches which all calculated to appeal to de Proballe's imagination and spur his alarm. "How know you this, Jacques?" asked de Proballe, when he had heard the news. " I overheard him last night speaking to Mademoiselle Lucette and saying he had grave news which he must tell milad: at once about M. de Cobalt." " That may not mean what you say." " I fear that it did, m'sieu. The two are lovers, it seems, and like a woman she was trying to wheedle the facts out of him. He was loath to tell her and sought to put her off ; but she got something from him. He said M. de Cobalt was a scoundrel he has a scurrilous tongue this Denys and, saving your presence, m'sieu, he said that de Cobalt was but a tool in the hands of greater scoundrels. Shamed I am that my lips should have to speak the words, but your lordship must know the truth he named you and His Grace the Duke de Rochelle." " In the devil's name, this is serious then," exclaimed de Proballe angrily. " How much does he know ? " " Indeed, m'sieu, I cannot say. He hinted at an in- tercepted letter, but he was called away soon. I can only infer he has made an important discovery. But the girl was terribly alarmed." " It may ruin everything. Have you breathed a whis- per to a soul ? " " Have I served you all these years to betray you ? " .36 A COURIER OF FORTUNE and he spread his hands out and spoke as if in sorrow that such a suspicion should even be named. " That she suspects something I know to be true indeed." " Tell me. Quick, Jacques, I am uneasy." " Purposefully I put myself in her way, m'sieu. She is a pretty girl enough and thinks, forsooth, that all men can be wheedled by her glances. She led round artfully to the subject and plied me with questions, all inspired, as 1 could see, by what this Denys had told her. She did not find me easy to draw, m'sieu," and he smiled with deprecating reference to his secrecy. " But 'twas easy to see what was in her thoughts." " She may also be a source of danger. She may tell Gabrielle," exclaimed de Proballe quickly. " By Heaven ; the thing must be stopped." But it was not Dauban's wish to have Lucette harmed, so he made haste to check this thought. " Of herself she knows nothing, m'sieu ; all hangs on the man's story, and if both of them were removed from Malincourt, might not miladi herself take fright?" " A shrewd thought, Jacques. We must deal with the man alone. Do you think he can have seen my niece yet?" " No, m'sieu, I am sure. I watched him closely. But this morning he may seek her nay, he will do so. He said as much." " He must not," exclaimed de Proballe earnestly. " At any cost that must be prevented." " It will be difficult, m'sieu, but should not be im- possible." " You have a thought, I see. Speak it." " It is not for me to offer counsel to you, m'sieu. But yesterday there was a cavalier who afforded some as- sistance to miladi in the market place. She is anxious to -find him, and sent this Denys yesterday in search of him. If you could have knowledge that the stranger was to THE DUKE'S PROPOSAL 37 be found, say at some place a few leagues away, it might be possible to despatch Denys thither in quest of him, and thus enable time and perchance provide means and opportunity to deal with him. Miladi would appre- ciate any effort to find the cavalier, and some of the roads around Morvaix are not over-safe." " You have a cunning brain, Jacques," exclaimed de Proballe suddenly, with a sharp glance at his secretary. " Have you aught against this Denys ? " Dauban did not shrink from the scrutiny, but answered deferentially " If my lord thinks I should place my feelings before my duty to him, I have served him uselessly all these years." " I don't think it, Jacques. You too well know on which side your interest lies, and you know also that I should not be a pleasant man to betray." " I am naught if not your faithful servant, my lord," replied Dauban. He knew he had said enough for his purpose and that his master would adopt the suggestion lie had let fall. The seed he had sown would bear fruit ; and he was astute enough not to appear too anxious and thus reveal his personal feelings. His plan was carried out. De Proballe sent for Denys, and after inquiring about the guest of the previous day he said he had news that the cavalier could be found at Beaucamp, an estate some four leagues west of Mor- vaix. He expressed his desire to please and surprise Gabrielle by finding the stranger, and also spoke feel- ingly about the honour of the family being concerned to thank the stranger for the service rendered to its young head, and thus despatched Denys on the mission before he could get a word with Gabrielle. As soon as he had seen him start, he hurried with his news to the castle, had an earnest interview with the Duke, and returned to Malincourt without Gabrielle even 38 A COURIER OF FORTUNE knowing of his absence. Thus the train was all laid when at noon the Governor, in accordance with the ar- rangement of the previous day, came to wait upon Gabri- elle. " You have made all arrangements ? " was de Proballe's greeting when they met for a moment and were going to Gabrielle. " I am not likely to fail, m'sieu," was the drily-spoken reply. " Antoine de Cavannes and Henri d'Estelle have ridden out, and know me better than to return with any mission unfulfilled. My men serve me well or do not serve me long." The next minute he was bowing over Gabrielle's hand, which he would have carried to his lips had she not adroitly and with unseeming intention prevented him. " The sun never shines for me, mademoiselle, when I have no chance to look into your eyes," he murmured, with glances of bold, almost aggressive admiration. Words and glance were alike detestable to Gabrielle. " Your lordship is pleased to flatter, but flattery does not please me," she returned with a smile. " It is no flattery, but the truth," he protested, his hand on his heart. " Your beauty is the fairest thing the earth holds for me." " The good opinion of the husband of my dear friend, the Duchess de Rochelle, must of course be ever wel- come, but I beg you to burden it with less wealth of language." At the reference to his wife the Duke frowned, as he took a seat near her. " We see too little of you, mademoiselle," he said next, " and rumour says you are often to be found in many of the humble houses in Morvaix." " Alas ! my lord, there is much distress and poverty among the people, and Holy Church requires that those who can should minister to them." THE DUKE'S PROPOSAL 39 " Holy Church should do the work more thoroughly. I hold not with this constant tending and pampering of those whose chief employment seems to be to breed dis- content." "They have unhappily but too much cause for discon- tent," said Gabrielle firmly. " You have considered the petition which I ventured to send to you?" He smiled indulgently. " What do you know of these things ? " " My own eyes have seen their distress, their want, their sufferings. Men workless and despairing, women hopeless and languishing, children starving and crying for the food which the parents cannot give them. We who are rich and have plenty can but scantily measure the pain of those in want. Even when we see it for our- selves we cannot realize all its misery ; and those of us who never see it cannot even believe in its existence." " Would you have me don a monk's garb, then, and turn bread carrier to a set of worthless wastrels ? " asked the Governor half in anger, half in sardonic humour. " Nay, my lord, it is in no such spirit I would ap- proach you. But you have the power to administer relief which all others lack. I would but have you recognize the evil and apply the remedy." " You make a beautiful advocate, Mistress Gabrielle, and you, if anyone, can work your will with me. I would gladly see these things with your eyes to please you," he said with a meaning glance. " I am but of small account, and to please me is a very little thing, and at best a poor motive for doing right." " It would be my only motive, poor or rich. But I fer.r you understand the art of government but ill. We must have money to administer the town. We must have troops, and troops must be paid and fed, fair advocate." " Why ? Is force in the hand of the ruler a surer 40 A COURIER OF FORTUNE foundation of rule than content and prosperity among the ruled?" " The world cannot wag without soldiers, mademois- elle, and Morvaix can only be ruled by force." " Must a populace be starved that the soldiers may be fat? If I seem to speak boldly, it is because I feel deeply. And if I offend, I crave your pardon, mon- sieur." " Nothing you could say or do could ever offend me, Mademoiselle Gabrielle. With you I am as clay in the hands of the potter." " Nay, if you put it merely on grounds personal to myself, I can urge nothing," said Gabrielle, sadly and reluctantly. " Yet they are the only grounds that will prevail with me," he answered. " The lot of these people is much to you, you say ; then you would of a surety make sacri- fices to help them? Is it not so? " " I would do anything in my power," she said warmly. " That remains to be proved," he retorted, smiling as he looked searchingly at her. " Perhaps I may take that as a challenge and put you to a test. Your petition here" he drew it out and opened it. " You urge me to recall this last ordinance of mine and take off the new imposts on food." " The people will starve if you do not, monsieur." " Well, let them starve, then. I must have money, and money can only be raised by such means. But if I were to grant you this favour, make this sacrifice for you, what sacrifice would you make in your turn, what favour would you grant me ? " His eyes were glowing as he turned them upon her while waiting for her reply. " I do not understand your lordship," said Gabrielle, meeting his glance with her calm innocent gaze. THE DUKE'S PROPOSAL 41 " Or is it that you will not ? " he asked insolently. " Supposing I agree that your influence shall prevail with me and that in the government of Morvaix you and I shall act together: you inspiring with your lofty mo- tives, I executing with the powers at my command. If we try it for a year, two years, three years any time you like to fix what would be my reward ? " " The rich gratitude of a contented people, the re- spect of every man in Morvaix ; hope in place of despair, prosperity instead of want, love where fear now lurks." " Pshaw ! I do not seek the love of such canaille, a mouthing mob as ready to shout ' Crucify ' as ' Hos- anna ! ' What reward would you yourself grant ? " " I should for ever bless and admire you." " For ever is a long, indefinite time, and blessings and admiration may be but cold emotions. What would you do? " and he once more fixed his bold eyes upon her face. " Again I say I do not understand what your lordship would have me say." He paused in thought and then laughed abruptly, al- most grimly. " It is enough," he exclaimed, with a wave of the hand. " The thought pleases me, for I would gladly please you ; believe that I will grant your petition " " Oh, I thank you " she burst in, when he checked her. " Wait. I will grant it if you will fall in with my plan, will lend me your aid in the perilous task of gov- ernment ; will work with me and inspire me with your sweet counsel ; and if you will consider what favour you will grant me in return. I will have my answer in a week from now, and until then we speak no more of this. Now I have to offer you my congratulations upon your approaching marriage, in which I take deep in- terest." 42 A COURIER OF FORTUNE He rose shortly afterwards, and when Gabrielle held her hand to him he carried it to his lips. " Remember," he said, retaining her hand and look- ing up, his face quite close to hers. " Remember, we have made a compact, and you must make the offer worthy of my acceptance or it may mean fresh and heavier imposts for your favourites in place of lighter ones," and with that smiling, half-jesting menace he went away, calling the Baron de Proballe to attend him. Gabrielle stood gazing after him sorely bewildered by what had passed, distracted by doubts and striving earn- estly to fathom the meaning of the question he had pressed with such insistence. When he had gone she went to an inner room, accom- panied by Lucette who had been present at the interview but out of earshot, and had followed the strange proceed- ings, watching the Duke intently and reading there some- thing of the purpose which was hidden from Gabrielle's unsuspecting nature. Lucette was skilled in reading love in the eyes of men, and with quaking heart and fearsome curiosity she waited now to hear what words the Duke had spoken to Gabrielle to inspire the looks which she had seen him cast upon her. And when she heard them, Lucette felt her cheeks alternately flame with rage and chill with deadly fear for Gabrielle's sake. CHAPTER V THE TIGER'S CLAWS LUCETTE had had her own troubles as well. Never before had such a mischance occurred as that of the previous evening in the pine walk ; and the fact that she was merely tricking Dauban in order to wheedle the truth out of him had not helped her with her lover in the least. The thrashing administered to Dauban had relieved some of Denys' wrath ; but the hard blows for him had been followed by some equally hard words for Lucette, with many hot and bitter reproaches ; none the less stinging because for once undeserved. And she had not been able to make peace with him. Worst of all, he had ridden away that morning with- out so much as a word to her ; and she was angry at his obduracy and wounded by his neglect, and still more angry with herself for caring so much. Gabrielle, quick to notice the troubles of those about her, had seen Lucette's woe-begone, doleful looks and questioned her before the Duke's visit ; but npw for the moment she was wholly engrossed by the perplexity in which that visit had left her. " What can he want of me, Lucette ? " she asked again and again, until Lucette had a suggestion to make, born of her own belief of the Duke's purpose and intended as a warning for Gabrielle. " Why not take counsel of the Duchess ? She is a true friend of yours, Gabrielle, and a good woman." " It is a good thought. I will go to her to-day. I 43 44 A COURIER OF FORTUNE would give half my wealth to do what he proposes to have a voice even for no more than a few short years in governing the people. I could do so much good." " Would he keep his word, think you ? I do not trust him. Truth and honour are not counted among his parts." " You are suspicious. Why ? " " To begin with, he is a man," and Lucette nodded her head and stamped her foot petulantly. " Not always a quick path to your disfavour, coz," said Gabrielle with a smile. " Denys is a man." " Denys has a head of wood," said Lucette, lapsing into her own wrongs for a moment. " Seeing the infinite uses to which we turn wood, I know not why we always liken it to stupidity. Whatever our good Denys' head may be, his heart is staunch and true." " We are not speaking of Denys but of the Duke, who- has neither wooden head nor staunch heart unless it be staunch to some cruel and treacherous purpose for his own game." " I fear there is truth in your words ; yet he spoke me fairly." " Any man can do that," exclaimed Lucette, with al- most vicious emphasis. " But see the Duchess herself, tell her all that passed, and ask her. A wife should cer- tainly know best how to interpret her husband's words." The advice was given with so much eagerness that Gabrielle turned and looked searchingly into her friend's eyes. " Have you made a guess at his purpose and withhold it from me ? " She asked so directly that Lucette winced, fearing that her own fears might be divined. She took shelter quickly in subterfuge, and lowering her eyes she dropped her head on Gabrielle's shoulder and said with a deep sigh V "WHAT A THING OF APRIL WEATHER, IS THIS LOVE OF YOURS, LUCETTE" THE TIGER'S CLAWS 45 " Oh, Gabrielle, I am not myself ; I am the most miserable girl on earth." " What a thing of April weather is this love of yours ! Smiles and tears, sunshine and drifting clouds ; ever changing and plaguing, as it seems to me, coz." " You will know some day, Gabrielle." " I could hope not, indeed. It seems to me the world has sterner work for some of us women than to be plaguing our wits to please a man or pleasing ourselves by plaguing him. I would gladly give up all if I could help my people in Morvaix here. Little did the Duke think how nearly his offer touched me." " Did you think so sternly yesterday, Gabrielle, after that chance encounter in the market place? " "If my thoughts wandered from my duty for an hour, a night's reflection has corrected them," answered Gabri- elle slowly. " The night had nothing but bitterness for me," cried Lucette dismally. " And to-day Denys has ridden away without a word." " You should not provoke his anger against you so lightly." "' There was no cause for it. He would be jealous of another man's shadow," said Lucette with a pout; and then with a quick change of mood, she cried : " Oh, how selfish I am ; but how am I to tell you ? " "To tell me what?" " I don't know what name to give it, or how to speak of it. I was talking with Master Dauban, your uncle's secretary " " So that was the cause of Denys' anger ! Lucette, Lucette ! " " I hate him ; he is a loathsome creature." "Then why talk to him?" " He made me talk to him by what he said." " Now of a truth you puzzle me." 46 A COURIER OF FORTUNE " It is true. He spoke of some danger threatening Malincourt and you, and I did but try to get it from him. That was all." " You should not listen to tittle-tattle, coz." " He spoke of your betrothal to this M. de Cobalt that there was some sinister meaning in it; that M. de Cobalt was no true man but a villain ; and that others greater than he were concerned to do you harm through him. What could I do but listen and seek the truth ? " " You could have bid him hold his tongue for a mis- chief-making meddler in concerns that are none of his. Tell me no more of it, Lucette." " But he swore it was true, and that " " Peace, child ; I will hear no more." " Gabrielle, you must," cried Lucette, looking up. " It is true, and you must find out what it means." " Shall I give my hand to a man not trusting him ? " " Can you marry him knowing he is not true ? " " Lucette, you will make me lose patience. Would you have me deign to fret myself over the worrying of an idle gossip-monger ? " " Oh, it is terrible." " You are not yourself, child, and are frightened be- cause you have angered Denys more deeply than usual. Come, let us go out into the bright sunshine and shake off these fretting fancies. You are always the slave of passing moods, Lucette," she said, as they crossed the terrace and passed down the broad steps into the gar- den. "But out here in the sunshine you can most easily recover your spirits." " I am plagued with a fear of I know not what," an- swered Lucette, sighing dismally. "I wonder where Denys has gone." " He will come back, and as you are always telling me, all will come right, again." She smiled but the smile ended in something like a sigh. THE TIGER'S CLAWS 47 She was indeed sorely perplexed by the course mat- ters were taking, and although she would not ac- knowledge it, Lucette's recital of Dauban's warning had moved her considerably. It fitted closely with her own feelings in regard to giv- ing herself to a man she had never seen. Her pride of place and family had alone induced her to think of ac- cepting the husband whom her mother had chosen for her ; but it was not in human nature to acquiesce without murmurs and qualms and doubts and hesitation. Moreover, the scene in the market place on the previous 'day had disturbed her profoundly, despite her stout as- sertion that the night's reflection had restored her. Her couch had been the ground of a fierce battle between cer- tain wild new-springing emotions and the set and sober thoughts of duty; and the fight had raged through the whole of a sleepless night. In vain she had told herself over and over again that the stranger cavalier was nothing to her and could be nothing; that it was treachery to her dead mother even to let a thought of him force itself upon her ; that it was unworthy, unmaidenly, and cowardly to be moved by the remembrance that a man had looked kindly into her eyes and that she had faltered before his glance; and this at the very moment when he to whom she was be- trothed was coming to her. She upbraided herself bitterly for her weakness, and rising from her couch had passed an hour or more on her knees in fervent prayer for strength to overcome the temptation which she found so alluring, and for power to subdue these new feelings as subtly sweet as they were strange and exciting. Her heart would not be denied, however, and despite her most resolute efforts the recollection of the strong handsome face, with the clear steadfast blue eyes would 48 A COURIER OF FORTUNE force itself back upon her again and again and yet again, despite her most earnest efforts. In the morning when her uncle told her that he had heard of the stranger's presence at Beaucamp and had despatched Denys in search of him, she was conscious that her heart fluttered almost wildly for the moment, and she had been compelled to turn her face away lest some of the emotion might make itself evident there. " He must not think us thankless, uncle," she had re- plied, calmly enough in tone; but in her heart she was driven to hope he would not be found and that never would she have to undergo the ordeal of meeting him face to face. What might then happen she did not dare to think. But all this emotion she had hidden from even the sharp eyes of her companion, so that, although for her own secret reasons she was as eagerly impatient as Lucette herself for Denys' return, her secret was locked away under an outward demeanour as calm and self-pos- sessed as usual. Twice she sent to inquire if he had come ; pretending, even while despising herself for the pretence, that it was- for Lucette's sake ; and when noon came and passed and he had not returned, she masked her own disappointment under a concern for Lucette. But he did return at length, despite the Duke's plans against him. Unconscious of the danger in which he rode he had by a mere chance change of direction evaded the two men sent to waylay him, and they had only ascer- tained the fact in time to admit of their following him to Malincourt in hot haste and mortal fear of the Gov- ernor's anger. They had wandered into a distant part of the grounds when Gabrielle caught sight of him pricking fast toward the maison. and she was at great pains to conceal the start she gave on seeing he was alone. She told herself THE TIGER'S CLAWS 49 that she was glad he brought no one with him; but a little stinging stab of disappointment deep down in her heart and an eager, hungry desire to learn the news he brought, told a very different story. Then Lucette caught sight of him. " Look, Gabrielle, look. There rides Denys," she cried excitedly. " Where ? " asked Gabrielle in a calm tone, feeling like a wicked hypocrite for her small pretence. " There, there. I hope he will not see us," exclaimed Lucette, pointing in his direction and making herself as conspicuous as possible. " You are showing yourself plainly, Lucette." " Then he will know where not to come, if he is not in a better temper than this morning." Denys had seen Lucette. Gabrielle saw him turn and look toward them and then ride on toward the house without making a sign. " He might have waved a hand," said Lucette, pouting and shrugging her shoulders. " But I will punish him. Let us go away from here." " But just now you implied that he would not come here." ' I will not forgive him easily if he does," said Lucette, with a shake of the head and a little stamp of the foot. " I will leave you to meet him, coz ; and take my ad- vice, cease to play this foolish game with him." " There are two other cavaliers riding this way," said Lucette suddenly, " and spurring hard in urgent haste, it would seem." Had they not been so intent in watching these and speaking of Denys, they would have seen yet another cavalier who stepped for a moment from a belt of trees, looked eagerly in their direction, and then hurriedly hid himself. Gabrielle, quite unconscious of this, continued to urge. 50 A COURIER OF FORTUNE Lucette to wait alone for Denys and seek to make her peace with him. But Lucette was obstinate; and when at length she caught sight of Denys in the distance, dust-stained with his long ride, walking in their direction, she drew Gabrielle hurriedly behind a clump of trees into hiding. " We will see what he does," she whispered excitedly. " I shall know by his face what mood he is in." When Denys reached the spot where they had been he paused and looked about him. " It was here I saw her, I'll swear," he said aloud to himself. " I marked that old chestnut tree," and he glanced at it. " Which way can she have gone ? Lu- cette," he called in a loud voice. " Lucette." As he looked about him he backed close to the low trees be- hind which the two girls stood. " She can't have wan- dered far. Lucette Lucette," he called again, and waited for his voice to come echoing back. Then Lucette, whose face had brightened at hearing him call for her, plucked a rose from her bosom and tossed it so that it fell upon him in its course to the ground. He picked it up and smiled. " A rose from an almond tree," he said aloud. " Surely something of a strange portent. Where are you, Lucette ; little witch, that changes the natural blooms of a tree ? " Lucette had stepped on a low bough of a tree and now looked through the bushes. " I have dropped my rose, m'sieu. May I trouble you ? Ah, M. Denys, is it you ? " with a start of pretended sur- prise. *' Lucette," he said passionately. . " Monsieur ! " This distantly. " Come, Lucette. Let the rose make our peace. I have been thinking of you through all my long ride." She came slowly toward him, parting the bushes and playing at indifference. THE TIGER'S CLAWS 51 " It is my rose, if you please, m'sieu." " But you meant it for me," and he kissed it and then tried to take her hands. But she drew back. " Do we know each other, m'sieu ? " His answer was a smile and an attempt to take her in his arms. But she would not let him. Seeing his mood, she could not resist a chance to tease him further. " Have you forgotten what you said last night ? Did you not ride off this morning without a word a single word ? Do you think I forgive so easily, and forget ? " " I can answer that, Denys," said Gabrielle, stepping out now from her place of concealment. She was anxious to end the quarrel and learn the news he brought. " She has forgiven you and is sorry for what she did. She has been heart-broken all the morning at your absence." " Gabrielle, I " began Lucette in protest. " It is true, Denys, every word. So make your peace with her. Come, Lucette, be true to yourself." " Peacemaker as usual, mademoiselle," cried Denys, with a happy, grateful smile. " Indeed, indeed, it is nothing of the sort. Denys said last night that " " Never mind what I said in my anger, Lucette ; I am sorry." " But it was so causeless, so unjust, so so horrible," and she put her hands to her ears as if in horror at the mere recollection. Denys captured them then in his strong hands and held her a prisoner, while Gabrielle turned away. " Let me go, Denys, let me go ; how dare you ! " cried Lucette, as if in anger, and commenced to struggle, tap- ping her foot and averting her head as he strove to kiss her. " Let me go I say." " Not till you say all that foolish quarrel is over, and you have kissed me." 52 A COURIER OF FORTUNE " I will not. I will not. Let me go," she cried, keep- ing up the pretence of anger. *' Kiss me then." " I will not. How dare you force me like this ? " And they were struggling in this way when a wholly unexpected and unwelcome interruption came. " How dare you treat a girl like that ? " demanded a man's voice ; and Antoine de Cavannes, followed by Henri d'Estelle, who had dogged Denys' footsteps, rushed up and laid violent hands on his shoulder. " Oh, it's you, Lucette," continued Antoine, in anger and surprise. " Why didn't you call me ? " Denys frowned darkly. He released Lucette, who fell back a step or two in disconcerted amazement. " This is no concern of yours, gentlemen," said Denys. " Indeed, but it is. No cowardly cur shall maltreat a girl in our presence, eh, d'Estelle ? " The two men ex- changed meaning glances. " Be careful of your words, m'sieu, if you please," said Denys, his hand going involuntarily to his sword belt. " Careful with a blackguardly girl-beater like you. Be off about your business and leave mademoiselle with me." " By God ! " cried Denys under his breath. " You shall eat those words, or I am no man." " Out on you for a braggart," said Antoine, while his companion gave Denys a violent thrust. " Be off with you, I say," he exclaimed roughly. In a moment Denys' sword was out of its scabbard. " No, no, Denys, you must not," cried Lucette, now in dire consternation at the turn matters had taken. " You've often told me of this fellow's blackguard ways," said Antoine. " It's time he had a lesson how to behave." " Gabrielle, Gabrielle," cried Lucette, catching sight of her. "Come here. Come here." THE TIGER'S CLAWS 53 " Another petticoat for the coward to skulk behind," said d'Estelle, with a coarse laugh. " Gentlemen, you have made a great mistake," cried Gabrielle, hastening forward. " This is not what you think. M. St. Jean is betrothed to Mademoiselle de Bois- degarde." " It had small appearance of it just now," said d'Estelle. "And I know it to be false," declared /v.toine. " Monsieur ! " exclaimed Gabrielle, drawing herself up. " Mademoiselle ! " answered d'Estelle, with insolent imitation of her tone. The words were scarcely out of d'Estelle's mouth be- fore Denys strode forward and struck him a swinging left-handed blow across the mouth. " You dog ! " he said fiercely. The two men drew then and were for attacking him together, but Lucette threw herself before him. Her wits, at first dazed by the dread of trouble to herself from the meeting of Antoine and Denys, were now sharpened by her fear for Denys' sake from the unequal combat, and by a rapid intuition she jumped to the conclusion that the meeting was designed for her lover's hurt. " It shall not be. It is not fair two to one. You cowards ! " she cried, facing the couple angrily. " Stand aside, Lucette," said Denys, putting her away. " The thing has gone too far," and choosing a spot which he deemed most to his advantage he put himself in an attitude of defence. " Now, messieurs, if you will." Lucette wrung her hands distractedly. " They will kill him. They have come to do it. I know I know," she cried, until Gabrielle bade her run to the house and get he!p, when she set off with the speed of fear. Denys was a good swordsman, and, having chosen his ground well, fought warily against the pair, who, over- eager to finish the thing before any help could come, 54 A COURIER OF FORTUNE hampered each other, so that d'Estelle, getting in An- toine's way, tripped and fell. His sword flew out of his hand and rolled close to Gabrielle, who instantly set her foot upon it. The man scrambled quickly to his feet and ran to his sword. " It is not fair, monsieur, two to one," said Gabrielle angrily. " Take your foot from my sword, mademoiselle," he answered, a menace in both tone and look. " I will not," she answered as firmly as before. " Then take the consequences," he cried fiercely, and with a thrust he pushed her away, and snatching up his weapon, ran to the assistance of Antoine, whom Denys was now pressing fiercely in single combat. " Help, help! " called Gabrielle in a loud voice. " Will no help come ? " But help was unexpectedly at hand, for another's eyes had seen the dastardly attack of d'Estelle. The stranger who had been in the wood had witnessed the last part of the quarrel, and when the two men com- menced the attack upon Denys, he had started at a rapid run toward the scene. A loud angry shout now proclaimed his arrival. " You villain, to strike a woman. Two swords to one, gentlemen! This is murder, not fighting. Have a care, monsieur ; that rascal is getting behind your back. Ah, a foul, treacherous stroke," he exclaimed next, as d'Estelle, having crept up behind Denys, ran his blade into his back. As Denys fell, the stranger gave another loud cry and leapt forward. Antoine was about to deliver another thrust while Denys lay on the ground, when his sword was parried by that of the newcomer. " To me, messieurs, to me," and the two men found themselves the objects of a rapid and vehement attack by THE TIGER'S CLAWS 55 a swordsman vastly more skilful than themselves. In a minute d'Estelle was wounded with a slash on the sword arm, and facing Antoine, the cavalier cried in a voice of thunder : " Now, you assassin, it is your turn." But Antoine, deserted by his comrade, who ran off as soon as he was wounded, had no heart to face the blade which played round him, threatening death at every flashing turn, gave ground and with a cry of terror, broke away and fled as fast as his legs would carry him. His antagonist was following him, when there came a cry from Gabrielle. " Monsieur monsieur ! " He stopped at the words, turned, bared his head and bowed. " Your pardon, mademoiselle. In my haste to punish a treacherous coward I was forgetting you were alone." " Monsieur," said Gabrielle, now lowering her eyes in blushing confusion. It was the cavalier who had rescued her the previous day in the market place ; and the rush of thoughts held her tongue-tied in embarrassment. CHAPTER VI I AM KNOWN AS GERARD DE COBALT." ABRIELLE'S heart beat very fast in the few moments she stood trying vainly to find words to speak, and she was conscious of little save a whirl of strange emotions in which predominated a sort of guilty pleasure at meeting again the stranger who had so filled her thoughts in the last hours. He broke the silence. " I trust that scoundrel did not hurt you, mademoi- selle ? " he said, voice and eyes alike full of solicitude, as she noticed in her swift flitting upward glance when he spoke. " No, monsieur," she replied, and could say no more. " I have set a mark on him to know him by, and he will have a reckoning to settle. By your leave, I will see to this poor fellow's hurt. I am something of a surgeon. A soldier must be many things," and with a bow he went over to Denys and bent over him. This act relieved Gabrielle's embarrassment, and fear for Denys made her less conscious of her own confusing thoughts. After a moment's hesitation she knelt down on the other side of the wounded man. " My poor Denys," she murmured. Her companion with quick deft touch found the wound, and after examining it, staunched the blood which was flowing freely. " An ill sight for your eyes, mademoiselle," he said. " I am a soldier's daughter, monsieur, and accustomed to the treatment of the sick. Is the hurt serious, think you?" 56 GERARD DE COBALT 57 " To the best of my judgment, no, unless there be some internal injury, which is not likely, judging by the direc- tion of the wound. It was a coward's thrust in truth, but like most coward's work, ill done, thank Heaven. It is mainly a flesh wound. But a surgeon should see it with as little delay as possible." " There will be help from the maison directly. I have sent for it." At that moment Denys opened his eyes and seeing Gabrielle he smiled faintly, and then frowned in surprise at her companion. " You are not much hurt, my brave Denys," said Gabri- elle, " and all is well with me." Denys rolled his eyes round as if in search of some one, and Gabrielle was quick to understand. " Lucette has gone for help, Denys ; she will be back directly. All is well with her as with me." He smiled again, and making an ineffectual effort to speak, closed his eyes with a sigh of relief. Then footsteps and voices were heard, and Lucette, with the Baron de Proballe and Jacques Dauban, came hurry- ing to the spot. Lucette threw herself beside Denys while de Proballe eyed the stranger with searching glances, and started slightly at the sound of his voice as he bade Lucette be cautious not to disturb Denys, " There has been fighting, I hear, Gabrielle," he said. " There has been murder attempted, uncle, and it would have been done but for the intervention of this gentleman, who drove the assassins off." " We are deeply beholden to you, monsieur," said de Proballe courteously, " and on behalf of my niece, I thank you." While he spake he was searching his memory to recall where he had seen the stranger, whose face and voice he seemed to know. " There is no need for thanks, monsieur," was the reply. " I did no more than any one would have done. But the 58 A COURIER OF FORTUNE wounded man should be removed and a surgeon should see to his hurts. He has lost much blood." " We will send for a litter. Run to the maison, Jacques, and " " With your leave, and a little help in lifting him, I could carry him if it be not too far," interrupted the stranger. And with Dauban's and Lucette's assistance, he picked Denys up and bade them show him the way. " You are strong, monsieur," said de Proballe, with a smile at the ease with which he bore the heavy burden. " I am a soldier, monsieur, and he who fights must needs have strong arms. It were best if your servant there were to run on and prepare for our coming." Dauban's face scowled at the word servant. " Run on, Jacques, and see to this," said de Proballe, adding : " He is my secretary, monsieur, not my servant." Dauban hastened on then, and Gabrielle and her uncle walked in front, Lucette keeping by Denys. " It is the cavalier who came to my assistance in the market place yesterday, uncle," said Gabrielle. " Who is he ? I am much mistaken if I have not seen him somewhere before," was the reply. " I have not inquired his name." " He belongs not to Morvaix, I think, and seems, as you said, a man of some distinction. I will ask his name and station." " Had we not better wait until we reach the maison ? Our poor Denys is a heavy burden even for his stalwart arms, and to cause him to talk just now might prove bur- densome to him." " You are always solicitous, Gabrielle," replied her uncle, with a smile and a shrewd glance. " I will leave it as you say." Meanwhile Dauban had hurried on a prey to mingled feelings, in which desire to appear anxious on Denys' be- half and so hide his share in the matter was paramount. GERARD DE COBALT 59 He sent one servant speeding 1 on horseback for a surgeon and brought out others with a litter, and met the little procession as they were nearing the terrace. Denys was laid carefully and gently on the litter and borne up the broad steps into the house, Lucette walk- ing by his side and holding his hand. The other three remained at the foot of the steps, the stranger leaning for a space against one of the pediments of the marble balustrade to recover his breath. " We shall be glad to know, monsieur, to whom we are indebted for this most timely service as well as for that rendered yesterday to my niece in the market place," said de Proballe. " It seems to me we have met before ; but I am getting an old man, and my memory is apt to fail me at times." The question appeared to be momentarily embarrassing and, to cover the pause, the stranger breathed heavily and made a gesture of fatigue. " You will come in and rest, monsieur," said Gabrielle, noticing this. But the hesitation passed, and glancing first at Gabrielle with a smile of thanks for her thoughtfulness, he turned to de Proballe and said firmly " I am glad to have been of service to mademoiselle, monsieur. I am known as Gerard de Cobalt." " Gerard de Cobalt ! " both exclaimed in a breath ; de Proballe adding 1 " Our Gerard. Then of a truth are you welcome indeed to Malincourt." " To Malincourt ! " exclaimed Gerard, amazed at the effect of the name he had given. He knew of course where he was and who they were who spoke to him ; but why they should welcome him in this way passed his under- standing. And when he turned from de Proballe to Gabrielle and saw that her cheeks were aglow with blushes and her eyes bright and dancing with gladness, his be- wilderment was all the greater. 60 A COURIER OF FORTUNE " Tis the work of Providence, surely," she said, hold- ing her hand to him. He took it and pressed his lips to it. " Aye, 'tis Providence," echoed de Proballe. " Now I see why you were no stranger to me. 'Tis the boy speak- ing through the man, Gerard, and a right gallant man too." " The boy ? " asked Gerard, not understanding. " Of course. You were but a slip of a lad when we last met, with little promise of being such a stalwart fellow. But I will go and see to poor Denys. You two will not be sorry to be alone and learn something each of the other," and with a sharp inscrutable glance at Gerard, he passed up the steps and into the house. Gerard felt profoundly ill at ease. It was clear that some egregious mistake had been made concerning him, and that he had been mistaken for some other Gerard whose real name was that which he had assumed at ran- dom for the purposes of his sojourn in Morvaix. To avow himself Gerard de Bourbon, while his work was still scarcely begun, was impracticable. It might ruin everything indeed ; for de Proballe would instantly acquaint the Duke de Rochelle ; yet to deceive the lovely girl whose face had been in his thoughts from the mo- ment he had first seen her was repugnant to every sense of right and instinct of honour. There was another consideration. The Baron de Pro- balle was represented as Gabrielle's uncle ; and knowing, as Gerard did, the man's real character and infinite capacity for ill-doing, fears for Gabrielle herself impelled him to maintain his assumed character until he had at least satisfied himself that de Proballe had no evil intent toward her. He could not decide what to do for a moment, and his confusion and hesitation were apparent to Gabrielle, who set them down, however, to very different causes. There was an alcove with a seat near the corner of GERARD DE COBALT 61 the balustrade, and sinking upon it with a sigh, Gabrielle exclaimed " Thank God you have come, cousin, and thank God more that you are what you are, a brave and gallant gentleman." " Cousin ? " echoed Gerard, catching the word. " Cousin, of course ; what else ? " and then as if per- ceiving some double meaning in her last words, she blushed vividly. " I do not understand," he murmured, and then : " That is the Baron de Proballe ? " " Of course, as surely as I am Gabrielle de Malincourt. My uncle and my one good friend and adviser up to now." She lifted her eyes and smiled as she emphasised the last words. " Your good friend and adviser ! " he repeated. " How oddly you speak, cousin. Is it not by his counsel and urging that you are here ? " " That I am here ? " he asked, this time with a start. " Perhaps you are not glad to have been brought here." " Mademoiselle, I have seen you," he answered with a bow. Gabrielle laughed gaily. " How formal, cousin." " I am lost in wonderment. I know not what to say." " It is well that you are quicker with your sword than with your tongue, or it would have gone harder than it did with my poor Denys just now. But perhaps I understand. You are surprised in me. I am different from what you expected." " You are the fairest woman I have ever seen." She blushed again and smiled. " Yet you could not look more scared were I the ugliest witch. Shall I tell you a secret? I have dreaded your coming." " Pray God I may never give you cause to repent it, 62 A COURIER OF FORTUNE mademoiselle," he replied with an intense earnestness which drew her gaze full upon him. " Mademoiselle ? " she repeated, after a pause, with a touch of coquetry. " Mademoiselle from cousin to cousin ? " He started again uneasily, for the question put a fresh puzzle to him how to address her. Then he put it by and asked " Why did you dread my coming, as you say ? " She first winced and bit her lip, and then, setting her head a little on one side, she glanced up at him with a mischievous smile. " I once knew such a horrid Gerard de Cobalt ; and if you had been like him, oh " the sentence ended in a shudder. " What, another Gerard de Cobalt ? " he asked mystified. She laughed outright then, merrily and without re- straint. " As if you did not know. How could there be any other Gerard de Cobalt but you? You were a horrid boy, you know; really horrid; cruel, rough, unkind just for unkindness' sake. And you used to hate me at least you said so ; and I was glad of it." " I must have been worse than unkind a fool, I think, mademoiselle. Boys generally are," he replied laughing. " Mademoiselle again ? " " What should I say ? " he asked, growing bolder the deeper he allowed himself to plunge into the mystery, and getting less and less willing to have it cleared up. " My name is Gabrielle," she said half shyly, " unless you think mademoiselle prettier." " Gabrielle." He spoke the name in a soft tender tone with such a sweet reverence that she lowered her gaze and sighed. " So I was a horrid boy, was I ? " he asked lightly, breaking the pause. She looked up then all smiles. GERARD DE COBALT 63 " Don't you remember ? But of course you didn't think so yourself, and I daresay thought me a little spitfire. You used to pinch me slyly and kick me, and laugh when you hurt me. I wonder I have not the bruises to this day. And have you forgotten that time I flew at you and boxed your ears ? " " I wonder I can have forgotten," he laughed. " Yes, you had snared a blackbird and were pulling out its feathers, and mad at the sight I rushed at you and struck you, and you let it go in your surprise. I hated you for that, Gerard, I did indeed." " Serve me right, too." " And you called me such names." " Not Gabrielle ? " he interposed. " No, and not mademoiselle," she retorted laughing 1 . " But cat, and beast, and fury, and everything, and you pulled my hair." " That hair ? " he asked, laughing again. " What sacri- lege." " Yes, this hair," she nodded gaily. " Oh, it is no wonder that when they told me you were coming to well, you know why that I was frightened lest you should be just an older edition of that cruel little ugly horror." "Ugly, too?" " Yes, ugly. You were not a bit good-looking even for a boy. I should never have guessed you were the same ; " and then she put her finger to her lip in some dismay as if to check herself. " I think I am glad to have disappointed you." " And do you think I have changed ? " she asked, with a challenge in her eyes. " You are older." " What, in fifteen years ? How strange ! " " Is it fifteen years since you saw that pleasant youth you have described ? " 64 A COURIER OF FORTUNE " Is that to put off my question ? Have I disappointed you as you have me ? " " I had not even an idea of how beautiful you would be." " Nay, if you flatter me, I shall not like it." " It IS' no flattery Gabrielle," and the low earnest tone thrilled her with delight. She thought a moment and then, looking up, said simply as she smiled into his eyes " It is not unmaidenly, seeing why you have come to Morvaix, for me to say what pleasure such words give me, Gerard. Oh, I think I must be the happiest girl in all fair France to-day." " Seeing why I have come ? " he repeated question- ingly. " Gerard ! " The tone was one of reproach, and she looked troubled. " You have come for for a purpose, haven't you ? " Her eyes were on the ground as she spoke hesitatingly. " Yes, and with God's help, I will carry it through." She looked up then, but the smile on her face faded quickly away as she seemed not to read in his eyes what she sought. " And your purpose is what ? " she asked, in a strange tone, very subdued, quiet and anxious. " Even to you I cannot tell it yet," he answered. " Cannot tell it me, Gerard ? But " she broke off and repeated wonderingly : " 'Cannot tell it me yet ? ' ' " But you shall know it at the first moment I can open my lips, and from what I have learnt of you, I know your sympathy will be with me and it." Gabrielle felt the colour leaving her cheeks. What could he mean? There must be some hindrance to the plan of their marriage. He had said nothing of this in his letters to her uncle nor a word to her. " You have turned pale, mademoiselle. Are you ill ?'" lie asked kindly, seeing the change in her. GERARD DE COBALT 65 " No, no ; but I fear I don't understand. I have been unmaidenly and forward. But I did not know. You have said nothing of this obstacle in your letters to my uncle or to me. I thought it was settled. But I was wrong, of course ; we all have been. Yet I thought when you came with no word oh, cousin, was it manly or honourable of you not to tell me at once, not to check me ? Oh, I know not what to say." He was as much disturbed by the change in her as he was troubled by the sight of her distress and puzzled by her words. " Obstacle ? What obstacle ? What have I said to dis- turb you thus ? " he asked. " I would do anything in the world for you." " You shame me, cousin." " Gabrielle, on my honour, I know not what you mean ? " he cried, with whole-hearted earnestness. She rose then and looked at him, with a great effort to be calm. " As God is my judge, I would give my life to serve you," he protested passionately. " I repeat, I know not what you mean." " What your purpose may be, I cannot guess ; but mat- ters have gone too far for us to fence with words or feign ignorance of facts. You can have had but the one pur- pose in coming to Morvaix and to Malincourt. You have already expressed it openly in your letters. It is to further my dead parents' wish for our marriage." He fell back a pace in his intense wonderment, and an exclamation of astonishment rushed to his lips only to be checked with a supreme effort. But she saw the look and noted the gesture, and her pride took instant offence. " I will leave you, monsieur ; perhaps you will explain this obstacle to my uncle with more candour than you have deemed necessary to show to me." 66 A COURIER OF FORTUNE He conquered his surprise, and the wounded pride in her eyes and voice roused him. To him she was more than aught else in the world, and instantly he took the resolve to sweep away the misunderstanding by explain- ing all his purpose in Morvaix, and that he was not the man she believed. He could not let her go in anger, let the cost be what it would. " One moment. As I live, there is no obstacle on my side to to our marriage. That I swear. But I will explain all." She paused and turned, her foot already on the steps to leave him ; and his heart leapt to see the light that his words brought back to her eyes. " You have tried me sorely, cousin. I " she faltered and smiled and then leant for support against the balus- trade. " God knows I would not cause you even a moment's uneasy thought," he said earnestly. " I have done wrong, I know, but the temptation was a sweet one. I had no thought to deceive you when I came " He got no farther, for at that moment de Proballe stepped from the house and crossed the terrace to them, saying cheerily as he approached " Well, are you getting to know one another, eh ? " " What I have to say is for your ears alone. I pray your patience and will give you ample reasons," said Gerard in a quick undertone ; adding aloud : " Yes, monsieur, we are close to a complete understanding. Is it not so, cousin ? " " I hope so," she answered, mystified still, but smiling. " Poor Denys is better, but very weak, and is asking for you." " With your leave I will go to him," she said to Gerard. " I sent her off that we may have a talk and an under- standing, too," said de Proballe, when Gabrielle had gone GERARD DE COBALT 67 into the house. " Let us walk here in the open where no ears can catch our words." He led the way to where a fountain stood among the flower beds surrounded by a broad path, and Gerard ac- companied him, in bewildered curiosity as to what this new development was to be. CHAPTER VII AT MALINCOURT DISTRESSED as Gerard had been by the necessity to deceive Gabrielle, into which he had allowed himself to be drawn, he had no such qualms in regard to her uncle. He was convinced that, as Pascal had said, if there was evil work on foot, de Proballe would be concerned in it. That such a man should be found established at Malin- court, posing as the true friend of an innocent girl, and regarded by her as an honourable and confidential ad- viser, was in itself enough to rouse suspicion. He decided at once, therefore, to fall in with de Pro- balle's mood, whatever it might be, and to lead him to talk as freely as he would. " Why did you not come straight to Malincourt, Gerard, or at any rate let me know of your presence in Morvaix, that I might have word with you ? " " If I was doubtful of my reception by Gabrielle, can you blame me ? " asked Gerard in reply, dropping readily into his assumed character. " But I had told you exactly how matters were with her." " But I had not seen her with my own eyes." " Psh, a sentimental fool's reason," exclaimed de Pro- balle, contemptuously. " Yet, I am no sentimental fool, monsieur." " If you were no worse, you would be lucky. Your kinsman, Raouf, in Paris, gave me your history." " He may have lied," answered Gerard, calmly, sup- pressing a start at the mention of the name and the coin- 68 AT MALINCOURT 69 cidence it suggested. " But let it pass. What I have done, I have done. If it comes to that, Raouf gave me no saintly account of you." " Paris is not Morvaix, and what I do there or here is no concern of yours or his/' was the curt, half angry reply. Gerard laughed. " As I said, Raouf may have lied. It is of no account ; but I cannot see that in choosing my own method I have done so ill." De Proballe smiled unpleasantly. " You played boldly. I did not know you had such courage except in your cups. Yes, you have made a good impression on Gabrielle; but have none the less done ill." " In what way ? " " In saving that fool to-day. You were too hasty. You should have let one of the swords find his heart, and then have played the rescuer of Gabrielle. The men wouldn't have touched you." " Why not? " asked Gerard quickly. " They tried." " Because you stood between them and Denys." " Read me the riddle." " Denys has found out something of the real purpose of this marriage ; how much I know not ; and his silence is necessary to our success. The Duke will not thank you." " The Duke ! " exclaimed Gerard hastily, bewildered by this unexpected reference to the Governor in connection with the marriage. A sudden sharp glance from his com- panion warned him that he had blundered, so he forced a laugh, and added : " The Duke should label his men if he does not want them hurt." " Are you a fool ? " retorted de Proballe, sharply. " Had you come straight to me, this would have been avoided. I tell you the man is dangerous. Is not that enough ? " " No ; it depends on how much he knows." 70 A COURIER OF FORTUNE " He knows that you are here to marry Gabrielle and that in doing so you are merely playing catspaw; and he suspects the real purpose, that it is to cover the Duke's plan in regard to her." " Then he suspects what an infernal villain Gerard de Cobalt must be ! " " He is not alone in that suspicion," was de Proballe's sneering comment. " True. I think I'm beginning to suspect it myself," answered Gerard drily. " If you were anything else, you'd be little use to us \ so let us have no cant here." " I am here to play my part," said Gerard smoothly, repressing his anger. " It is a part many a better man would gladly play. You will have wealth, a beautiful wife, a high position here, and a pardon for that Cambrai affair. Surely all that a man could wish." He regarded Gerard vrith a sly covert smile as he reeled off these advantages. Gerard's face was as impassive as that of a statue, while his thoughts were busy seeking the real meaning beneath the words. He paused a moment, and then an- swered in a level tone " True, but you omit the price I have to pay." " Price," cried de Proballe, with another sneer. " Price ! Honour rather, you mean. The Duke de Rochelle is all but of the Royal blood; and better men than you will ever be have been glad to pay no more for their careers than mere marital complaisance." " By God ! " exclaimed Gerard, his voice vibrating with feeling as he realized now the full infamy of the plot and the degradation of the part cast for him ; then catching de Proballe's eyes fixed on him, he forced down his rage, and said coolly : " You are right, monsieur ; Gerard de Cobalt cannot afford to be particular. He has that pardon to gain." AT MALINCOURT 71 " Now perhaps you understand the harm you did in saving that meddler's life." " I see now that if I had had all these thoughts in my mind I would have acted differently." " You will see the Duke to-day, and will find him in a gracious mood." " It is not the reputation he bears. They call him the Tiger, I hear." " His enemies do ; those who seek to thwart him. He saw Gabrielle to-day, and what passed between them pleased him greatly. She urged him to relax the rigour of his rule here ; and he half consented. His plan is that he and she shall take frequent counsel together for the government of the people when she is your wife. He will thus see much of her in many a private conference, and the people will have cause to bless her name for her good influence. Some of the blessings may come your way, Gerard, for the good change will date from the time of your marriage. You will be a popular man in Morvaix." He ended with another of his dry cynical laughs, and looked for his companion to join in. But Gerard was too deeply moved even to simulate laughter. " There is yet one thing that perplexes me has per- plexed me from the first. What is your part in this? Raouf did not paint you exactly as a type of self-denial, willing to stand aloof when others were reaping rich gains." " My plans, like my reasons, are my own," returned de Proballe, with a frown. " You shall know them all in time." " As you please. It is enough for me to know that you have them. And I have enough on my side to keep my wits busy." " Had you but let the Governor's men work their way with that St. Jean all would have been well ; but I scent 72 A COURIER OF FORTUNE danger there. Some other means of silencing him must be found. For your part you have but to push your suit with Gabrielle with all speed, and hasten on the marriage. In that, the success you have gained to-day will help you. Your act yesterday in the market place almost turned her head ; at any rate, it went to her heart. But now, tell me of yourself, something of the story of your life. She will surely question you, and you must have a gallant tale to tell." " My past, like your reasons, is my own. Should she question me I shall know how to answer." " From whence came you here, and how ? " " That I am here may suffice. I have come to do my task; and believe me I shall not fail to satisfy even the Duke himself of my thoroughness." " You can be close-lipped, it seems," said de Proballe, irritably. " No bad quality surely, when such work as mine has to be done." " If you will not talk then, let us go into the house. You will of course bide at Malincourt. Have you a servant and apparel suited to your new position ? You are but indifferently clad now." " I am but a courier of fortune ; but I have a servant, and can provide for all the needs of even my high position at Malincourt." " You are a strange fellow, Gerard, and altogether un- like what your letters had led me to expect. But take your own way." " I have done that always, and shall not change even in Malincourt. I have a matter that calls me to the town, and will return to the maison within an hour or so, by your leave," and without another word he turned and walked away, leaving de Proballe staring after him in high dudgeon at his unexpected independence. Gerard plunged along at a quick pace, his brows pent AT MALINCOURT 73 and frowning as he thought over the extraordinary situ- ation in which he found himself involved. He made his decision with characteristic promptitude. He would re- turn to Malincourt to see the thing through, to watch over Gabrielle, and to play out the part for which he had been thus unexpectedly cast. There was no thought now of undeceiving her as to his real character. That was now out of the question, impossible, for a time at least, for her own sake no less than for his own. The explanation need not be long delayed. Once let him get the proofs of the Governor's connivance at the scheme and these he hoped to get in the interview which de Proballe said was to take place at once and he would strike the power from the Governor's hands by virtue of the authority which his father, the Duke of Bourbon, as Suzerain of the province, had conferred upon him. But the proofs must be very clear. The times were such that too close a scrutiny was not likely to be made into the private lives of those holding authority. The man who ruled his province in such a way as to relieve those above him of trouble, and who was always to be relied on to find troops should they be needed, could make sure of wide tolerance in any matters of his private life. Moreover, the Duke de Rochelle was connected with the blood royal ; he could count therefore upon high patronage and help ; and there were in this connection many reasons why Gerard must walk warily. There had been trouble between the House of Bourbon and the throne ; and the King and his advisers would welcome only too gladly any pretext to step in and wrest this last lingering remnant of Bourbon suzerainty from the once all-powerful family. Gerard felt all the responsibility that rested on him ; and it was in this respect that de Proballe's last words 74 A COURIER OF FORTUNE were of such importance. The Governor was betraying himself by mixing up a personal intrigue with the work of Government. Not content with having misgoverned the people and overtaxed them to the verge of revolt offences which might have been overlooked in view of the powerful force of soldiery he had raised and trained he was now contemplating a complete reversal of policy in order to please Gabrielle for his own evil personal ends. Here was Gerard's chance, and he was quick to see it and to determine to use it. He would continue the acted lie of his false character until he had secured from the Governor himself an admission of his real purpose, or had found other incontestable proof of it de Proballe's word being less than valueless ; and the moment he was satisfied he would strike. To this end he sought out the young officer, Pascal, a close intimate friend, told him much of what he had learned, and prevailed on him to doff the monk's cowl and assume the character of his servant at Malincourt during the few hours or days he might have to remain there. Pascal, to whom devilment in any form was welcome enough, entered readily into the spirit of the adventure, and agreed instantly. Together they obtained such ap- parel as was necessary, and returned to Malincourt to- gether. " I hope the old rat, de Proballe, won't recognize me," said Pascal. " I once won some three hundred crowns from him, and they say he never forgets a man who has beaten him with the dice box." " 1 am full of anxiety over this, Pascal ; for Heaven's sake avoid every chance of a mishap," replied Gerard earnestly. " I'll keep out of his way. Have no fear for me. Lest lie should know my voice, I'll play the dumb man." " No, no, not that. No buffoonery, on any account." AT MALINCOURT 75 " Well, then, you can say I have taken a vow of silence on account of the past trippings of my tongue. The reason would be true enough." " There is need for nothing of the kind. Keep in the background with your eyes and ears open and your lips closed ; shun the women as you would the plague, and all will be well. Especially, shun the women." The handsome young fellow laughed. " I'll shun them, if they be not too pretty ; but there are limits, Gerard. I haven't touched a pair of lips since I've been in the city ; although I must say a monk's cowl gives rare opportunities. Were I not a soldier, on my faith I think I'd be a monk." Gerard was received at the maison with such ceremony as became a person of his consequence. Gabrielle and her uncle greeted him: Gabrielle with such smiles and gladness that Pascal ceased to wonder at his enthusiasm for his new role ; and de Proballe with many significant shrugs and looks and equivocal phrases. The rest hailed him as the chosen husband of their beloved mistress ; and the story of his bravery and prowess in the rescue of Denys having spread, they welcomed him with acclama- tion. Pascal, as their new lord's servant, would also have been made much of; and seeing many ruddy lips and bright eyes among the women, he would gladly enough have responded had not Gerard's injunctions of caution been still strong upon him. He feigned fatigue, there- fore, and asked to be shown at once to Gerard's apart- ments ; and going there, he at once fell into much deeper waters than any which could have threatened him in any other part of the house. The apartments were close to the room where Denys lay with Lucette in attendance. Denys was better; but when he had been told that his preserver was no other than Gerard de Cobalt, he had taken the news very 76 A COURIER OF FORTUNE strangely and had broken out into a torrent of abuse of him. Then he had gone on to tell Lucette things which, added to what she had heard from Jacques Dauban on the previous evening, had frightened her profoundly. But this sudden violent passion so weakened Denys that a relapse followed ; and thus Lucette had been left with a half-told tale which he had conjured her to carry to Gabrielle at once. She was at her wits' end what to do, and when she heard that Gerard had arrived and was to be lodged in rooms adjoining, she found occasion to loiter about until she encountered Pascal. Her pretty face and distracted looks went straight to his sympathies, and when of her own motion she spoke to him, he soon forgot all about Gerard's counsel. "You are here with M. de Cobalt, monsieur?" she said. " Certainly, mademoiselle, as certainly as that you are here with some trouble of another kind than a captious master. Although trouble may be a master of any of us for that matter." Lucette was watching him, and found him good to look upon. Handsome, frank-faced and clear-eyed, with the stamp of truth. " You, too, are a soldier, monsieur ? " " When I am not anything else, mademoiselle. But in times like these a man plays many parts." She has handsome eyes, and knows how to use them, was his thought. " You have been long with M. de Cobalt, no doubt ? " " I don't know, mademoiselle," was his unexpected reply, given with an engaging smile. He has a dangerous smile, this servant, and speaks with an air, said Lucette to herself. She is going to try and pump me, was Pascal's un- spoken warning to himself. " Don't know, monsieur ! How can that be ? " AT MALINCOURT 77 " It depends upon what we reckon long ; whether by lapse of time weeks, months, years or by the events which have occurred. A man may know a maiden for years until he marry her, and then find that he has never known her at all." " Ah, you are a wit." " What I am I myself know not ; but I know what I am not and I am not a stream in which people, even pretty maids, can fish with a chance of catching much." " There is another thing you are not, monsieur," re- torted Lucette, smiling. " There are many. I am not my master's diary, for others to read," he answered with a laugh and a shake of the head. " Neither are you a servant, monsieur, unless you wear your master's jewels on your fingers." " By my shroud, but you have keen eyes as well as- pretty ones ; but even sharp eyes may lead one astray. I wear this jewel by my master's whim," he replied un- abashed. " May I see it closer ? " " Why not 'tis but a paste," and he held it up. " You take great care of your hands, monsieur, for a serving soldier man," was her comment, so unexpected that Pascal started and laughed. " Do you think I do hard work ? " he asked, shrugging his shoulders. " Your clothes, too, are new and ill-fitting they fit you so ill, indeed, that I would swear you have never worn the like before." " Count not the misfit to me for my sin," replied Pascal gaily. " 'Tis that of the rascal who made them. You interest me, mademoiselle ; may I ask who you are ? " " Your voice, your manner, your tone, the very bow and air with which you asked that question, everything about you belies the servant, monsieur," continued Lucette. " I 78 A COURIER OF FORTUNE am Mademoiselle de Malincourt's foster sister and friend, Lucette de Boisdegarde ; and I am on my way to tell her of this discovery of mine and other things. You bar my path, monsieur," she said with dignity, as Pascal in some dismay put himself before her. " If you are in truth a servant, I order you to stand aside ; if you are a gentle- man, I ask you." " If I detain you a moment, it is only to assure you that Mdlle. de Malincourt and yourself can have no more faithful friend and well-wisher than myself." " Your name, monsieur ? " " Pascal de Pascal Tourelle, at your service." She was quick to see the slip, and pressed home a thrust at once. " On your honour ? " " Pascal, on my honour ; Tourelle, during my service with my master." She smiled, partly at the evasion, but more at his man- ner of making it. " If you were not in this service of which you speak so readily, how would you have finished that sentence? Pascal de what ? " " That is my unhappy secret, mademoiselle ; I beg your consideration," and his tone suggested a melancholy trouble. But Lucette smiled. " Had you been a servant truly, your honour would not have stayed you from deceiving me. If I do not go now to mademoiselle, will you tell me all you know of this M. de Cobalt?" " I will tell you this, on my honour, and your honour will prevent your asking more," he answered after a moment's consideration. " A braver soldier, a more lionourable knight, a more gallant gentleman, never trod this earth than he in whose service you now find me." She looked at him searchingly, and believed him. But AT MALINCOURT 79. this very belief only sufficed to perplex her the more after Denys' story. " One question more I must put. Do you know if he was ever at Cambrai ? Do not answer against your will,, nor if you cannot speak truly on your honour." " I can answer that, frankly. I have known him many years, and can say that until within the last few days, never. We passed through the place in coming here." " Then is the puzzle inscrutable ! " exclaimed Lucette. Denys had told her of the murder at Cambrai, the pardon for which was part of the price to be paid to de Cobalt,, and had spoken of a letter which he had found that put the thing plainly. He had been in the act of telling her where the paper was concealed, that she might get it and carry it to Gabrielle, when the relapse had prevented further speech. " I know not what to do," she cried, in sore perplexity and distress. " If I trust you, others are sadly misled. And yet I believe you have not deceived me." " On my honour I have spoken no more than the truth," said Pascal earnestly. He was as much puzzled as Lucette herself. " If you would deal with me frankly^ and say " " I cannot ; I cannot," she broke in excitedly. "Then may I suggest you speak to M. de Cobalt?" " You know not what you say. But the matter must be probed to the bottom ; " and afraid to say more she left him and hurried back to Denys' bedside. Pascal looked after her, nodded once or twice in answer to his thoughts, and then, with a quizzical smile, mut- tered, as he turned back to his room " Now is the devil about to claim some of his dues for this mad business. I must find Gerard and tell him." They had scarcely parted when the face of the spy- Jacques Dauban peeped cautiously round an angle of the So A COURIER OF FORTUNE wall. Seeing the way was clear he came on with stealthy noiseless tread, chuckling slyly to himself as he rubbed his hands together. He paused just a moment to listen at the door through which Pascal had gone, and then passed on toward the room where Denys lay. CHAPTER VIII THE PLOT THICKENS MEANWHILE Gerard himself, without any help from Pascal's misadventure, was finding enough embarrassments to tax his wit and resource- fulness. De Proballe, anxious that Gerard should have the fullest opportunities to push his suit with Gabrielle, soon made an excuse to leave them together. He pleaded that he must send to the Governor to arrange for the inter- view between him and Gerard, and left them a move that was not without its embarrassment to Gerard, since Gabrielle promptly took advantage of it to carry the con- versation back to the point where it had been interrupted in the gardens. " Yon have something important to tell me, Gerard, I know. You were about to tell me when my uncle came to us. But first, I have to make a confession and to ask your pardon." " I am no priest, I fear," he said, meeting her smiling gaze. " But this is a wrong done to you. When I was think- ing over all we said to-day and I have thought of noth- ing else since I remembered to my shame, that I had never given you even a word of thanks for your help yes- terday, and again to-day." " Please say nothing of it." " Oh, but you must have thought me a very miser of my gratitude. And I am not that. Indeed, indeed, I do thank you from the bottom of my heart," she cried, warmly, her eyes on his face. Si 82 A COURIER OF FORTUNE " Do you think I need more reward than the knowledge that it was you whom I could help ? When I saw you yesterday, my heart leapt, and I vowed " " Well ? " she asked, as he paused ; and when he still hesitated, checked by the thought that he had no right to speak thus while the truth of his position was still unexplained, she added, with a little frown and a very winsome smile, "you break off at most irritating points, cousin." " I vowed myself to your service for good or ill," he said deliberately. " Take care what you say, cousin. Did you know who I was?" " Not then, indeed." " Then was that surely a most dangerous vow." "How?" She laughed merrily. " Supposing it had not been Gabrielle to whom you thus rashly vowed yourself ; what would you have done ? " " I had not thought of it. No other woman would have drawn such a vow from me." " You turn words well so well that I could almost be afraid of your skill. Shall we go out on the terrace ? The evening air is lovely. Tell me," she said, as they walked, " how came you to be playing trespasser so opportunely to-day in Malincourt. It has puzzled me." " If I tell the truth, I was lurking in the wood, hoping to catch a sight of you again." " You had learnt who this lady of your vow was by that time, then?" " Else I had not been in Malincourt," he answered, without thinking. She glanced at him quickly, her face wrinkled with this fresh puzzle. " Is not that a worse puzzle? " she asked. " Knowing who I was, why not have come straight to the maison ? " THE PLOT THICKENS 83 " Of course, I might have done so," he replied. He saw the slip then clearly enough, and tried to cover it with a laugh. " Perhaps I ought to have come." " But you did not. Why ? I do not mind that you did not, but why should you choose so strange a course ? " " What answer can I give, save it was a whim ? " " You would have seen me sooner had you come and would not have been one whit less welcome ; and would in truth have saved me some hours of anxiety. Do you know that, yesterday, I sent high and low in search of you ; and only this morning my poor Denys went riding out to Beaucamp on a veritable wild-goose chase to find you?" Gerard smiled. " Did you at the time know who I was ? " he asked. " Should I have sent away from Morvaix to find you, had I known?" " Then you, too, were not without interest in a stranger ? " " It is not a fair hit," she laughed. " I would not have had even a stranger think me an ingrate for such service." " Then it was merely to thank me, you wished." " Gerard ! " and she let her eyes drop to the ground. " I should like to think that before you heard my name to-day, you " He commenced in great earnestness, but checked himself again. " Some day I will tell you," she replied in a low tone, after a pause ; and then, in a tone as low, he asked " And what if I had been other than Gerard de Cobalt?" " Thank God, it was not so," she cried, with a little shiver and a sigh. " Why, Gabrielle ? " He had his own strong reason for pressing the question. For a time she kept her head bowed and remained 84 A COURIER OF FORTUNE silent ; but then raising her eyes to him frankly and trust- fully she said " I think I should like to tell you. You will not think shame of me. I fear I could never have been Gerard de Cobalt's wife. All night I wrestled with the problem, and prayed fervently for strength to do my duty, and keep the pledge made for me by my parents. But when I knew Gerard de Cobalt would come to-day, I dreaded to meet him. Can you not guess why ? " She was all blushes and sweetness as the faltered confession dropped from her lips. " You cannot think what this means to me," he an- swered with passion. " But some day you will under- stand." " Why not now, Gerard ? I have betrayed all my little secret little, do I say if you but knew how great, how all in all it is to me ! I have shown you all my heart," she whispered. They were leaning on the marble balustrade, gazing over the lovely gardens which the risen moon was silver- ing with her glory. " Why not now, Gerard ? " she repeated, after a long pause, with sweet, gentle insistence. " What need of secrets between us two ? " He longed to respond to this frank confession of her feelings by telling her everything; and the impulse to speak was only curbed with great effort. But prudence stayed him, and the fear of unknown consequences which might imperil everything by forcing a disclosure to de Proballe. " We will have no secrets one from the other, Gabri- elle, when once this matter in my thoughts has been cleared up," he said, his reluctance to refuse her plea caus- ing him to speak with hesitation. " Is itr the same of which you spoke to-day so strangely ? " THE PLOT THICKENS 85 " The same, yes." " But you were going to tell me then." Her pause before the word, and emphasis in speaking it, did not escape him. But even the subtle temptation implied in the sweet accent did not prevail. " Yes, I was going to tell you. If I do not, you trust me?" " Gerard, of course. I should trust you always. But I am only a woman, and curious," she added, with a tender smile of reproachful invitation. " And if I assure you it is for your own sake that I hold this back, you will bear with me ? " " For my sake ? Now in truth you increase my per- plexity, and do but whet my appetite. How can it be for my sake? You said to-day that it concerned the very purpose of your coming here ; and when I spoke of that purpose as I knew it our marriage, Gerard you started back as if in alarm or overwhelming surprise. You pained me so that I was leaving you in anger." " The pain was greater on my side than yours, Gabri- " And then you suggested you had been led to de- ceive me in some strange way : I should not believe that, indeed ; and, as if impelled by some sudden thought, you were about to tell me everything. And then my uncle came, and you whispered hurriedly that what you had to say was for my ears alone. Are we not alone now ? " .she asked with witching pressure ; and she smiled ten- derly, as she added : " You see I remember every word you said. Indeed, I could never forget them ; but I cannot understand"; and she shook her head as if the puzzle were all beyond her solving. " If you but trust me, what else can matter?" he an- swered, at a loss how to meet her. " Nothing, nothing now," she cried joyfully, moving- a little closer to him so that her shoulder was against his. 86 A COURIER OF FORTUNE " Chide me if I seem too persistent. I have had so much of my own way in my life that I must be getting self- willed, I think. But don't make the chiding too harsh, Gerard. And do not keep me too long with this secret between us; I think I shall grow jealous of it. And another condition," she laughed : " Do not tell any one before you tell me. I could not bear that." " You are even harder to resist when you yield, Gabri- elle, than when you plead, I fear." " Am I ? Then I will yield that I may plead. But I will wait your time. Of course I will. It is such delight to me to find you what you are, that all else is nothing. Besides, it is the first request you have made to me, and I should be a churl to refuse it. I did not think of that, and could be angry with myself for having forgotten it. I would not hear you now, if you were to offer to tell me." Her laugh at this was as that of a child in its pure delight. " I am almost constrained to tempt you," he said, laughing in his turn. " Nay, I have put my curiosity away about that, but I have plenty left about you and your life and all you have done to change you from that boy Gerard whom I knew." " I am very different from him, I trust. I have been a soldier since the time I was big enough to shoulder a musket." " And have fought ? Tell me, tell me. Where and with whom ? I love to hear of brave deeds. I am a sol- dier's daughter, you know." " I have been a courier of fortune, as all younger sons must be, and have carried arms under the Bourbons." " We Malincourts, too, claim to be of the Bourbon blood ; but how do you mean a younger son ? I had not heard you had ever a brother, Gerard." " All soldiers have brothers-5n-arms," he replied, THE PLOT THICKENS 87 hastily, and with some confusion. " I have had my own way to push to prove that I was worthy to lead." " Yes, yes. And you have proved that long since, I am confident. But tell me of the fighting. Oh, I would that I had been a man to bear my part as a soldier ! " " That had been hard on me, Gabrielle." " True enough, too. And for that I am glad I am only a woman, "she said, gently, nestling yet closer to him. And having thus led her on to the safe topic of his career as a soldier, he told her many of his experiences. She listened eagerly to his story, hanging on his words in rare delight, until he broke off, remembering that he was to see the Governor that night. " I am forgetting I could forget all in your company. But M. de Proballe has arranged that I see the Duke to- night. I had best seek him." " You must be careful with the Governor, Gerard." "Why? I do not fear him." " He is all powerful here in Morvaix. You saw what passed in the market place yesterday. He is a man of iron." " Yet what harm can he do me ? " " He is bad to the heart's core. His wife is my one intimate friend in Morvaix, an honourable, God-fearing woman, who has suffered unspeakable sorrows at his hands in her life. She is now bed-ridden, poor soul ; and we have spoken freely together of the Duke." " He is a tyrant that I have learnt." " And many worse things, I fear. I would not will- ingly speak ill of any man, but to you I should speak freely. He has but too well merited the term men give him the Tiger of Morvaix. Could the grim walls and torture chambers of his castle bear witness against him, fearsome truths indeed would come to light." " Tell me of them." " Nay, not to-night. To-night we will not speak of 88 A COURIER OF FORTUNE Morvaix horrors; rather let us hope that from to-night, from your coming, Gerard, better times will dawn for the city and the unfortunate citizens. The Duke is a hard, harsh, cruel man, who tolerates but one principle of rule: blind implicit obedience to his will, to be en- forced by any measure of cruelty, however violent and harsh. He has ground down the people until the yoke has become intolerable ; and yet there seems no remedy. I sent tidings privately to the Duke of Bourbon, as Suzerain of the province, praying him to come or send aid to us before the people should be driven to open re- bellion. But no one comes, no one heeds ; and we must work out our own rescue. I have a faint hope indeed, that matters will mend." "How?" " I saw the Duke to-day, and urged him to relax the severity of his rule to take off this last cruel impost on the people's food, for one thing; and he half promised, making his consent contingent on some sacrifice from me. God knows there is nothing I would not give in such a cause. I would strip myself of all my possessions even of Malincourt itself, dearly as I love every stone of the old maison. But I hold the welfare of the people dearer. He would not name the condition, however, leaving it to me to do so. And I know not what he wishes." Gerard's face grew dark with anger as he listened, knowing full well from de Proballe's words what the condition was. " We shall together find the means, Gabrielle," he said earnestly. " My hand and oath on that ; and my life the forfeit if I fail." " You will help me in this," she cried, joyfully and eagerly. " Oh, Gerard, did I not say to-day how glad I was that you had come ! What great issues now depend on you. With you to help me, a strong man at Malin- court, to oppose the castle ; not violently I mean, but with THE PLOT THICKENS 89 the strength of all the people's sympathy behind us, what may we not achieve? But when you see the Duke, be wary of him ; give him no cause present offence that we may be the stronger in the future." " Does any one but you know that you sent to Bour- bon for help ? Your uncle, for instance ? " " No. I told no one ; not even him. I deemed him too intimate with the Governor. He would not wittingly betray me, I know, for he has often spoken to me in sor- row of the Duke's government. You like him, Gerard ? " " I have seen but little of him ; but I have indeed found him blunt in speaking of facts," was the cautious reply, drily spoken. A footstep on the terrace disturbed them. It was Pascal. " I was seeking you, monsieur, to know if you have any other commands for me," he said aloud in a re- spectful tone, adding in a whisper, as they stood apart : " I must speak to you at once. There's a devil of a mess." " Wait but a minute," whispered Gerard ; and then, aloud : " I will you see directly, good Pascal. It is my faithful fellow in some trouble about me, Gabrielle." " Then let us go in. Ah, here is Lucette," she added, as Lucette, looking very troubled, came out of the maison. " How is Denys, Lucette ? " " He was better for some time, but the fever seems to have come back upon him. The surgeon has seen him again, and given him a potion, and he is now asleep." " He should be carefully watched all night, never left for a moment," declared Gerard quickly, remembering de Proballe's threatening words. " You will see to this, mademoiselle." " The surgeon says he will sleep until the morning, and will need no more till then," answered Lucette. 90 A COURIER OF FORTUNE " Let him be watched. At need I, or Pascal here, will remain by his bedside." " By your leave, monsieur, that were not well ; " and Lucette spoke so sharply that all looked at her. " What mean you, Lucette ? " asked Gabrielle. " Denys has, for causes that may be plain afterward, conceived a violent dislike toward Monsieur de Cobalt ; and if he woke and found him by the bedside, it might be very ill indeed." " But I have never set eyes on him until to-day, mademoiselle." " It is probably no more than a sick man's fancy," said Gabrielle. " It may be so ; yet it is very strong upon him, and he talks wildly and almost at random." " I fear his wound is more serious than you deemed, Gerard," declared Gabrielle. "It is the more reason for what I have urged that he be watched closely and never left. His life itself may hang upon it." " I will see that it is done," agreed Gabrielle readily. " That what is done ? " It was de Proballe who asked the question, coming out of the house in time to catch the last words. " My poor Denys is very ill, it seems, uncle, and Gerard has just been saying that he should be watched cease- lessly." " Poor fellow," he replied in a compassionate tone ; and then with an upcast glance at Gerard he asked : " And why do you think he should be watched so closely? " " I have had some skill in sword-wounds, monsieur, and Mademoiselle Lucette here says he has been talking wildly. When delirium follows such a wound as his there is every need for care." It was an adroit answer, for it satisfied de Proballe and also bore out what he had said before. But Lacette's THE PLOT THICKENS 9 r eyes were very keen, and knowing all she did, she was watching closely enough to catch de Proballe's glance of meaning as he answered " You are right then, Gerard. I will see to this, Gabri- elle. Denys is too good a fellow for us to run any risks with. My man, Jacques Dauban, has had some training in surgery, and would gladly keep such a vigil." Lucette bit her lip and cast down her eyes. " I think we need not trouble Master Dauban or cause him to lose a night's rest," she said. " My maid and I can watch, monsieur." " Ever kind and considerate, Lucette," said de Pro- balle. " Well, we can see to it, as Gabrielle says. And now, Gerard, I have a word for your ear about the- Governor. He cannot receive you to-night." " I am sorry ; but to-morrow will do for me." "What is this about Denys?" asked de Proballe, eagerly, when Gabrielle and Lucette had left them. " You should not have urged that watching. If the man is alive to-morrow, everything may be ruined. What has he said to Lucette there ? " " Indeed, I neither know nor care." "Are you mad?" " To-night, perhaps yes ; sanity may come in the morn- ing. I have been talking long and earnestly with Gabri- elle, and her purity and innocence may have maddened me. If that be so, it is sweet madness." " Psh. Spare me such cant. Would you ruin every- thing? We are men with work to do, not fools to stuff our minds with folly." " Nor villains to murder sick men. If harm should come to Denys I should never forgive myself nor you,, monsieur ; and I should hold you responsible." " Then you do not wish this marriage ? " " Not if the path to it be cold-blooded murder, Monsieur- de Proballe." 92 A COURIER OF FORTUNE " Does it lie in your mouth to speak of murder, after Cambrai ? But your head is turned because you find your cousin has a pretty face ; and if it is not to be turned next on the headsman's block, you will cease this folly." " So it was held to be murder at Cambrai ? " " You try my patience beyond endurance. See to it that you have more reason in the morning; and that you may find it, I will give you something to ponder in the night. I have talked with the Duke to-night, and found him with another plan half-fledged in his thoughts; and if ever it gets full-feathered you may look to yourself." " He seems a man quick at hatching schemes. I fear neither him nor them." " Fool ! Do you dream to oppose him ? He is now half- minded to divorce his Duchess and make Gabrielle his wife. He finds that he stands higher in the favour of the Cardinal Archbishop than he deemed ; his Eminence has sent him a hundred fighting men for his army; and he now thinks he can secure a dispensation to put away his wife. He is childless, and she a bed-ridden invalid ; and the Church might not willingly see so noble a line as his extinct. If you do not hurry to make Gabrielle your wife, I would not answer for your head. Ponder that to-night, .and mouth of sweet madness in the morning, if you have any mind left for such folly." Waiting for no reply, de Proballe turned on his heel and entered the house ; and as Gerard was gazing after him, Pascal approached and touched him on the arm. " Of all the diabolical villains What is it, man ? " he broke off impatiently. " What's the use of wasting breath in that way when there are things to be done? This precious maison is like a nest of spies. I've been found out for an impostor by that pretty sharp-eyed girl whose lover lies wounded up- stairs; and I was wondering how to get to you to tell 3 r ou when I came on some sneaking whelp of a man with THE PLOT THICKENS 93 his ear jammed to the door of the chamber where she was watching." " Did you break his head for him ? " " Nearly ; but I did better. I played spy in my turn ; and your honest man can beat a rogue at his own trade when he tries, even when that trade is spying. Presently the rascal went to the door of the apartments where we are to lie, and, after listening and waiting, he knocked, at first gently, and then more boldly, and finding no one within, entered, and I caught him ransacking among our baggage. Holy Peter! but he cut a sorry figure when he saw me peeping round the door at him; " and Pascal laughed. " What did you do? I hope you were discreet." " I first knocked him down and drubbed him soundly, and then tied him up with a roll of cloth for his supper, and locked him in a cupboard. Tnen I came for you that we may try him together." "Who is he?" " I gave him no time to say. But come, or he may be smothered for I'm a novice with the gag and in that case we shall get nothing out of him ; which would be a pity." " It's a curious turn," said Gerard uneasily, as they hurried away together. CHAPTER IX WHAT DENYS KNEW PASCAL was all laughter and sallies as he led the way up to their apartments, but Gerard was in no such mood. He was very serious and full of misgivings at the course things were taking. There were more than enough complications in the position already without the additional embarrassment of the bestowal of a prisoner. It was not without some sense of relief, therefore, that he saw Pascal start as he entered the room, and heard him exclaim in a tone of dismay " The sly devil has wriggled out, Gerard. By my shroud, I had not deemed it possible. I put him in there and shot the bolt upon him"; and he pointed to an empty closet. " Never mind. Perhaps it is best so," answered Gerard with a smile. " An honest man can't always beat a rogue at his own trade, it seems." " Aye, laugh away ; but he'll not laugh if ever I set eyes on him again, the sneaking mongrel." " For not waiting for your return, you mean ? He knows his business, at any rate." " Aye, that's certain ; but the point is how much he knows of yours? " retorted Pascal. " I'll forgive him for knowing his own, but he shall pay the price for meddling in mine. Were I not a fool I had mounted guard over him and waited for you to come here." " Are you sure he was spying upon us ? " " Am I sure that we are on a queer quest here ? Who -can have turned him on to such a scent ? " 94 WHAT DENYS KNEW 95 " I should suspect de Proballe, were it not that he knows all my supposed unsavoury history as the real de Cobalt." " He has no suspicion that you are not ? " " Not that I can think." " Then it must be the girl who questioned me and said I was no servant Mdlle. de Boisdegarde," suggested Pascal, with a shrewd nod of the head. " I mind me now. Are you supposed to have done some ugly thing at Cambrai ? She questioned me on the point." " Yes, a something which de Proballe spells murder, and for which I am to be pardoned." " A thousand devils ! I gave her my word of honour you had never been there, except as we passed through the place on our way here." " How can she have got wind of it ? " and Gerard pursed his lips thoughtfully. " Wait, wait. I see. De Proballe told me this good fellow Denys had his suspi- cions. He has told her. Phew ! " he whistled. " The plot thickens." " It's thick enough already to be a very devil's pie of complication," laughed Pascal. " I suppose, as usual you will listen to no counsel of prudence." "Prudence, from Pascal de la Tour?" and Gerard laughed in his turn. " Nay, for myself I care nothing. Let come what may it's all welcome, so long as there be but some fun in it. But your life is valuable. Would it not be wise to give up this de Cobalt business, leave Morvaix, and return as yourself with the troops from Cambrai ? " Gerard thought a moment, and then with another smile answered " You have seen for yourself how a certain matter stands. Were you in my place, would you act on your own counsel ? " " Not I, on my soul. If there are two ways to an end, ?6 A COURIER OF FORTUNE I would choose that which has the more spice in it, and devil take the danger. But you and I stand on different footings, Gerard, and I would not so counsel you." " Counsel or no counsel, I stay, Pascal. We will have the troops up when the need calls for them. But I will follow the spirit of your advice. I'll write to my cousin d'Alembert, at Cambrai, bidding him be prepared to march hither at an hour's notice ; and to-mprrow early you must find means to despatch a messenger to him. Then seek out Dubois, and tell him to keep in close touch with the hundred we brought into the city as monks, so as to assemble them at any moment. Do you know how the hundred we played at presenting to this Governor have been bestowed ? " "' That was a shrewd step," answered Pascal, with a laugh. " They are enrolled among the castle guards, in accordance with the suggestion Dubois handed on from his Eminence yourself, Gerard. Pray Heaven, they do but keep discreet tongues. They are tough fighters, and every man would gladly give his life for you; but like soldiers, they love their liquor." " To-morrow, or at any rate the day following, should see all in readiness for us to act. Now let me write my letter a task I loathe." While Gerard wrote, Pascal left the room, wishful in case of emergencies to learn his way better about the great house, and he came back just as the seal was set to the paper. " Gerard, that sharp-eyed beauty, Mdlle. Lucette, wishes a word with you. I met her on the watch in the corridor as I returned." Gerard went out to her. " May I put a question to you, M. de Cobalt ? " was how she met him. " Certainly, mademoiselle. Can I help you ? You look sorely troubled." WHAT DENYS KNEW 97 " Gabrielle trusts you so implicitly, monsieur, and 'twas she bade me ask you. Will you tell me why you were so anxious that Denys St. Jean should be watched so jealously? " " I gave my reasons, mademoiselle. When fever and delirium follow loss of blood from a sword-thrust there must always be risk to the patient." " There is no delirium, monsieur. When Denys spoke of you, he was perfectly calm and clear. At first, that is, and until his excitement grew. But what he said of you was said collectedly." " But the fever is on him, and therefore he should not be left," said Gerard calmly. She made a quick gesture of impatience. " Can you not answer me frankly, monsieur ? Oh, par- don me, but I am in such distress. You have some other reasons. I saw the look that passed between you and M. de Proballe." " Would you ask me to interpret for you all M. de Proballe's looks, and to explain all you may have thought in your excitement ? " and he smiled. " Denys is so hot against you, and makes such charges." " Should I warn you to set a watch over him if I my- self were minded to do him any harm for that? In all honest truth, I care not what he may either think or say." " But he declares " " By your leave, I would rather not hear what he says except from his own lips. I shall know how to answer him." She lifted her hands despairingly and was turning away, when a further question occurred to her. " On your honour, monsieur, you have no other reason for this watching than what you have said ? " " That is a question which I would rather that you did not put to me." " But we trust you so," she cried reproachfully. 98 A COURIER OF FORTUNE He smiled again. " Then do as I have suggested." " Oh, what a mystery is all this ; " she exclaimed, and left him. " One word more, mademoiselle," he said, following her a couple of paces. " We are soldiers and accustomed to long watches and little sleep. One of us will be on the watch out here in the corridor for the night." She made no reply ; and Gerard, going back to Pascal, told him what he proposed : that they two should watch in turns through the night. " I hope that rat will come stealing back," said Pascal. *' If I don't pinch his throat for him, may my fingers for- get the feel of a man's wizen;" and he agreed readily to take the first spell. The rat did come back, more than once ; but so cun- ningly and softly now, so warily and so keen of scent for the watchers, that neither Gerard nor Pascal knew of his coming; and in the morning both agreed that they had kept their vigil to no purpose. Could they have heard the report which Dauban gave to his master, however, they would have known otherwise. De Proballe was ill at ease, indeed. He did not like the attitude which Gerard had adopted. He had looked for a pliant tool, afraid of his life ; and he found instead, a man who showed independence and firmness, who had a will of his own, and who both said and did things that made against his plans. For his purpose it was not by any means enough that Gerard should succeed in making a good impression on Gabrielle. That was right, so far as it went ; but Gerard seemed to be captivated by her beauty ; and that was al- together wrong. If there was to be love between them, the whole scheme might be jeopardised; and with it would go his own more daring and ambitious plans. Were Gerard to marry Gabrielle and then turn against him, no one could foresee the consequences. The blunder- WHAT DENYS KNEW 99 ing interference in regard to Denys was unaccountable ; and the manner in which he had flinched from the neces- sary step of dealing with one whose knowledge was so dangerous, was profoundly disturbing. It was enough to rouse the wrath of any one ; and when Dauban brought word that a watch was actually being kept which ren- dered it impossible even to get to the door of the room, his perplexity equalled his ill-temper. He had his own standards of judging men; and he could only come now to the conclusion that Gerard was in some way playing for his own hand. This thought kept him in a ferment of speculation the whole night. Seeing Gerard in the gardens early, he went down to him, resolved to have an explanation. " I want a word with you, Gerard," he said, bluntly. " We must understand one another, or this thing goes no farther." Gerard had gone out early in the hope of seeing Gabri- elle, and was anything but pleased to have de Proballe's company instead ; nor did he at all relish the peremptory tone in which de Proballe spoke. Thus his answer was sharp and curt. " What is there we do not understand, monsieur? " " In the first place, you must understand that as I am the author of this marriage scheme, you must work for it as I direct, or it must come to an end." "Is that so?" " Yes, it is so ; and you had better know it. I first thought of it ; I found the proofs of her parents' wishes to lay before Gabrielle ; and what I made I can as easily unmake again. I have but to speak a word and the bubble will burst." " Then it was a lie, M. de Proballe ? " asked Gerard coldly and incisively. " A lie, as you know perfectly well ; one in which you have already taken part, and which you have come here ioo A COURIER OF FORTUNE in person to continue to the end. It is useless for us to play like children at pretences. In your letters to me you have expressed your willingness to put yourself en- tirely in my hands, to do precisely what I tell you. Now, will you do it? If you will not, say so." " My memory for such matters is short, monsieur, and in regard to all such communications I am as if I had never penned them"; replied Gerard, after a moment's pause. " Then it is as I thought. You have some scheme of your own to further. What is it ? " De Proballe was furious at the answer. " If it be my own, as you suggest, should I be likely to disclose it to you ? " " You do not deny it ? " " I do not admit your right to question me." " Do you intend to marry Gabrielle ? " " Without a doubt, if she will deign to marry me." . " Then why did you set a watch outside that babbler's door all through the night ? " " How do you know that I did ? " " No matter. I know it, and that is enough." " I was right, then, in thinking you would choose the night for your work. I set the watch, monsieur, because I had no mind to be a party to your murderous scheme." " You will repent this attitude." " Very likely. Most of us spend our lives in either com- mitting one blunder or repenting others." " You tempt me to deem my act a blunder indeed in bringing you to Morvaix." " That may be part of the better understanding, the reference to which opened our conversation. Need we say any more ? " " Before the day is done you may understand better," cried de Proballe, furiously. " Shall we leave it, then, for the coming hours to de- WHAT DENYS KNEW 101 cide ? " retorted Gerard, lightly and without more he turned his back and walked away. De Proballe returned to the house more uneasy and more wrathful than ever. He seemed to see his schemes crumbling to pieces before his eyes, and to be unable to avert the ruin. He had built so much on Gerard's com- ing that he was loath now to carry his fears to the Gov- ernor, and thus stop the marriage altogether ; and yet it was plain that if this was to be Gerard's attitude when he had married Gabrielle and was master of Malincourt, the very marriage itself might but make matters worse than they were at present. He could not see what private scheme Gerard could have in reserve; and came at length to think that the success with Gabrielle had so turned Gerard's head that he believed himself master of the situation. From this delusion it would not be difficult to rouse him, however. A word or two from the Duke that his life was in danger would soon cure this swashbuckler mood ; and such a word he could instigate at any moment. He could there- fore safely let matters run their course for the present. In this temper he awaited the hour fixed for Gerard's interview with the Governor; but early in the fore- noon the latter arrived at Malincourt ; and de Proballe found him in a dangerous temper. " We were to wait upon you at the Castle, Duke," he said, suavely. " Am I not welcome at Malincourt ? " " You can need no assurance from me, I trust, that your presence here is an honour and a welcome con- descension." " Umph ! " and the Governor shrugged his shoulders. " Where is Mdlle. de Malincourt? " " I have not seen my niece this morning. I will have her sent for." " No, that is not my wish. Where is your villainous 104 A COURIER OF FORTUNE The lovers approached, all unsuspecting that keen vengeful eyes were bent upon them from under the strained pent brows of a man half mad with jealous frenzy. And a handsome picture they made as they came up the broad steps laughing gaily in the sweet abandonment of new-found all-trusting love. Gabrielle held in one hand the kerchief with which she had at first covered her head, and in the other was a posy of freshly plucked flowers, from which she had chosen a red rose to give to Gerard. Her face was radiant with smiles and her eyes glowed as she turned them ever and again upon her handsome lover by her side. At the head of the steps she stayed and leant in a grace- ful pose against the marble pillar on which stood the statue of a fantastically carved faun. "And must you really go now to the Castle?" she asked. " M. de Proballe named this hour, Gabrielle." " I am loath for you to go, cousin ; yet could wish you gone that I may look for your return, and long for it." " You do not think I leave you willingly ? " A tender glance was the answer, and at the sight of it the angry man within the room close by drew in his breath sharply as if in pain. " I believe I shall count the minutes till you return," she said. " Am I not foolish ? But your coming has changed my world." " If it be foolishness, then it is good to be foolish," returned Gerard. " You will be careful with the Duke, remembering what I have told you, Gerard." " I have to think of you, Gabrielle, and the thought will inspire me to caution." " I would I could be present. Not that I doubt you ; maybe," she smiled, "it is only because I do not like to be parted from you." WHAT DENYS KNEW 105 " The minutes will be no less leaden to me while I am away ; " and again they smiled each to the other with such a glance that the Duke could endure no more. " This must end," he whispered fiercely. " I will bear no more ; " and he was moving impetuously when de Pro- balle stayed him and whispered in reply " I beg you have patience, my lord. He is but adopt- ing my suggestion and wooing her that the marriage may take place the sooner." " Then he must find some other way. It is hell to me." " Stay ; some one comes. By all the saints in heaven, it is Denys ! " He was walking with difficulty, and leaning on Lu- cette's arm for support. " It is he who knows something of our plans, my lord, and should have been silenced by your men yester- day. He must be stopped, or he will poison her ears against him." But the Duke, catching eagerly at the words, laid a strong hand on de Proballe's arm and held him as he whispered in tense accents " Let him do it, and I will thank him. Stay, monsieur, I order you." In dire consternation de Proballe, now much agitated,, fell back to his place, and both were again silent. " Denys, Denys, what madness is it that brings you from your sick bed thus ? " cried Gabrielle, in surprise and some alarm for him. " You are risking your life." " It is no madness, mademoiselle, and my life would be cheaply spent in such a case," answered Denys, speak- ing with great labour and seeming even to breathe with difficulty. " I could not stay him, Gabrielle," said Lucette, in re- sponse to Gabrielle's look of reproach. " You would not come to me when I sent for you,. 104 A COURIER OF FORTUNE The lovers approached, all unsuspecting that keen vengeful eyes were bent upon them from under the strained pent brows of a man half mad with jealous frenzy. And a handsome picture they made as they came up the broad steps laughing gaily in the sweet abandonment of new-found all-trusting love. Gabrielle held in one hand the kerchief with which she had at first covered her head, and in the other was a posy of freshly plucked flowers, from which she had chosen a red rose to give to Gerard. Her face was radiant with smiles and her eyes glowed as she turned them ever and again upon her handsome lover by her side. At the head of the steps she stayed and leant in a grace- ful pose against the marble pillar on which stood the statue of a fantastically carved faun. " And must you really go now to the Castle ? " she asked. " M. de Proballe named this hour, Gabrielle." " I am loath for you to go, cousin ; yet could wish you gone that I may look for your return, and long for it." " You do not think I leave you willingly ? " A tender glance was the answer, and at the sight of it the angry man within the room close by drew in his breath sharply as if in pain. " I believe I shall count the minutes till you return," she said. " Am I not foolish ? But your coming has changed my world." " If it be foolishness, then it is good to be foolish," returned Gerard. " You will be careful with the Duke, remembering what I have told you, Gerard." " I have to think of you, Gabrielle, and the thought will inspire me to caution." " I would I could be present. Not that I doubt you ; maybe," she smiled, "it is only because I do not like to be parted from you." WHAT DENYS KNEW 105 " The minutes will be no less leaden to me while I am away ; " and again they smiled each to the other with such a glance that the Duke could endure no more. " This must end," he whispered fiercely. " I will bear no more ; " and he was moving impetuously when de Pro- balle stayed him and whispered in reply " I beg you have patience, my lord. He is but adopt- ing my suggestion and wooing her that the marriage may take place the sooner." " Then he must find some other way. It is hell to me." " Stay ; some one comes. By all the saints in heaven, it is Denys ! " He was walking with difficulty, and leaning on Lu- cette's arm for support. " It is he who knows something of our plans, my lord, and should have been silenced by your men yester- day. He must be stopped, or he will poison her ears against him." But the Duke, catching eagerly at the words, laid a strong hand on de Proballe's arm and held him as he whispered in tense accents " Let him do it, and I will thank him. Stay, monsieur, I order you." In dire consternation de Proballe, now much agitated,, fell back to his place, and both were again silent. " Denys, Denys, what madness is it that brings you from your sick bed thus ? " cried Gabrielle, in surprise and some alarm for him. " You are risking your life." " It is no madness, mademoiselle, and my life would be cheaply spent in such a case," answered Denys, speak- ing with great labour and seeming even to breathe with difficulty. " I could not stay him, Gabrielle," said Lucette, in re- sponse to Gabrielle's look of reproach. " You would not come to me when I sent for you,. 106 A COURIER OF FORTUNE mademoiselle," said Denys slowly, when he had found breath. " So I came to you." " I could not come then, and did but delay, good Denys. But what is this matter that could not wait ? " " That man is the matter Gerard de Cobalt. I know the truth of his coming hither and his treachery, and not another hour was to be lost before I told you." " Denys ! How dare you speak thus ? You presume upon my good will. It was M. de Cobalt who saved your life yesterday." "Would God I had lost it rather than that it should be saved by him. As Heaven is my witness, I speak but the truth when I say he is a villain ; and I can and will prove my words by his own testimony." A moment's tense silence followed this fierce accusa- tion ; and in it the Duke whispered under his breath " It grows interesting. I hope he will make good his words. He is an honest sturdy fellow, and looks as earnest as he is sincere. A good witness, and welcome." CHAPTER X THE ACCUSATION TO Gerard the turn of events was profoundly dis- turbing-. He had heard from both Lucette and de Proballe that Denys had suspicions of the reasons which were supposed to have brought him to Morvaix, and knew something of the unsavoury past of the man whose name he had taken ; and to have all this blurted out to Gabrielle might have very ugly conse- quences. Almost any other moment would have been less in- opportune, as it seemed ; and he would have given much to be able to silence his accuser. Yet he could not appear to shun the charge or shrink from any proofs which Denys had obtained : could do nothing in fact. It was the irony of the thing that the very interference which he would have welcomed at the fitting moment should be so em- barrassing now. Gabrielle had, however, only one thought. To her it seemed treachery even to listen further to the accusation. She was very angry, and her face mantled with colour. " You have been a faithful friend to me, Denys," she said, " and are ill with your wound. Were it otherwise, your present act would part us. There is no place in Malincourt, or in my service, for any one who maligns my friends. Lucette, it pains me that you are in this. Gerard, will you take me into the house ? " But Gerard's honour and instincts of fairness forbade acquiescence in this unjust rebuke. 107 io8 A COURIER OF FORTUNE " Nay, Gabrielle, I believe you are too hard upon M. St. Jean and upon Mdlle. Lucette as well. It is but his zeal for you that makes him indiscreet." " The fool, the fool ! " muttered de Proballe. " When she would have shut her own ears to the truth." " You hear M. de Cobalt, Denys. Take lesson by his generosky. Go back to your chamber, and when you are well, in mind and body both, I will hear you. Lucette, see to this." She spoke with all the dignity of one who meant to be obeyed. " I have no power to prevail with him, Gabrielle. He urged me first to come with this story to you, and when I would not, rose from his bed and insisted on seeking you for himself." Denys appeared to be almost spent with his effort. He stood leaning against the parapet in such desperate straits that Gabrielle was touched with deep compassion. " I am passing, I think," he said. His face was deadly grey as he clung 1 to the marble with one hand while with the other he felt for a paper and drew it out. He seemed so near collapse that Gerard stepped forward to help him ; but anger rallied him and he waved away the prof- fered help with a gesture of contempt. " Pray God he falls before he can do more mischief, the meddling dog ! " muttered de Proballe again. " Lead him away, Lucette," said Gabrielle, in pain at the sight. But Denys would not go ; and after an effort he said slowly with much effort and many a pause " My last strength can have no better use than in this for you, mademoiselle. This letter from M. de Cobalt to M. de Proballe. Read it, for the love of God, read it." " Denys, Denys, how can you ask such unworthiness ? " cried Gabrielle indignantly, her eyes and voice full of re- proach. "If it be M. de Cobalt's letter, give it to him. Would you have me imitate you and play the spy ? " 44 Speak not so harshly, Gabrielle," exclaimed Lucette. THE ACCUSATION 109 But Denys stopped her and spoke again, moving a step toward Gabrielle. " He would marry you but to betray you to the Duke. Tis my last word. He says it here." Holding the letter in his now trembling fingers he made a great effort to reach Gabrielle with it, his staring eyes fixed earnestly and imploringly upon her. But his fever-racked strength was gone. " For God's sake be warned," he mumbled half-incoherently. It was his last effort. As the words dropped from his lips, he fell prone to the ground, the letter fluttering from his nerveless fingers to Gabrielle's feet. Lucette with a cry knelt beside him. Gabrielle had shrunk from his approach, but now stood gazing down on him, pity, pain and distress in her eyes. And Gerard stooped and felt his heart. "He has but fainted," he said, looking up. " Let him. be carried back to the bed he should never have left. He is a noble faithful fellow and has freely risked his life for what he deems the truth." " Good, Gerard ! Splendidly played. Did you mark that, my lord ? " whispered de Proballe, intensely re- lieved at Denys' collapse. " What an actor the villain is, Duke ? Said I not he was but acting with Gabrielle ? You could swear that tone of his was a note of honour- able innocence. But the Duke made no reply. He was staring with pent gloomy brows at the scene. " You bear him no grudge for this, Gerard ? " said Gabrielle with a smile of confidence. " Should I feel enmity to one whose only motive was desire to serve you and who has drawn this further proof of your trust in me? He did and said no more than he deemed both right and true. I honour him for his courage." " Then I will tear the letter that appears to have cheated his fevered wits, and so end the matter ; " and picking up the paper she was about to tear it when he stopped her. " Fool ! Idiot ! Now indeed he goes too far ; " mut- tered de Proballe, as he saw the gesture. " Let her tear it." Gerard had the strongest reasons for not having the letter destroyed, however. It was the proof he needed to make de Proballe's guilt clear. " I should not destroy it, Gabrielle. There must be much behind this which we do not yet understand; and if it is to be cleared, this letter may be needed." " 'Tis but the delusion born of fever madness." " Men do not forge letters in delirium," answered Gerard quietly. " You would not have me read it ! " Gabrielle's eyes "were wide with astonishment. " What will the fool do next ? " murmured de Pro- balle, in deep agitation. " Is he aiming this at me ? " Gerard paused a moment to think, and then an- swered calmly and firmly. " Yes, I would have you read it." " But it is designed to slander you." " I am too sure of your trust to fear any slander, Gabrielle. I would have you read it, whatever it be." " By the Cross ! he plays a bold hand," muttered the Duke, drawing his breath. " What is in the letter ? " " It will ruin everything," whispered de Proballe. " Then do I not understand him. He must indeed be sure of her, as he says ; " and his frown grew deeper than before. Gabrielle stood fingering the letter in hesitation some moments and then unfolded it. " I will do your bidding, Gerard, although I had rather not." She read it then. THE ACCUSATION in " To M. LE BARON DE PROBALLE, " The messenger has brought me your last communi- cation and the sum of money I asked for. My doubts are almost satisfied. I have some troublesome mat- ters to arrange, and some little time must pass before they can be settled. But you can count upon my reaching Malincourt by the end of June or the first days of July, if in response to this you send me a declara- tion under the Duke de Rochelle's own hand that I shall receive his pardon for the affair at Cambrai. You must procure this ; as without it I shall not trust myself with- in his province. " You require me to state my acceptance of your proposal specifically. I now do this. I will marry Gabrielle. She shall never learn from me that her parents never expressed any such wish for our marriage as she has been told. I will use my utmost efforts to compel her, if need be, to submit to the Duke's wishes. And I will act in every way faithfully as you may direct in any other plans you have. " The fortune I shall receive with Gabrielle will be all I need that and the pardon ; for I seek no Court position, favour, or influence. " Send me the written assurance of the pardon, and by the time the messenger can return hither, I may be ready to set out myself. " GERARD DE COBALT." " By the God above us all, what callous infamy ! " ex- claimed Gerard, passionately, stirred to the depths by the letter, whose full meaning he well understood. But it was otherwise with Gabrielle, who saw in it no more than an attempt to slander him ; and she mistook his burn- ing words for indignation at the effort to ruin him in her eyes. " Infamy indeed," she said warmly. " Would that I ii2 A COURIER OF FORTUNE knew the author of so vile a slander! If I thought for 3, moment that Denys " " No, no, Gabrielle. Don't even speak such a thought," cried Lucette. " I had forgotten him," said Gerard. " I will help bear him into the house. We will deal with this after- wards, Gabrielle." " Except to find the villain who forged the letter, there is no more to do in it, Gerard. They little know me who think I could be moved by so contemptible a lie. ( I could ask your pardon for having read it to the end ' could almost be vexed with you, indeed, for having caused me to read it. Shall I tear it now ? " i He was bending over Denys and looked up quickly. " No, I will keep it ; and some one some day shall pay a heavy reckoning," he answered as he took it. Then with Lucette's help he lifted Denys and took him into j the house. Gabrielle was following, when the Duke said ; hurriedly to de Proballe , " Go and detain her on the terrace. I must speak with her ; but first will think a space. I am on the rack." He had been profoundly moved by the scene and was ; intensely agitated. He had let the letter be read without I interference involving though it did both de Proballe I -and himself in the belief that the revelation of Gerard's j "baseness would change her feelings ; and the unshaken ' -confidence she had shown in Gerard's honour was to his jealousy as biting acid to an open wound. With a bitterness beyond words to describe and far too galling for his selfish soul to endure, he saw now that in causing Gerard to be brought to Morvaix for his own purpose with Gabrielle, he had but plunged a sword into his own heart. The villain had played his part so well that he had won her love; and the wound burned and stabbed and maddened him with its pain. But he would have his revenge. No man should be THE ACCUSATION 113 suffered to come between him and his desires. If this de Cobalt had won her love, he should pay the price. His rival's life lay in the palm of his hand ; and in Morvaix at least there was none to step between him and the object of his hate. It was a treacherous betrayal ; nothing else. Pretend- ing to keep the letter of his pledge, Gerard had broken the spirit, and should be trusted no more. The pardon for the murder at Cambrai should be withheld, unless and his eyes gleamed dangerously at a fresh thought and he smiled with a cunning pleasure. Gabrielle loved this de Cobalt ; and the love would put a weapon in his hands powerful enough to break her to his purpose. His new resolve was quick to take shape. She should be his wife ; and the price of her consent should be her new lover's life. The old scheme should be laid away; and with it would go at a stroke all need for de Cobalt's services. His next move was soon decided ; and he stepped out and joined Gabrielle and her uncle. " I make no apology for thus breaking upon you sud- denly, because the reason for it is your own welfare," he began, speaking deliberately. " I trust your lordship does not deem an apology nec- essary for visiting Malincourt," replied Gabrielle, courte- ously, but wondering at his manner. " This is no ordinary visit of courtesy, mademoiselle ; and if the manner of it is unusual and displeasing, as it may well be, the purpose will, I hope, prove its excuse. We have been close observers of the scene which has just occurred here as M. de Proballe has perhaps told you." But de Proballe had done nothing of the kind, and he started in some dismay at the words. His start was lost by Gabrielle, however, in her intense surprise. " Observers, my lord ? I fear I do not understand," she replied with dignity. U4 A COURIER OF FORTUNE "Yet my words explain my meaning. Very evil in- telligence has reached me concerning this M. de Cobalt ; and in my zeal for your welfare I came this morning to confer with M. de Proballe ; and we arranged the scene that this man's character might be tested openly." " I should prefer that M. de Cobalt be present, my lord." Gabrielle took fire instantly, and she made no attempt to disguise her indignation. " It is not necessary. His presence or absence is a matter of no concern. What you have heard of him to-day and read in that letter of his is true." " Do you mean " she began hastily, then checked herself and said proudly : " But I will not deign to ask a question. Your lordship must be entirely in error. I have unbounded faith in M. de Cobalt's honour. It is a matter your lordship must excuse my declining to discuss." The Duke frowned, but repressed his anger. " I can understand your feelings," he said calmly. " Would that the man were worthy of it ! I honour you for this attitude and would gladly spare you the pain which the truth must cause you ; but it must be told, mademoiselle." Gabrielle would not answer, and the Duke turned to de Proballe. " You will tell your niece, monsieur, that that letter was written to you by M. de Cobalt himself in reply to others from you to him." " I think you and I had better discuss this further," said de Proballe, in a desperate shift at the new position. " It is my wish, monsieur," replied the Duke coldly, with a glance of menace. " Even my uncle himself will not shake my confidence in M. de Cobalt, although he may change my feelings toward himself," declared Gabrielle, firmly. " M. de Proballe," said the Duke. " I know not your intentions," he answered, in a fever THE ACCUSATION of disquiet. " I I scarcely heard what the letter con- tained ; and and before I can say so much I ought to see it to examine it." He stumbled and hesitated over the words. " Do I understand, M. le Baron, that you give me the lie ? " and the cold cutting words were accompanied by a look that no one could misunderstand. " God forfend ; but I wash my hands of the whole affair," he cried, with a gesture of profound agitation and a sigh. " It is true, Gabrielle. The letter was writ- ten by Gerard to me some time since. It is one of several that have passed between us." " I do not believe it ; " and Gabrielle drew herself up in proud repudiation of the further attack upon the man she loved and trusted. " On my honour it is so, mademoiselle," declared the Duke. " And now I must make my confession of the part I have played in this. It is no humour of mine to seek others' forgiveness, but for what I have done in all this distressful error, I do beg yours. It was at my instance that this de Cobalt was brought to Morvaix." " Then do I thank you, my lord, and, believe me, I see nothing in the act which calls for forgiveness," inter- posed Gabrielle swiftly, as he paused. He took no notice of the interruption ; he was too deeply engrossed in think- ing how to put his case most plausibly. " My motive you will at least admit was worthy it was the good of the people of Morvaix. Next to myself, the House of Malincourt is the most potent influence here, and thus the subject of your marriage has given me much thought. It would have been a disaster had you fallen under the sway of some unworthy man and been pre- vailed upon to marry him, and so let the influence of your house pass into evil hands. To prevent this, we for your uncle has shared my views and acted with me throughout we planned to arrange your marriage with n6 A COURIER OF FORTUNE a man who would place himself under our guidance in all matters." " And your lordship and you, monsieur, chose a man whose life was so evil if this lying letter were to be credited that he only dared to come hither when he had been assured under your lordship's own hand of a pardon for some foul offence. Surely you would not have me credit this of you ! I do not. I will not. For it involves a cruel slander upon my true and gallant cousin." " What the Duke says is true in every word, Gabrielle," declared de Proballe, much relieved at the astute line the Governor was taking. " We did not know the evil history of this man," con- tinued the Duke in the same quiet deliberate tone ; " or he would never have been brought here. I have but learned it within the last few hours. The affair at Cam- brai was mistold to us ; and I have but just gathered the full details of what I find to have been a foul and most treacherous murder." A contemptuous smile of disbelief was Gabrielle's only answer to this ; but it was more eloquent than many words of her unshaken and unshakable faith in Gerard. The Duke paused, and after a moment resumed " We had heard that he had repented of his old ex- cesses and wrong living, and when we sent for him, believed this to be the case. But when we found that his repentance was but acted lying in which he is an adept there seemed no course open but to put him to the proof by confronting him with his own writing, so that your eyes might be opened and yourself convinced of the impossibility of a marriage with him." " I have yet to be convinced, my lord ; and know no power or means on earth strong enough to convince me. My parents' wishes " " Were but M. de Proballe's invention, mademoiselle," interposed the Duke, in the same cold deliberate tone. THE ACCUSATION 117 " The story was designed to influence you to agree. That is all. In that we did wrong grievous wrong, no doubt ; for deceit with whatever motive used must aVways be wrong; and in this case it has ended disastrously. For that, as well as for the pain which, with all zeal for your real welfare, I have caused you, I crave your pardon." " Had you indeed done the harm you fear, I would never forgive you. I never could," answered Gabrielle, firmly ; then breaking into a smile she added : " but if indeed you have brought my cousin here, then do I thank you, as I say. Aye, thank you with all my heart." " You do but jest in a very grave issue, mademoiselle. This marriage is impossible." There was less deliberate- ness and more sternness in the Duke's tone now, and it provoked Gabrielle's pride. Unmistakable defiance was in her look and mien as she answered: " By your lordship's leave, I am head of my house ; and if that part of what you have said be true that my parents have expressed no wish for my marriage I am free to .choose without let or hindrance from any man. But here comes my cousin. He will know how to answer for himself." As Gerard came out of the house he started at seeing who was present, and then came on with firm step and confident bearing, and smiled to Gabrielle as he reached her side. CHAPTER XI THE DUKE'S SENTENCE GERARD saw at once by the faces of all three that some fresh complication had occurred dur- ing his absence. " I am very glad you have come, Gerard," said Gabri- elle. " M. le Due de Rochelle and my uncle have made some charges which you will be glad to face." " Certainly," he answered, with a bow to the Governor and a quick glance at de Proballe. The Duke took no notice of his salutation. " We had a conversation yesterday concerning the reason for your coming to Morvaix," said de Proballe. " You have not forgotten it ? " " I am not likely to have forgotten. Do you wish it repeated now ? " Gabrielle smiled confidently at the tone in which this was said. Gerard spoke as the challenger, not the challenged. There could be no mistaking that. " Leave this to me," interposed the Duke abruptly. " He admitted everything to me yesterday," declared de Proballe; but the Duke waved his hand impatiently. " Now, monsieur," he said sharply to Gerard. " A letter of yours to M. de Proballe was read this morning. Where is it?" " A letter was read. It is here ; " and he took it from his pocket. " The Duke and my uncle were listening to our con- versation," said Gabrielle quietly. " They say that the statements in the letter are true." " They may be," he said readily. 1 18 THE DUKE'S SENTENCE 119 " Gerard ! " Gabrielle's was a cry of consternation. " Did you think he would dare to deny it, mademoi- selle ? " asked the Duke. " There is no reason for any alarm, Gabrielle. On my honour you need but have patience." " Honour ! " exclaimed the Governor contemptuously. " Does such a word seem strange to the ears of the Duke de Rochelle ? " asked Gerard, quite unmoved as he met the angry look the question drew forth. " What are the charges your lordship brings against me ? " " Those contained in your own letter ; the letter which confesses the truth. Do you deny you wrote that letter to M. de Proballe?" For one moment Gerard hesitated. " The statements contained in that letter so far as they touch me are absolutely false," he declared emphatically. " That I affirm on my honour, Gabrielle ; but for the moment I cannot explain the affair." " I need no more. I was sure you would repudiate them," she answered exultantly. " I shall stay to hear no more." " I should prefer you to remain, mademoiselle," said the Duke. " I crave your lordship's permission to retire. I can hear no more of this attack upon my cousin. I am satis- fied. I have his assurance ; " and without waiting for any permission to be given, she went into the house. Gerard was glad to be left to deal with the matter in her absence. He recognized the extreme difficulty of the situation and the utter impossibility of giving a rational explanation without telling the truth about himself ; but he was anxious to have some plain speaking with the Governor, and he turned at once to him. " Your lordship will perhaps see the desirability of ex- plaining this new development to me," he said. " You are an insolent rascal in all truth," was the fiery reply. " It is from you I demand the explanation. See to it that it is satisfactory. I am not wont to be trifled with." " I see no trifling in all this. Will you explain it, M. de Proballe?" " You play the braggart well, Gerard, on my soul ; and if I see your object may I be cursed. When with me yesterday you admitted everything; and now to-day you deny your own writing, and pledge your honour the very things you have written are false." Gerard regarded him sternly. " Would you have had me tell that I was brought here to Morvaix to marry; Gabrielle in order to ruin her ? " he demanded. " It is false ! " cried the Governor. A flush of anger mounted to Gerard's face at this insult. " It accords ill with your reputation for courage, M. le Due, that you insult a man to whom your position denies the right to call you to account. If you have no other tone to adopt toward me, I will retire. But with M. de Proballe the matter stands otherwise. You will guard your tongue, monsieur, or I shall hold you responsible." " What an impudent swashbuckler is this murderer," sneered the Governor. " I am no murderer, my lord," asserted Gerard, hotly. " He means he holds your Grace's pardon for the deed," said de Proballe. " It will not save you," declared the Governor, bluntly. " You have broken your word and must take the conse- quences. I will waste no time with you." " In what have I broken my word ? " " I will not stoop to bandy words with you. I have changed my plans ; that is enough for you to know. You are no longer of use to me. But you can have one chance to save your skin. You came under the protection of my THE DUKE'S SENTENCE 121 assurance. You can leave it again; and never dare in the future to show your villainous face within my prov- ince." " I shall not leave," answered Gerard, every whit as firmly. " I have come for a purpose, and that purpose I shall fulfil." " Do you dare to defy me ? " " My words are my words and I will not recall them." " In God's name, you are a brazen scoundrel. But do not imagine that Mademoiselle de Malincourt can protect you. She is not to be polluted by a marriage with such as you. More of this, and I will withdraw what I have said and have you flung into gaol at once to pay the penalty for your crime." " That must be as your lordship will. I will not leave Morvaix even at your bidding." For the moment the Duke's fury seemed uncontrolla- ble ; but he mastered it and his tone when next he spoke was cold, tense, and full of menace. " It may be better so, perhaps ; but you shall have the chance I named. Understand me plainly. I will give you twenty-four hours in which to put as great a distance as you can between you and Morvaix. At noon to-morrow my troops will start to hunt you down ; and whenever and wherever they find you I swear that you shall die for that Cambrai murder." " Your hounds will not have far to seek. They will find me here in Morvaix," returned Gerard calmly. " I am not unwilling to witness your methods of trial and justice here." " You shall not lack the chance, I promise you. One other condition for your life I make. Before you leave the city you will return the paper sent to you from me by M. de Proballe. For the rest, look to yourself; for as I live, it will need all your wits and more than all your effrontery to save you from my hands." 122 'A COURIER OF FORTUNE With that he turned his back on Gerard, saying to de Proballe that he would speak again to Gabrielle before leaving Malincourt. They walked away together, and Gerard turned and paced the terrace in busy thought. One thing chiefly perplexed him why the Duke had shewn this change of front and now wished to drive him from Morvaix instead of seconding the scheme for the marriage. It did not occur to him to set it down to the true cause jealousy; and he racked his wits vainly to find a solution. The only reason that suggested itself to him was one that strengthened his resolve to stay that the Duke's object was to rob Gabrielle of even the slender protection which his presence afforded. If that were so, it followed that there was some fresh scheme on foot to do Gabrielle immediate hurt ; and in that view no consideration what- ever should induce him to leave. But in such a case, why had not the Governor taken the simpler course of handing him over to his soldiers at once? In seeking the answer to that question Gerard came much nearer the truth. If he were to run away, his flight would be tantamount to a confession that these charges against himself were true ; and Gabrielle would be led to hold him for the villain which the real de Cobalt unquestionably was. He would be seen to have pledged his honour to her, only to break it in a cowardly flight. Had the villainous de Cobalt stood in his place, he would no doubt have gladly welcomed the chance of saving his life at the sacrifice of his honour and of Ga- brielle ; and the Duke had acted on that supposition. Nothing should induce him to fall into the snare thus spread for him ; but at the same time he felt that he must take measures for self-preservation. This Tiger in his passion was capable of going to any lengths ; and means must be at hand to restrain him. He was still pondering this when Gabrielle came out THE DUKE'S SENTENCE 123 from her interview with the Duke. Her bright looks had given place to a troubled expression, and she was very pale. " The Governor is like a madman in his wrath against you, Gerard," she said. " I have never seen him so moved. Both he and my uncle are now as furious at the thought of our marriage as before they or at least my uncle was eager to promote it." "And you, Gabrielle?" " I know not how to act or what to say," she replied with a sigh of despair. " The tension of this morning's scene has tried you," he said gently. " But you do not believe I am the das- tard " " Gerard ! No. I cannot. Every prompting of my heart bids me trust you. I think I would trust you if all the world bore witness against you. But there must surely be some explanation of so great a mystery." " You love me ? " he asked with sudden fervour, taking her hand and searching her eyes with his, in which the fire of love burned. She left her hand in his willingly and trustingly and met his gaze with a smile. " Have I not shown it ? Do you need any other an- swer?" " With a love strong enough to face even this trial? " he insisted earnestly. " I shall never change, Gerard. Nothing could change my heart not even if all this were proven against you, as they both swear it can be. It would break my heart and blight my life; but my love would never change. And believe it I never would or will, unless your own lips tell me it is true ; and even then my heart would rebel against your words." " I shall never tell you that," he replied, vehemently. " Thank God there is no reason why I should not take your hand and look into your own innocent eyes and 124 A COURIER OF FORTUNE swear on my soul that all this charge passes me by as an idle breeze. You will never have cause to regret your sweet trust. That on my honour." " Why have they made these charges ? I am so sorely perplexed." " It will all appear in time, Gabrielle. There is dark and evil work behind, and I am resolved to drag it to the light of day." " But when ? They tell me you are going away again ! ; Ah, Gerard, my heart fell at the news." j " Tis but one more falsehood. Only one thing can j drive me from Morvaix your own sentence." " Yet they urged me to counsel you to go, saying that if you stay here you will be imprisoned. What is this affair at Cambrai which they call by the fell name of mur- der? Do not let my question anger you; but if there be really danger, you must fly." " The Governor would have me fly that you may be driven to deem me the guilty wretch he describes me. There is no danger to me, but rather to them ; to the Governor himself indeed most of all." " What would you do ? No deed of violence, Gerard?" " Violence there may have to be ; but not of the kind 1 in your thoughts. I am no assassin, whether at Cam- brai or here." " Then you have some scheme with which to com- bat him ? Can you not tell me that ? " she asked with almost wistful eagerness. " It is one that would speak to your heart, Gabrielle, for it will touch the welfare of all in Morvaix." " Now you frighten me. Would you further a revolt i here ? Heaven knows our wretched people are hot against him and ripe for a movement of the kind. But ! he is so strong in his soldiery, the end would be but useless bloodshed to be followed by even more grind- ing tyranny and misery for the city." THE DUKE'S SENTENCE 125 " Harbour no fears of that. Stay, what if I could lead a movement here which, without the evil things that make your woman's heart shrink, could yet break this Tiger's power and give good and just government to the people ? " " It is not possible, Gerard. You speak at random. You are not known in Morvaix ; and the people would not follow an unknown leader. Yet I have dreamed of something of the kind since you came. Were you but once established firmly as lord of Malincourt and had had time to win the confidence of the people and their trust, as you would win it, then but there, it is no more than a dream conjured up by finding you the man you are." " May I test your trust still further? I have my reasons, God knows, for thus testing you. If I were in, very truth the wretch the Duke has painted me, and yet had the means to do what I have said and came to you in the moment of my triumph and asked you to be my wife, how would you answer ? " " I would lay my hand in yours without a question, Gerard, sure that, whatever your past, you had redeemed it for my sake." She gave her answer without a falter or a second of hesitation. " Thank God and you for those words and that trust, Gabrielle," he cried, with fervent passion. " If I am ever unworthy of it, may God deal with me for a traitor ! The time for me to claim you so will come, and until it comes I will wait to seek from your lips the kiss of betrothal. Now am I sure indeed that all will be well with us." "But you will not remain in Morvaix?" she asked, after a pause. " Could I leave you after this ? " he replied tenderly. " I should understand the reason of your going." " I have far stronger reasons to remain near you." 126 A COURIER OF FORTUNE " I think you should not. I am safe ; but I fear for you ; and my fear will not pass while you remain here. I am going to-day to the Duchess and shall seek her aid and counsel telling her all." "To the Castle?" " Of a surety to the Castle. She has sent an urgent message to see me." -'By whom?" " The Duke." " I scent trouble in it. I do not like you to trust yourself in that man's power. If you go, I shall go too." " You are needlessly alarmed. She is my friend, and as good a woman as ever drew breath. I am often with her. I could not refuse; but it would be madness for you to think of going." " The term madness does not hinder me. For the part I have to play a bold front is not only necessary, it is prudence." " But you can serve no useful end by such a venture. The Duke might offer you violence, indeed, in his anger." " I can find a pretext and would gladly have a chance to get within the walls." " It may be less easy to find one to get out, Gerard." " Even so the work I have to do would not be stayed. I am firm on the point." " I do not like the look of it ; " and Gabrielle's face clouded. " The look may change on closer view." " Harm will come of it, Gerard. Let me prevail." " When my work is done you shall never prefer a request in vain. But this you must not press." She yielded then, albeit with anxiety and misgivings ; and they went into the house. Gerard hastened to his apartments to wait for Pascal THE DUKE'S SENTENCE 127 and to complete the arrangements for striking the blow upon which he had now decided. When Pascal arrived the two had a long conference, and once again Pascal advised a policy of caution. " Don't set your foot inside the Castle gates," he urged vigorously. " It can do no good and may work incalculable mischief." " Would you go in my stead ? " " With all the willingness in life." " And shall the leader shirk the risk which his fol- lowers would take? Is it thus we Bourbon leaders lead?" " That is no reason. There are times, of course, when the leader should be first, but this is not one of them. You know what sort of wild beast government this is in Morvaix ; you have now ample cause to do all you will against the Governor ; ride out then to Cambrai and yourself bring up the troops." " Shall a Bourbon give men cause to sneer at him for a coward? Nay, Pascal, you would but anger me to press such counsel further." " But your life to me and to us all is too precious to be risked in such a venture. I know what Dubois would urge were he here. Still, let it be as you will." " I am not risking my life, man. Do you think this Duke, daredevil though he be, will venture to harm Bourbon's son when once I declare myself? His own soldiers would revolt against it. No man shall call me poltroon ; and none has ever before advised me to de- serve such a term." " There you wrong me, Gerard. But I say no more. Pray heaven no harm come of it. It was my duty to urge this counsel, but I knew you would not so act ; " and Pascal smiled. " To our plans then. Another messenger must be found to ride to Cambrai with all the haste possible 128 A COURIER OF FORTUNE and carry this message to my cousin. In it I have urged him to bring up the troops with all despatch. If your courier of this morning gets first to hand, d'Alem- bert will be already preparing; if not, this urgent mes- sage will hurry him. If our messenger gets quickly to him some eight-and-forty hours should see him without the city here ; and I have told him to ride straight in unless a messenger from me meets him with a further despatch. By nightfall, on the day after to-morrow at latest, he should be here ; and within that short space no great harm can happen to either Mademoiselle de Malin- court or to me, let this Governor do what he will." " 'Twould be a shrewder plan to get her to ride with you to Cambrai and return with the troops," said Pascal. " The thought has not escaped me ; and it may come to it yet. We shall see. Failing it, I have this plan : Let Dubois or yourself choose some likely place in the city to which our fellows can be brought, so that at need, should trouble come, we can make a stand." " That is more to my liking," said Pascal, gleefully. " And lastly for yourself, Pascal. Don't return here, but don once more your monk's gown ; and when the task I have given you is completed, go to the Castle and keep your eyes open. There, if anywhere, trouble may be looked for, and your ready wit will be most needed." " You will at least let me be near you," said Pascal earnestly. " I know your zeal and friendship too well to hesitate to send for you at the first touch of danger. But I look for none of any serious character. And now," he broke off, rising, " it is time for this visit to the Castle. I must find Mademoiselle de Malincourt." Gabrielle was waiting for him and again urged him not to go. " I have a presentiment," she said. " Let me dissuade you at the last moment from this ill-omened daring." THE DUKE'S SENTENCE 129 " I should rather read the omens ill if I were to leave you or suffer you to go alone, Gabrielle." " Is there nothing I can say or do that will urge vou to fly?" " Nothing, nothing ; unless,' ' he added with a half- serious smile " unless you would share the flight. And that I cannot ask yet." She started and looked to read his face, and after a moment answered " I am a Malincourt, and my place, for good or ill, is in Morvaix." " And where is mine if not by your side ? " Nothing more was said, and they set out, Gabrielle so chilled by a presentiment of danger that her look was serious and troubled. CHAPTER XII GABRIELLE'S FRIEND THE Duke carried away from Malincourt a heart bitter with jealousy and black with anger, and* he vented his passion upon de Proballe, whom he chose to regard as the cause of all the trouble. " You have betrayed my confidence shamefully. You have doubtless your own ends to gain, as that letter hinted ; but they will cost you dear, whatever they are, monsieur." " Betrayed you ? How ? " asked de Proballe, exceed- ingly uneasy as he thought his ulterior plans might be suspected. " What have I done other than as we agreed ? " " Did we agree that this scoundrel was so to arrange the manner of his coming as to impress your niece in this way? Was he to flaunt himself as a man of spirit and , courage and impose thus on a young, impressionable, high-minded girl ? " " Did I order the manner of his coming? You wrong me entirely. His secret coming was as much a surprise to me as an offence to you ; and that he was able to make this impression on Gabrielle was not my doing but the blundering of your own men. Your soldiers first in the market place ; your followers, de Cavannes and d'Estelle, afterwards in their attack upon Denys in Gabrielle's very presence when Gerard was at hand." " Would God they had killed him ! " exclaimed the Duke brutally. " But after the affair in the market place you should have told me." 130 GABRIELLE'S FRIEND 131 Xay, that is an even greater injustice than ever, of us even guessed that the man was de Cobalt ? " De Proballe's tone was a good imitation of injured in- nocence. " You have betrayed me, I say ; and if the thing mis- carries you shall suffer," returned the Governor, in no mood to listen to any reason. " You should have stopped the mischief as soon as you saw it was going so far." " It happened but yesterday." " God's Cross ! man, what has that to do with it ? Is a mischief like this to be counted by hours ? Was it ever in our plan that the villain should win your niece's heart ?" " He had at least to make such an impression as would induce her to consent to marry him. It is but a passing fancy which the proof of his evil character will cure and his flight will prove it better than aught else." " Passing fancy ! " exclaimed the Duke bitterly. " Are you blind? I know not when I have so keenly suffered. But if he do not fly, he shall suffer too." " He is not fool enough to remain. It was a shrewd thought to give him time to cool and think ; and if he have any mind to linger, I will find arguments to drive him away. He has yet to learn your methods of justice here in Morvaix : I can find in them ample reasons for him. Although why you let him go instead of dealing with him at once I do not see." "If he flies, his flight will be, as you say, the proof of his guilt." " He will fly," said de Proballe, confidently. " Did he not shun your province as a man would shun hell? Did he not refuse to come without that promise of pardon in writing? By a man's acts you shall know him, not by his words. Let him think of Gabrielle as he will, he will think more of his own life. But I would have kept him." 13* A COURIER OF FORTUNE " When his flight has proved his guilt he can be re> taken for me to use." De Proballe laughed. " You have a mercy of your own, Duke. I had not thought of that. Stay, what if he were to use this interval of your mercy to prevail on Gabrielle to fly with him? He is daredevil enough/' " She would never stoop to that, surely ! " " Women are women, and when they are in when a man influences them, I mean, the best will do strange things." " Return to Malincourt and watch, de Proballe. Your niece is to come to the Castle two hours after noon. Make this flight impossible after then ; and after that I will see to it that no chance offers for her to leave even the Castle itself. If the mad attempt be made, have the scoundrel seized and brought to me." De Proballe was by no means sorry to get away from the Governor in his present mood, and returned to Malincourt to keep the watch ; while the Governor hur- ried on to the Castle to take further steps designed to prevent this suggested flight ; and some of them were to have important results in another direction. He despatched a body of soldiers to watch round Malincourt, and at the same time sent urgent commands to the officers of the different gates of the city that no one was to be allowed to pass out without leave signed by him. Thus it came about that the courier whom Pascal was sending to Cambrai was stopped, and valuable time lost. The Governor, having completed these arrangements, was closeted for an hour with his wife, and as soon as he heard, to his intense relief, that Gabrielle had arrived at the Castle and was with the Duchess, he sent for Dubois to sound him in regard to that part of the plan which called for the aid of the Church. He was as hot now upon the scheme of divorcing his GABRIELLE'S FRIEND 133 wife in order to be free to marry again, as he had been formerly upon the other intention. The ruse by which Gerard had succeeded in getting a hundred of his own soldiers enrolled among the Castle troops, by pretending that they came as a gift from the Cardinal Archbishop, was thus having singular results. The Governor read it as a proof that he stood so well with the Cardinal that he could hope to receive his Eminence's support in the matter of the divorce ; and as he concluded Dubois had been chosen as the Cardinal's delegate because of the latter 's confidence in him, here was the very man at hand to sound on the matter. Dubois was a clever soldier and a brave fighter, and had been selected by Gerard for his present task because his influence with the men was most likely to keep them in bounds while in the Castle. He made a very brusque unmonklike monk, however; and he now found himself in a very awkward position. Moreover, he knew nothing of Gerard's experiences within the last few hours. He listened quietly to the Duke, and, seeing no con- nection between the matter and any of Gerard's affairs, felt no interest in it at all, and gave his own opinion bluntly. He was a soldier, not a cleric ; knew little and cared less about the theological views as to the dissolu- tion of a tie cemented by a sacrament of the Church ; and the only thought he had about it was that as the Tiger Governor was such a tyrant, it was a blessing and not a curse that he was childless the point on which with him the Duke laid the chief stress. " His Eminence would never sanction it, my lord," lie declared brusquely. " It is against the Canon of Holy Church." " But it has been sanctioned before now," replied the Governor, and went on to cite instances and to argue the matter. Dubois had, however, only one reply to everything. i 3 4 A COURIER OF FORTUNE " The Cardinal would never sanction it ; " and his dogged insistence upon this began at length to enrage the Governor, not a little to Dubois' grim amusement. " I would rather have the countenance of the Church, but in Morvaix I am the head of the Church as of all else. I am wont to act first and inquire afterwards in most things. It is simpler, and the end is the same. This may be such a case. If I should seek your help as the Cardinal's representative you would give it ? " " It is none of my affair," replied Dubois hastily. " I repeat my question ; " and the Governor looked at him meaningly. But Dubois was the last man in the world to be browbeaten ; and thus he answered stolidly : " And I repeat my answer, my lord." " I am not wont to be set at defiance by monk or priest." " Nor I to be driven from my duty, my lord. I am not setting you at defiance." " My priests in Morvaix do not answer me thus." " I am not your lordship's priest." " You will at least keep silence about what has passed between us." " Unless my duty demand that I should speak of it." " What is that but threatening me and defying me ? " The Governor's anger was mounting fast in view of what he deemed the monk's contumacy, and Dubois was no less dogged and blunt. "If what you propose to do be right, what need is there for silence ; if it be wrong, why should my lips be sealed ? " he answered. " Secrets confided to the ears of you holy men are to be regarded as sacred." " This is no such occasion. You sought my opinion and I gave it. That is all. My duty is my duty, none the less or more." " Peace with your canting about duty. You are in GABRIELLE'S FRIEND 135 Morvaix now, and I will settle what is your duty. I rule here, absolutely." " I am not disputing your rule, my lord ; but I was not sent here to do your bidding or to cease to do what I deem my duty." " Out of my sight. It is such canting hypocrites as you who sow discord and do mischief. See to it that you hold your babbling tongue, or I'll find means to silence you." But Dubois fired at this injustice and an- swered hotly " I am no canting hypocrite, my lord, nor am I a recreant coward to flinch and cringe before your angry looks and passionate words. They do but convince me that in this thing you have some evil purpose ; and not in Morvaix, no, nor in all France, is there power to silence me if I think I ought to speak." " Out of my presence before I send for my guards to drive you away for a pestilent ribald malcontent." " I came of your seeking, not of my own wish," re- turned Dubois, not one whit abashed by the Governor's violence. "If I have cause to send for you again you will repent it." " I am in" no ways persuaded of that," returned Dubois, sturdily; and he swung out of the room, little think- ing that he had done harm to Gerard by his manful attitude. Yet in a way he had ; for the Governor, revolving what had passed, determined not to take the risk of applying to the Cardinal, but to hurry on his marriage, and leave the Church to interfere when it would have the accomplished fact to face. Had Dubois but known, he would have been more prudent to have appeared to consent to the Governor's plans and to have held out to him the hope of the Cardinal's consent, so that he might have been induced to incur the delay necessary to obtain it. He saw this I 3 6 A COURIER OF FORTUNE when Gerard pointed it out to him later. But it was too late then. In the meantime the Duchess had received Gabrielle with even greater tenderness and love than usual; and it was some time before she began to work round slowly to the subject of the Duke's wishes. " I am old, feeble, and bed-ridden, Gabrielle, and worse than all, childless. I am done with the world, dear, and willing to give place to one who can play my part better. It would have been better, far better, had I died years ago." " Then I should have lacked the truest woman friend a girl could have," answered Gabrielle sweetly. " But you must not yield to this melancholy. You have been in greater pain than usual, I fear, and it has tried you." " Not of body, child, but of mind, perhaps," and she sighed. "It is ill to lag on and on, a weary dreary nuisance to all around you. There comes a time when it is good to die." " You are morbid. Something has distressed you. Tell me," and Gabrielle sat on the bedside and took her friend's hand. " I have been a failure, child. I see it now ; and see how the people under the Duke's rule have suffered in consequence. The Duke himself has shown me this." " The Duke ? " exclaimed Gabrielle in surprise. " The influence of a woman's hand in his governing has been sadly missed. He loved me once, child, and then I could sway him, hard though he now seems. But when I bore him no children and my helplessness fell on me, an estrangement grew between us and from that followed, oh, so many evils." She sighed deeply, and paused before she added : "Yet he has shown me it is not too late, even now." " I cannot follow you now, dear," said Gabrielle. ( " A noble without a son to succeed him lacks one of GABRIELLE'S FRIEND 137 the great incentives to do right, Gabrielle. He turns his thoughts inwards, broods, thinks only of himself, and grows the harder for the galling grief and disappoint- ment. It has been so with the Duke. If I had but died years ago, when first my calamity struck me down, he would have taken another wife who would have borne him children. Would God indeed that I had died ! " Gabrielle said nothing. Deep down in her mind the thought began to take shape that there was some pur- pose behind her friend's words some new cause to bring this side of her sufferings to the light just now. " I used to pray so earnestly for a son," the Duchess continued, after a painful pause ; " but none came ; and I was thus so unneeded, so less than useless ; a clog, a drag, a dead weight in his life. I could not wonder he grew cold, and that in time the coldness hardened into cruelty. I stood for no more than the disappointment in his life." She spoke in a slow, leaden, hopeless, melancholy tone, infinitely touching to Gabrielle. " It is a dreary fate for a wife, child, to stir no other feeling in her husband's heart than that of disappointment and to see it hardening slowly into hate. Had I but dared at that time I would have taken my life. But I was a coward. I dared not find freedom in that way." " Did the Duke know of these thoughts ? " asked Gabri- elle, keeping her face averted. " Whether he could read mine as I could read his, I know not. I saw him only rarely. This has been so for many years indeed. That he should speak often of our childlessness, should even taunt me with it, was perhaps no more than natural and yet every word was like a sword-thrust in my heart. More than once I made him a proposal." "Yes?" " It was my own thought," continued the Duchess, smoothing Gabrielle's hair and petting her. " Quite my 138 A COURIER OF FORTUNE own. You know how the idea of self-sacrifice will some- times seize upon us women till it becomes almost a desire. It was so with me. I knew it would be so well for Morvaix if he could have some one by his side, heart- warm in the desire to help the people, strong in influence to modify the ever growing sternness of his rule by gentle suasive counsel he is at heart a man amenable to such influence, Gabrielle and able to take a due part in the work of government : a helpmeet in all ways. So I urged him to gain the sanction of Holy Church to dis- solve our marriage, on the ground of our childlessness, and seek another and a better wife." " My dear, my dear," cried Gabrielle, intensely moved. " Where could he find a better in all fair France than you ? He refused you, of course." " Yes then ; and not kindly, but with a gibe that he had not found marriage an experience he wished to double. It wounded me of course to have what I meant in all sincerity to be a help to him thus turned to jeering; but he did not understand my motive, I think. But now he has gone back to the plan ; for there is one, a woman among women, Gabrielle, who would be all that Morvaix could desire as his wife. And the one of all others whom I could best bear to see filling my place." She paused for Gabrielle to speak; but no response came. e in private and cannot wait." For a moment Gabrielle rebelled, raising her head proudly and meeting his gaze firmly. " I repeat, must be in private, mademoiselle," he said, adding as an afterthought : " And it cannot fail to interest you, seeing whom it concerns." She went then and he followed, maintaining silence until they were alone. " There must be no misunderstanding between us, my lord," cried Gabrielle, at once throwing down the gauge of defiance. "The Duchess, your wife and my dear friend, has at your instigation made me acquainted with your proposal a proposal I deem infamous and unholy and no power you can exert can bring me even to consider it. I pray you spare me the pain of any further refer- ence to it." " You are wrong to meet me thus at the outset with antagonism. You have heard as yet but one side only, and must bear with me while I speak of the other. I am far from being your enemy, Heaven knows." " While matters remain as they are, I cannot count your lordship among my friends." " Those are hard words to hear, mademoiselle. You mean ? " " I mean the slanders you have sanctioned against my cousin and the threats with which you have menaced him. His cause is mine ; his enemies are my enemies." He made a stern, angry gesture, but held his temper in check. " The Duchess has told you my wishes that of her own will and at her own desire our marriage should be dis- solved, in order that you may become my wife. But my full motive she could not tell you because she does not know it. It is that I love you, Gabrielle; love, aye, worship the very ground you tread and the very air you breathe. For me all France holds no " GABRIELLE'S FRIEND 143 " Spare me this added shame, my lord," Gabrielle broke in, her voice vibrating and her eyes flaming with indignation. " Shame ! " he repeated, with an angry start. " What is it but shame, the wrong you would do to the purest and sweetest wife man ever had ; what else but shame that you should offer to prostrate your gov- ernment to your own purposes ; what but foulest shame that almost within hearing of the woman you would thus wrong you seek to pollute my ears with this infamous profession? If there be a spark of manhood in you, kindle it till it light up your soul sufficiently to save you and me from this unholy degradation." " Your passion but whets my love, Gabrielle. I am not a man to be set aside from a purpose once formed. My purpose is now set you shall be my wife; and neither man nor devil nor God shall turn me." " I have but one word, then. I hold your offer to be vile and degrading, and I would rather die than falter for an instant in repudiating it." " You will not turn me," he repeated. " I have offered you my love a love that burns in me as a consuming fire and you think to put it aside with indignation and contempt. But there are other emotions fighting for me than love. And fear is one of them." " I do not fear your lordship," flashed Gabrielle, with lofty pride. " Yet there is none in Morvaix to protect you from me." " My cousin Gerard " " He has fled the city, like the craven, guilty, worthless wretch he is," he answered contemptuously. " It is not true, my lord. He is here in your castle. He came with me, foreseeing more clearly than I the purpose with which you brought me here. He came for my protection. And he is no craven guilty wretch as 144 A COURIER OF FORTUNE you say, but a good and true man: the man, my lord, whom I love, and whose wife I shall be, by the grace of God." He stood fighting with the tempest of rage which this proud avowal provoked and was still striving for self- restraint, when an interruption occurred. Someone came to the door, and when, with an angry exclamation, he opened it, he found a messenger from de Proballe. " Your Grace, M. le Baron de Proballe desires me to say that he seeks the favour of an immediate audience with you on matters of the most urgent importance affect- ing closely M. de Cobalt," said the man. "He has not fled, you say?" cried the Duke, turning to Gabrielle, and jumping to the conclusion that that was the news. His manner was full of exultation, and he laughed unpleasantly as he added : " Come and see for yourself." Together they went down to where de Proballe was waiting with strange news that had brought him in hot haste to the Castle. At the sight of her uncle's face and the triumphant glance he cast at her, Gabrielle felt her heart sink in momentary fear for Gerard; but she rallied quickly and faced them both with a confident smile as she waited for the tidings. CHAPTER XIII DISCOVERY WHILE "Gabrielle was closeted with the Duchess Gerard had made the best use of his time to learn what he could of the Governor's Castle. Well placed on rising ground just within the northern gate, it had in former times been a strong fortress, at once overawing Morvaix itself and commanding the approach from the north, the side which was most open to attack. Its outer fortifications formed a long portion of the boundary walls of the city; and in the more desperate times when that district had been constantly overrun by raiders, many a fierce and desperate conflict had raged round its gloomy walls. Gerard saw, not without uneasiness, that the Governor had restored many of the old fortifications, had con- structed several more modern works, and had thus greatly strengthened the place. The reason was not far to seek. The Duke ruled by force. He ground the people under the iron heel of military discipline; and so long as he was sure of the strength of his Castle and could maintain his soldiers, the people were powerless. They might protest and murmur and even rise in revolt ; but under the frowning menace of the Castle, they were helpless. Every piece of the military machinery was kept in a high state of preparedness for eventualities, and Gerard's keen soldier's eye could not fail to note all the evidences of strength and to estimate them at their true value. Whatever the Duke might be, he was a good soldier. MS J 4 6 A COURIER OF FORTUNE Everything about the Castle was regulated with military precision. Stranger though he was, no one attempted to interfere with him or even hinder him as he made his observa- tions. He had been seen to arrive with Gabrielle, and as the Duke had never deemed it possible he would venture inside the fortress and had therefore given no orders concerning him, he was held to be a guest who had been made free of the Castle, and was allowed to go where he would. The knowledge gained in this survey might prove invaluable. The plan of the whole Castle was soon clear in his mind and he detected the one weak spot in the defences against which, should the time come, an attack could best be delivered. This was at a point on the city side of the walls where some works were still in progress. The ground outside rose to within a few feet of the parapet on the top, and gangs of men were at work there: some removing the ground and others deepening the foundations of the walls, while their ladders and tools lay about the place. Gerard smiled with intense satisfaction at the dis- covery, which might well have vital importance. If a crisis arose which rendered it imperative for him to make a stand against the Governor for a time while awaiting the arrival of his cousin from Cambrai, Dubois could easily collect the men within the Castle and with them make a dash through this breach ; or again, if he himself were put under any restraint by the Duke, here was the road of escape. With these thoughts in his mind he made the most careful observation of the exact position of the spot, and then descended from the walls to the courtyards below to find the speediest and most direct road to it. He had completed his survey and was entering the Castle when he encountered Dubois fresh from his inter- DISCOVERY 147 view with the Governor and seething with indignation at his treatment. " My lord ! " exclaimed Dubois involuntarily, in sur- prise. " Good day, holy friar," answered Gerard, with a gesture of caution. " I have heard of your good deeds and would confer with you," he added aloud for the hearing of a couple of soldiers who were passing. " We can speak here," said Dubois, drawing aside into an alcove ; and in rapid tones he told of all he had done since his arrival, and then described the interview with the Governor. " You did well, but could have done better," said Gerard, after a moment's pause. " You should have led him to think the sanction would have been forthcoming from the Cardinal, and so have gained time. But it is vain to speak of that now. Listen to my plans." He told him the result of his observation, and instructed him to ascertain exactly what guard was kept at the works by night, to have some of their own men always watching near at hand, and above all to be sure that ladders were to be available there so that no time should be lost in case of emergency. " I too have a plan," said Dubois. " The soldiers here are but a wild mercenary lot, dissatisfied with everything ; disaffected toward the Duke and their officers ; any man's men who will but pay them. With a few bags of crowns, many of them could be bought and the Castle itself seized. Even among those who could not be bought, the men of Morvaix itself and the district round, there are many who hate the Governor for his excesses and, in their sympathy with the people outside, are ripe to revolt." " Splendidly done ! " said Gerard. " I knew you would not be housed in the Castle without results. I like the scheme. 'T would be a stroke indeed to vanquish this strutting cock with his own spurs. Push your inquiries i 4 8 A COURIER OF FORTUNE all you can in safety, using every discretion, and we v.ill speak of it again." " Ah, my fine cavalier, so we meet again. Seeking absolution from our new sir priest here, eh ? " Gerard turned quickly at the sneering voice to find that the two gallants whom he had surprised in their attack upon Denys, had come up unawares and now stood regarding Dubois and himself with sharp suspicious glances. " Is the Duke dead that his serving men have come to power?" retorted Gerard. "Or is either of you minded to renew the affair of the gardens of Malin- court ? " " We are minded to see what the rats are about in the Castle, whatever the colour of their coats." It was d'Estelle who answered. He was pale and weak, and carried his arm in a sling. " You are wounded, monsieur, and so licensed for a time in your insolence. But you, monsieur," and Gerard made a step toward Antoine. " You are still unhurt. Do you carry also an uncivil tongue ? If I know not how your tongue runs, since I have not heard it yet, I know at least how your legs run, for I have seen them." " This is no brawler's tavern," cried d'Estelle, in- solently. " You are out of your element here." " Peace," interposed Dubois, in his sonorous tones. " Be careful of such wanton provocation. I have known men's blood to flow for less. You should guard your tongue, young sir." " All right, bald pate," cried d'Estelle with a flippant laugh. " You have said nothing, monsieur," said Gerard to Antoine. " Peace, my son, peace," said Dubois again, laying his hand on Gerard's shoulder. " Would you, too, provoke strife?" DISCOVERY 149 " Good, old Tell-your-beads. What's sauce for the goose is sauce for such a gander," exclaimed d'Estelle, with another laugh. ;< These gentlemen and I have met before, father," said Gerard. " I prevented them from murdering a man, and they bear me ill-will in consequence." " It was no murder but a fair quarrel, monsieur," said Antoine. " Fair? With two swords to one? " " I caught M. St. Jean maltreating a lady who is dear to me, and did but seek to punish him as he deserved." " When I see a liar I watch his lips and listen. I am watching yours, monsieur," said Gerard, contemptuously. " You were set to murder him and for that purpose rode after him yester morning." Antoine changed colour and d'Estelle was silent. " Be careful what you say, monsieur," replied Antoine, hoarsely. " We are the Duke's followers and this is his lordship's Castle." "If you do not like my words, monsieur, there is an alternative which men of honour understand," retorted Gerard, in a deliberate tone, and with a look which Antoine had little mind to face. "If I do not seek a fight with you, it is not because I fear you," he answered, in none too firm a tone ; " but because there may be a way more useful to my master to deal with you." " I appreciate your discretion, and should I need a spy, may send in quest of your services." Then turning his back upon the pair he added to Dubois : " Now, father, we will resume our discussion of that point about Thomas a Kempis. I was arguing in regard to the warning against apostasy that " " Those vermin may be dangerous. They suspect," put in Dubois as they passed out of earshot. " A risk or so more or less at this crisis does not count 150 A COURIER OF FORTUNE for much ; but try to have them marked. They are two of this Tiger's claws and would scratch from behind given the chance." Just then a noise behind them attracted Gerard's attention, and turning he saw de Proballe, with Dauban at his side, hurrying toward the apartments of the Governor. " Ah, Gerard, I find you in good company here ! " said de Proballe in a cordial tone, pausing on his way. " I have great news. It concerns you." "How so, M. le Baron?" " What a formal fellow you are, with your M. le Baron. We must get to closer terms than these. I'm taking my news to the Governor. Come with me. Give me your arm, lad." " I thank you, monsieur, but it is not my wish." " Oh, Gerard, Gerard," cried de Proballe, with a laugh. " You will never push your way in this good city of Morvaix while you show yourself so cold and indifferent. Well, well, come to the Duke or go to the Church your own way. It's all one to me," and with a laugh he swept on. He was in high spirits. " There is some meaning in this/' muttered Gerard, gazing after him. " Go you, Dubois, and see to all I have said. I will make my way to the Duke. ' When de Proballe laughs there is the devil by his elbow,' was once a proverb in Paris, and it may be just as true in Morvaix." Without appearing to hasten, he followed de Proballe,. keeping a wary eye for all things as he passed along, and quickened his steps when he caught sight of the Gov- ernor in the distance in conference with de Proballe, while Gabrielle, her back toward him, was watching them closely. The Governor had come down in response to de Pro- balle's urgent message in the firm belief that the news DISCOVERY 151 was that of Gerard's flight and his first question was to that effect. " He has gone? " he asked eagerly. " A word first into your ear ; " and de Proballe drew him aside. " Gone ? No, thank Heaven ! better than that, much better. He is here in the Castle. I have spoken to him this minute." " Has he dared ? " exclaimed the Governor with a frown. " Dared ? It seems he would dare anything. Wait, here he is," he cried, catching sight of Gerard. " Now you shall see a comedy. Come, Gerard, come; I was waiting for you. I want your help." Hearing of his presence Gabrielle turned and ran to Gerard and stood by him. " What is this ? " demanded the Governor of de Proballe. " Bear with me and have your guards at hand, and you will see," was the whispered reply. " They are always at hand here," was the curt grim reply. De Proballe went toward Gerard, a smile on his lips. " So you have not followed our advice, Gerard, and fled. You like the city and the Castle? Perhaps you were seeking ghostly advice just now from that sturdy monk? I found our young friend in close consultation with a monk as I passed, Duke. Preparing, let us think, for that longer journey which you mentioned as the al- ternative to flight from the city." De Proballe was obviously enjoying the situation and resolved to make the most of it. " Who was the monk ? Do you know him ? " asked the Governor quickly. " He who came from the Cardinal Archbishop, the delegate. Gerard, it seems, is particular as to who shall shrive him. Our Morvaix priests are not good enough. 152 A COURIER OF FORTUNE The conference lasted long, too; at least so Antoine de Cavannes told me." The Governor shot a sharp glance at Gerard, who said to Gabrielle " The monk is one of those whom I met two days ago in the market place, Gabrielle, when Babillon, the smith, was done to death at my lord's bidding." He spoke quietly and calmly. " You may remember him ; a dark, swarthy, burly man who helped you. The companion of him who stepped between us and the soldiery." " I remember him well," answered Gabrielle. She was oppressed by a sense of danger, impalpable and invisible, but yet real. " That is all," said Gerard, with a smile to reassure her. "Of what spoke you together?" asked the Governor. " May not a man speak even with a monk in Morvaix without the Governor's permission? 'Twould seem not indeed ; for even while we were in converse, those two jackals who sought to take your Denys' life, Gabrielle, came up with flouts and jeers and sneers, as though licensed to insult even men of a religious life. I think in truth this is a matter that concerns you closely, my lord." " How dare you say that to me ? " " What daring is there in it ? I answered the fellow the one that is yet unwounded told him my thoughts of him and offered him such reparation as he could take ; when he turned upon me and hinted that such insolence as his was possible by your protection and permission. He is yonder ; let him come and answer for himself ; " and Gerard pointed to where Antoine and d'Estelle were standing at a distance. " Enough of this insolence," exclaimed the Governor. " So I told him," replied Gerard coolly ; " scarce be- lieving it possible such things could be done with your sanction. DISCOVERY 153 De Proballe had been fretting at this interlude in whicK he was not taking the important part he desired. " You need a curb to your tongue, Gerard," he said. " Does M. de Proballe desire an opportunity of ap- plying it ? " " What a fire-eater it is ! " cried de Proballe, hiding his vexation under a laugh, " and what a wit ! Where did you learn to be so free with your tongue ? " " Not in Morvaix of a truth, where every one must order his speech to suit the ears of his Governor, it seems." " Gerard ! " whispered Gabrielle, with growing alarm at his reckless answers. " Yet there are things in Morvaix that we can teacK persons of even your high character ! " exclaimed the Governor sharply. " I have already learnt many, my lord," was the dry; retort. " One you will learn. Thou shalt do no murder," added de Proballe. " That is certainly a branch of knowledge with many expert professors here," returned Gerard, with the same reckless air. His manner was intentionally assumed. He had not failed to discern from de Proballe's manner that some development was at hand, which boded danger; and he chose deliberately the attitude of reckless defiance of all authority. Intrepid by nature, he had often seen danger met and difficulties overcome by boldness, when no other means could have succeeded. His bearing toward the Governor, despot though he was in Morvaix, was carefully calculated. As a Bourbon and the son of the Suzerain Duke, with full authority to act in his father's place, this Governor owed him allegiance, and he believed he had but to reveal his true character to bring the bully to his knees. j 5 4 A COURIER OF FORTUNE Moreover, his hot Bourbon blood was fired by the insults heaped upon him as well as by the infamous condition of affairs he had found in Morvaix. But above all, and more than all, his chivalry was stirred on Gabrielle's account; and his new-born love for her filled his heart with fury against the two men who had plotted her ruin and had turned their venom against him only when they found he was no pliant tool in their abominable scheme. The Governor on his side was no whit less angry, and only Gabrielle's presence had restrained him from reply- ing to Gerard's taunts with violence. He meant to use Gerard as the means to force her consent to marry him ; and had resolved that he should not leave the Castle until that consent had been wrung from her. This very resolve, however, made him hesitate. To give him countenance with her, the crime which Gerard had committed must be the ground for imprisonment ; and while he smarted and fumed and raged under the lash of Gerard's bitter words, he had held back. But the limit of his endurance was reached; and as a first step he resolved to send Gabrielle away. There was a pause of some moments after Gerard's last words while the Governor made this decision, and then he turned to Gabrielle. " Mademoiselle, I must ask you to return to my wife for a time." " Do not go, Gabrielle, there is no need," declared Gerard. " He is right, my lord, there is no need," said de Proballe. " This must end," muttered the Governor. " It shall end now. Come, Gerard, I have spoken of your sharp wits. Let us see you use them now. Tell me the contents of this," and de Proballe held a paper before -him. DISCOVERY 155 " I am no wizard to read what I cannot see, monsieur." " No wizard ; you hear that, Duke. No wizard. Yet something of a wizard surely to write what you have never seen." Gerard on the instant understood what had occurred, but his face gave no sign and he stared steadily into de Proballe's sneering face. " Come, Gerard, come. You must know it. It is your own letter just arrived from you." The Governor understood it now, and with evidences of great excitement he tore the paper from de Proballe's hand and read it. He glanced from it to Gerard, and smiled a smile full of sinister meaning. " Do you say you do not know this ? " Gerard maintained the same calm collected attitude.. He was considering what course to adopt. " You hear ? Either you know what is written here or you are some lying impostor masquerading in a false name. " Gerard ! Gerard ! " cried Gabrielle, intensely moved.. " Aye, Gerard or some other name,'" sneered de Pro- balle. " Ask his name, Gabrielle." " Now, monsieur, at once if you please," said the Governor, in a stern imperative tone. " Speak, or I call my guards. Do you know this paper? If not, who are you and why are you here ? " CHAPTER XIV " I AM NOT GERARD DE COBALT " OF all present Gabrielle was by far the most agitated. The Duke, perplexed, suspicious, and bitterly hostile to the man who had stepped be- tween him and his passion, was chiefly concerned to find how best to turn the thing to his rival's hurt. De Pro- balle, angry at having been tricked, was for the moment too occupied in enjoying his personal importance in having thus unmasked the impostor, to think of much else. But to Gabrielle the issue was all in all. If this were' not Gerard her cousin, the man to whom she had been betrothed, how strangely forward and unmaidenly she must have appeared. She recalled with a sense of some- thing akin to shame how she had almost pressed herself upon him in the first moment of his arrival ; and at the recollection, her cheeks flamed so that she hid them beneath her hands and involuntarily drew away from his side. It was but a little thing, that gesture of hers; but Gerard saw and understood it, and on the moment it stayed the words of avowal even as they were at his lips, and changed the whole course of his action. He had come to Morvaix to ascertain the truth as to the misgovernment and, if need arose, to depose and punish the powerful Governor ; but his love for Gabrielle was now so much to him and filled so much of his purpose, that he set it first and before all else. 156 "I'M NOT GERARD DE COBALT" 157 He had won her love by a trick, an imposture. He had been in great measure forced into it by circumstances, indeed, and by his very zeal in her cause. But it was none the less a trick ; and he was too proud, having won it so, to hold it by mere greatness of rank. He would not avow that rank until he had justified himself in Gabrielle's eyes. And even as he thought of this and formed the resolve, another consideration occurred to him. He could by this means still further test the methods of rule in Morvaix. He had had ample evidence of the Gov- ernor's willingness to wrest the considerations of justice to his own personal ends; but it would throw a fresh light upon matters to note his conduct when he knew that the man he had first used and then threatened was not the cowardly murderer the real Gerard de Cobalt was said to be. " Do you intend to trifle all day with me ? " demanded the Governor, when Gerard had remained silent some time. " I am not trifling, but thinking," answered Gerard. At his calm strong tone Gabrielle took her hands from her face and with another eager, almost imploring glance, made a half step toward him, and then checked herself in deep embarrassment. " You have need to think, I'll warrant," exclaimed de Proballe. But it was to Gabrielle Gerard turned. " You have no need to shrink from me, mademoiselle,'* he said with a smile, " although I can understand you. I fear I must plead guilty to having deceived you. I am not the writer of that letter. I am not your cousin, Gerard de Cobalt." " So you see that game is over," sneered de Proballe. " What lie next, pray ? You will not find us so easy to be fooled now." 158 A COURIER OF FORTUNE " If I am not Gerard de Cobalt, monsieur," cried Gerard, sternly, " you will still find I am a man who does not take insults lightly. For your past words I forgive you, because of your natural irritation at this discovery. But for your future words and conduct I shall hold you responsible every word and every act." " You will of course explain your conduct, monsieur, and state as frankly as you can who you are and your purpose in my city. See to it that the explanation be as satisfactory as your present position is equivocal." The Governor's tone was curt and peremptory. " The explantion is due to Mademoiselle de Malin- <:ourt, and I promise you it shall be frank enough in some respects to satisfy even you. I had a sufficient object in coming to Morvaix what that is for the present I with- hold and to accomplish it I took a name not my own. I borrowed it at hazard from a notorious dicer and wastrel of Paris Raouf de Cobalt." " But you called yourself Gerard de Cobalt," said the Duke. " In ignorance that he had a relative of that name an even worse scoundrel, it would seem, than himself whom you and M. de Proballe designed to use for your schemes." " Do you think to carry off this imposture with in^ science ? " demanded the Duke angrily. " It is not insolence. I have no cause to hide the truth, monsieur. I had been in Morvaix but a few hours when I was a witness of the scene in the market place, and we met for the first time, mademoiselle. I inquired concerning you, and learning that you were the Gabrielle de Malincourt whose praises were on all men's lips, I haunted the gardens of the maison in the hope of seeing you again. There we met, yesterday, for the second time and you may remember my passing confusion when you questioned me as to the reasons for what "I'M NOT GERARD DE COBALT" 15? seemed such strange conduct in a man you believed to be your cousin and for whose coming you were prepared." " You did not tell me all, monsieur," said Gabrielle. " You shall know why. I was on the point of doing so when M. de Proballe interrupted us, and carrying me away, told me enough to disclose to me the peril which threatened you." " Yes, yes, we know all about that," interposed de Proballe hastily. " Mademoiselle de Malincourt does not. You read the letter yesterday of which your follower Denys had in some way possessed himself, mademoiselle, and I need only say that that contained in essence the story of this de Cobalt which M. de Proballe told me at length, adding that my marriage with you was to be no more or less than a cover for your ruin at the hands of the Duke de Rochelle." " It is a lie," cried the Governor furiously. " Then blame the liar, M. le Due. There he stands," and Gerard pointed at de Proballe. " It is a tissue of lies," said de Proballe. " You know me too well, Gabrielle, to believe this vile slander." " There you mistake. It is I, not Mademoiselle de Malincourt, who know you. I know M. de Proballe's life and reputation in Paris." "This shall go no further. Your name, monsieur?" demanded the Governor. " Does not touch the truth or falsehood of what I say, and need not therefore be disclosed yet. I shall choose my own time to disclose it." " You will tell it now, or suffer the consequences." " I do not understand. Do you threaten me ? " " By your own confession you have come sneaking here in an assumed name ; as a spy of some sort. We soldiers have a short shrift for spies." " Monsieur " began Gabrielle, in a tone of en- i6o A COURIER OF FORTUNE treaty, alarmed for Gerard's safety, and a prey to many mingled emotions. " I have committed no offence, mademoiselle, save in having 1 misled you to believe I was a worse man than I am. For that I have to crave your pardon, pleading only in excuse the reasons I have shown. For the rest, I have done no wrong," he said, meeting confidently the Governor's threatening looks. " You are a spy, monsieur, and as a spy shall be treated." " It is no uncommon thing for strangers to travel with- out disclosing their names. Is that a crime in Morvaix which is a common practice all over France and Europe ?" " Do you say now you are naught but a traveller ? " " Far from it. I have a purpose in coming to your city." " Then you are a spy, I say." " I am no spy, monsieur. I am a soldier. A true son of France with none but pure French blood in my veins ; and a loyal subject of His Majesty the King, of whom we are all subjects in common. I have fought under the great Bourbon, the Suzerain of this city and the territory of Morvaix. To hold me for a spy will argue ill of i Morvaix and the rule that prevails here." ! " You dare to threaten me, then ? " " Monsieur has doubtless his papers to support his statements and a safe conduct from his powerful friends," suggested de Proballe, with a sneer. " Aye, of course, produce them," declared the Gov- ernor. " They may explain the suspicious manner of your coming." " I can make good my words at any time," said Gerard, not relishing this thrust. " The manner of my coining was my own choosing. But since I have been here your lordship must have seen for yourself my acts have been far from those of a spy." "I'M NOT GERARD DE COBALT" 161 De Proballe stepped forward and whispered eagerly to the Governor. " Is that so, indeed ? I hear that even now you have been seen making careful observations of our Castle and the fortifications. You can of course explain so singular and apt a curiosity? Apt, I mean, as fitting with the conduct of a spy." " Are the soldiers of France forbidden even to look at the fortifications of Morvaix's famous Castle ? " " Spies are so forbidden, monsieur, and when detected are dealt with as you, being a soldier, will understand." " I repeat, I am no spy." " Then prove it so, by declaring who you are." " I am accustomed to have my word accepted, mon- sieur," answered Gerard proudly. The Governor was about to answer when de Proballe laid a hand on his arm and drew him to one side. " Why not declare yourself, monsieur ? " asked Gabri- elle, half-hesitatingly, as the others drew out of earshot. " You little know the Duke if you think you can safely hold him at defiance thus." " I am not concerned for what he may think or do, mademoiselle. It is you, and you only, whom I fear to have estranged. I deceived you. Can you forgive me ? " " You should not have done it, monsieur," she an- swered, dropping her eyes. "You you shamed me." " God forbid you should believe such a thought as that could have been in my heart." " But I I deemed you were my cousin. Oh, when I think of it, my face flames with humiliation." " Then in all truth am I bitterly punished. But you must see how hardly I was placed. When I heard the blunt confession of all that was designed against you I knew not what to do. Hating myself for every act and word of compelled deception, yet I could not speak with- out But of course, you must blame me." 1 62 A COURIER OF FORTUNE " You could have told me, monsieur, if you had trusted me ; " and the reproach in her eyes as she glanced up stung him so that he winced. " And you read in me no more than mistrust ? " he whispered. " Monsieur ! " " And you think I have been untrue to you ? " " Monsieur ! " This time with a little accent of pain, adding under her breath, " I trusted you so com- pletely." " And now ? " His tone was as low as hers, and when she made no answer he said, " First your words stabbed me, now it is your silence." She caught her breath and lifted and let fall her hand with a gesture of perplexity : a pathetic little sign of her distress. " But you, too, are silent still," she murmured, after a pause. " And I was so sure of you." The softly spoken words stung her so that she winced at the implied reproach in them. The reproach was unmerited, and while repudiat- ing the injustice she was both wistful and yet unwilling to let him see how his words hurt her. " Why will you not speak and end the uncertainty ? " she asked. " For myself and for others I care nothing, as I say ; but can you find no reason ? " " It is for me ? " she cried quickly, with a swift glance and an involuntary thrill of delight. She had not doubted him; but the confirmation of her trust which seemed to come from the assurance that it was still for her he was acting thus, brought inexpressible comfort. If it was for her that he still ran the risks involved in maintaining silence, it could be for only one reason. He had been acting a part, and yet not acting merely with her. The words he had spoken, the glances he had "I'M NOT GERARD DE COBALT" 163 cast, the thousand little acts and signs he had given while she had deemed him her cousin, had expressed real feel- ing. He had not looked on her as unmaidenly, but and as the thought grafted itself more firmly upon her faith in him, the colour came flooding again to her cheeks, but from such different causes, and her eyes glowed. " I thought " she said, about to give impulsive utterance to her new belief, when she checked herself, looked up with a smile of sweet confusion, and then again dropped her eyes. Gerard had watched her closely trying to read the perplexing changes of her manner, fearing from her con- straint and silence that she was angered ; but gathered hope fast when she smiled. " I would give much to know that thought," he said, when she faltered. " You must not keep silence and run this risk for me," she said slowly, keeping her eyes upon the ground. " Am I forgiven the deception I practised ? " he whis- pered. " Was it not done because you deemed it best for for all things ? " She had meant to say " for me," but the words hung on her lips so that she could not utter them. " For all things, no," he answered pointedly, " for you, yes ; for you only." It was sweet hearing. Her heart beat fast and her bosom rose and fell quickly in agitation. But she could not look at him, could not let him see yet how deeply he had stirred her. She had passed one crisis of racking pain when she feared that she had mistaken him; and shrank now from even a chance of mis judgment. " I believe that," she said simply after a pause. " And I am forgiven ? " he pressed, eager for her to look at him, that he might read in her sweet eyes the knowledge for which his heart was hungering. 164 A COURIER OF FORTUNE " Yes." It was a whisper, no more ; and still she kept her eyes down. " And you trust me as ever? " " I may ? " she questioned in a whisper. " As God is my judge you may," he answered with intense passion. " Could I forgive if I did not trust ? " " Thank God for that trust." She smiled and was lifting her face to meet his ardent gaze, when the Governor and de Proballe returned. Neither Gerard nor Gabrielle had had eyes or ears for them in the minutes of absence ; and had not noted how at first they had talked together and had then sent for the two men, Antoine de Cavannes and d'Estelle, and having questioned them, had once again conferred alone. It was de Proballe who now took the chief part, and he approached Gerard with a bland smile upon his sallow face, and said, in a smooth even tone " My lord has now committed this matter to my hands, Gerard, as a family affair ; and I am confident it can be easily arranged." Gerard noticed the use of his name and the familiar manner, and read in it at once some change of purpose. " I do not wish your interference, monsieur, and recognize no right of yours to take any such part." " I am acting solely in Gabrielle's interest. I have put it to the Duke that this matter can best be settled be- tween us. You see, Gerard " " What do you mean by the use of that name to me?" " Is not your name Gerard ? " He put the question casually and with just the necessary accent of surprise. " You must see how equivocal the position is." " I desire to hold no intercourse with you, monsieur," replied Gerard coldly. " You are really making a bad matter worse," and "I'M NOT GERARD DE COBALT" 165 de Proballe spread out his hands deprecatingly. " You are either Gerard de Cobalt or some one else. If the former, then this is a family matter which the Duke, in his love of justice and regard for the honour of our family, is willing to see arranged. But if the latter, then your conduct throughout is open to great suspicion. You came to the city secretly ; you took part in our private affairs without the faintest warrant; you led a violent revolt against the Governor's soldiers ; you have wounded one of his followers most unjustifiably; you have forced your way into the Castle here and, if not actually a spy, have acted just as a spy would have acted ; you have been watched and observed to be in long confidential con- ference with another stranger some pestilent con- tumacious monk ; and thus have so gravely compromised yourself as to strain the Duke's clemency beyond en- durance." " And all this harangue means what? " asked Gerard, bluntly. " That you are in a very ugly fix indeed, in which my influence with the Duke can only with difficulty assist you. The monk with whom you spoke has been placed in confinement." " You are right in one thing, M. de Proballe : I can read in this your influence with the Governor. But those who know you best know that never yet did your in- fluence harm those against whom it was directed nor help those for whom it was cast." At this moment a servant approached Gabrielle with a request that she would go at once to the Duchess. She had been taken ill suddenly and had asked urgently for Gabrielle. " I \vill come soon." " You need not hesitate on account of me," said Gerard with a smile. " These soldiers here," replied Gabrielle in a tone of i66 alarm, as she pointed to a number of men who showed in the doorways. " See. I fear danger." ' Tis the hour for the change of guard, Gabrielle," said de Proballe. " I will not go yet," she declared firmly. " You cannot stay here, mademoiselle," interposed the Governor bluntly. " I will report to you all that passes, Gabrielle," said de Proballe. " I will not go," she repeated. " I think you had better," urged Gerard. " It must be as you will," said de Proballe, when she shook her head resolutely. " Now that the men are here they will see that no violence is done. Our Gerard is so hasty, such a fire-eater, that he might be tempted to some fresh rashness which would be fatal to all settlement. Wait," he said as if struck with a sudden thought. " It will serve the same purpose if you will give me your sword, Gerard." " That I will never do," was the quick indignant re- sponse. " To me then, monsieur," said the Governor, stepping forward. " To no man, my lord." " Then it must be taken from you ; " and the Governor signed to the soldiers. In a moment Gerard's blade was out. " Do you realize what you are doing, and where you are ? " cried de Proballe. " Drawing upon the Governor of Morvaix ? " " Who dares to lay a hand on me may look to himself. I see your plan, monsieur," said Gerard to de Proballe, with a bitter smile. " Disarm him," commanded the Governor, his eyes flashing. " This is treason against the constituted ruler, monsieur." "I'M NOT GERARD DE COBALT" 167 " Gerard, Gerard ! " cried Gabrielle in dire alarm. " Come, Gabrielle, you must not interfere in this," and -de Proballe seized her hand and drew her aside. Gerard sprang 1 forward to interfere, but the soldiers interposed and prevented him. " Cut him down if he resists," was the Governor's com- mand, implacably given. For some moments the fierce unequal combat raged, and two of the soldiers being wounded, the others fell back for a moment. " My lord, stop this fighting," cried Gabrielle, strug- gling to free herself from de Proballe's grasp. At her voice Gerard turned and made as if to go to her, but the soldiers, seeing that his eyes were turned from them, chose the moment to rush in again and one of them sprang upon him from behind. Thus hampered he was soon overpowered by the number who attacked him, his sword was wrenched from his grasp, and he was led away a prisoner. CHAPTER XV A PRISONER GABRIELLE witnessed the attack upon Gerard with almost breathless fear lest he should be wounded or even killed in the fight ; but when she saw him led away a prisoner every feeling was merged in fierce hot resentment at the outrage. De Proballe retained his hold of her until Gerard had been taken away, and the instant he released her she turned upon him in magnificent indignation, she drew, herself to her full height and looked at him with eyes flashing with anger. " You have shown me your true character at last, M. le Baron, and from this point our roads part, and we are strangers." " I did it for your own good, Gabrielle," he said apologetically. " You did it because I am only a woman. Were I a man you should pay the penalty here and now. But there are those in my household who will not tamely see me maltreated, and if you consult your safety you will avoid Malincourt. If you come there, I will have you driven from my door." " You are very angry and therefore very unrea- sonable." She turned her back upon him without a word more and approached the Governor. " For the moment you have your way, M. le Due ; but the day has not yet dawned when the influence of my lOS A PRISONER 16? house of Malincourt stands for naught in Morvaix. You have foully outraged an innocent and honourable man, and if I have to carry my appeal in person to the King" of France, I will have justice done." " I will see you later, mademoiselle, when your indig- nation has somewhat spent itself and you can better appreciate what has occurred." " My indignation will never pass, my lord, until jus- tice has been done." " Justice will be done, mademoiselle ; have no fear on that score. What you have witnessed is but the needful preliminary." " What I mean is justice according to the laws of France, and not according to the Tyrant of Morvaix," she cried fearlessly. " In your present mood, I have no more to say ; " and with a bow he moved away, leaving Gabriel le free to go where she would. Remembering the message which had been brought to her and eager to have some one to whom she could pour out the tale of her wrongs and on whose sympathy she could rely, Gabrielle went to the apartments of the Duchess. The two men watched her go, both moved by widely different feelings. Each had been much disturbed by her outburst. De Proballe, thinking naturally of himself, was dis- posed to regret the part he had taken. With the doors of Malincourt shut, against him he saw the plans for his own future advancement in danger of collapse. He had meant to climb on Gabrielle's favour with the Duke to greater things. For this reason he had welcomed the change of plan which was to make her the Duke's wife, and had thrown himself readily into the attempts to ruin Gerard in her eyes. But if he was to be deprived of the prestige which the Malincourt influence afforded, he would be 170 A COURIER OF FORTUNE left dependent only on his own wits and the Duke's favour ; and what a shifting sand the latter was, he knew only too well. But the Governor was scarcely less furious than Gabri- lle herself, and never being inclined to blame himself laid the whole fault upon de Proballe. Gabrielle's fierce resentment had shown the mistake of attacking Gerard in her presence ; and the fact that he himself had given the orders only heightened his rage against de Proballe. He left the latter no reason to mis- understand his attitude. " I am to be an outcast, it seems, because of this," said de Proballe, in as nonchalant an air as he could assume. " When a man blunders as you have he has no cause to quarrel with the consequences," was the blunt reply. " As for that, I am too old a hand to quarrel when the luck's against me. But what blunder do you mean ? " " Everything you have done." " Umph ! I might have expected it," exclaimed de Pro- balle, with a sharp glance at the Governor's angry face. " It was your plan. Had I not listened to you, matters would have gone very differently. When you learnt that the man was another than this Gerard de Cobalt, you should have given me the information privately and have left me to act. But you must needs meddle in it your own way and this is the result." " Did I know you would bring Gabrielle down to listen to it all ? The mischief is that the man was arrested be- fore her eyes. All women are hysterical fools at such times. But at least it was not I who ordered your men to attack him." " That is not true." De Proballe's reply was a significant shrug of the shoulders. " Do you mean to give me the lie, monsieur ? " cried the Governor passionately. A PRISONER 171 " You had no hesitation about giving it me." " You ! " A sneer this, of ineffable contempt, and de Proballe winced and bit his lip as his sallow cheeks paled, " I have tried to serve you in this," he murmured. " You had your wages to earn, that is all. Even this man knew of your old character in Paris. Do you think I am ignorant of it ? " The taunt cut deep, but de Proballe forced down his temper and answered with a laugh. " Put not your faith in princes," he said, lightly. " If you mean that having first used me and now abused me you have no further need of my services, say so, and we'll make an end of things." " I have no use for blunderers like you," declared the Duke, sullenly. " Grant that a blunder has been made as of course it has and say if you like that I made it; whether is it better to waste time in wrangling over it or to see how to repair it ? " He paused a moment to note how this was taken, and then added : " At least you have the man- safe under bolts and bars." " And in doing it have changed your niece's passive resistance into active violent hatred." " Oh, if it comes to that, it would never have been a love match on her side ; " and he laughed. " To hell with your sneers," cried the Governor fiercely. " Life's too sour a thing to be taken so seriously. I meant no taunt ; no more than a fact. You would have had to force it ; and will have to do no more now. Her rage will cool. As I say, you have the man and can treat him at will, either as the scamp de Cobalt or the spy I was able to prove him. Give her some few hour to think over his danger, and then see how far she'll be ready to go to save his life." "Who can the fellow be?" De Proballe took heart 172 A COURIER OF FORTUNE at the question. He was not going to be thrown over- board at once ; and he answered with gathering assurance. *' Nay, rather, what does it matter who he is ? He came here as Gerard de Cobalt ; he owned it to me ; I can swear to that. Treat him as no other. I called him by his name that your people might hear ; what I said to you before the arrest stands as good now as then deal with him for that murder at Cambrai. You have him tight enough by that rope and can answer his repudiation by simply disbelieving it and regarding it as made when he found himself in a mess. Gerard de Cobalt he was, and Gerard de Cobalt I should let him remain." " But who is he ? And what does he here ? " " Have you no persuasive methods in this Castle of yours? I have heard that many a prisoner has before now been led to confess his crime and so save an infinite amount of trouble in collecting proofs." " My mind misgives me," murmured the Governor uneasily. " Ah, that's Gabrielle's influence ; " and de Proballe smiled, not pleasantly. " This is no woman's work, Duke." He felt that his words were beginning to have influence again. " But if he be, as I suspect, a spy, in what interest is lie here?" " Even spies can be induced to speak in old Pierre's chamber. Have him placed there, and you and I can visit him later." " Do I seek your advice where to place my prisoners ? " asked the Governor, angrily. " But I will have him sent there," he added, after a pause. " Ah ! " and de Proballe smiled again cunningly. " All will soon be well again, then, and this little mistake made good. Few men can long resist the creaking arguments x)f the rack." The Governor was silent long enough for de Proballe to think of another scheme. A PRISONER 173 " There is, of course, another way. The lever you have with Gabrielle is this precious fellow's life and safety, and if he chanced to get maimed in the progress of in- quiry, she would take it very ill. Promise her his life if she will consent to marry you at once. Then send him out of the city with an escort. Escorts have been known to quarrel with their charges before now," he added drily. " This man, if he be in truth a spy, may be dangerous. There is that monk, too, who should also be put to the question. Perchance he knows all that you need to learn." " I had forgotten him." " I had not, and one man is as good as another when it comes to getting information. Leave this to me, Duke. I shall not blunder again. Meanwhile, you can go to> Gabrielle with a free hand, to give her any assurances she may ask." " We will speak of it later ; I must think," said the Governor. De Proballe looked after him as he walked away, and laughed softly to himself. " What a cauldron of trouble does this plaguey love brew for us fools of mortals ! " he muttered. " Here are the whole affairs of a city tum- bled topsy-turvy, hither-thither, because Gabrielle has a. pretty face and yonder sour-visaged loon is sick to kiss it. Aye, aye, and blood will flow too, and men's pates will be cracked and their throats slit before his heart ceases to ache, or I am no reader of signs ; and 'twill be luck more than judgment that will carry one safe through the hurly-burly." Meanwhile Gabrielle had carried her storm of wrath to the Duchess and had poured out her story with half- incoherent vehemence until her friend, whose sudden, faintness had been invented by de Proballe as a lure to get Gabrielle away, was like to be overcome in truth. But even a girl's wrath, however righteous, cannot last for ever ; and thus in time Gabrielle's began to abate 374 A COURIER OF FORTUNE its hurricane force, and gradually her furious indignation hardened into a stern determination to secure Gerard's freedom and to thwart and punish those who had so mal- treated him. " You have been so vehement, child, I could scarce understand you," said the Duchess. " I know how it