A CHANGED MAN The conviction that the new Duke had been too lenient was more firmly impressed upon Gaspard Lemasle each day, each hour almost. In the captain's conception of life and duty there was much that was primitive; a blow for a blow, treachery for treachery, seemed to him amongst the first laws of existence. Failure would have meant certain death to the conspirators, success naturally ought to mean death to those against whom they had conspired, to Count Felix and all who had aided him. "A man who holds his power at the hands of the mob cannot afford to be lenient," he said to Jean. "Is that friend Roger's case?" said the dwarf. "At present, yes. The few soldiers we can command would hardly serve to crush an organized rising in the Count's favor. I would he were dead." Lemasle did not speak without reason. The people had come together for a purpose, but that purpose accomplished, the mob was not to be easily dispersed. Such men in rebelling threw law and order behind them, the thought of riot and plunder filled their hearts, yet at the very outset restraint had been put upon them. Nobles had been allowed to pass through the streets and leave the city, strict orders being given that they were not to be molested. Some of the bolder spirits had refused to obey these orders and immediately found themselves confronted by soldiers, their carbines loaded, The seven days which Herrick had given the nobles to decide whether they would serve him or not, had passed, and comparatively few of them had submitted. Some asked for an extension of time, some would fain have remained neutral, and others boldly declared their inability to accept his claim as a just one. There was little doubt that Christine de Liancourt's attitude, which had certainly become known in many quarters, had something to do with the position taken up by the nobility; and the people of Vayenne, whose idol Mademoiselle was, were silently, if not openly, opposed to the new Duke in consequence. There was another point which told against Herrick. He refused, for the present, to be crowned in St. Etienne, and people were "Not yet, Lemasle," he answered. "When the iron crown is placed on my head the whole nation shall shout for joy, or the crown shall never rest there." "You occupy a thorny seat, sir," said the captain, who had easily fallen into his place as a loyal subject of the Duke. "I care not so long as such men as you, and those you command, love me." The overbearing and insulting manner of Barbier had proved of great service to Herrick. The best soldiers and men-at-arms, who loved Gaspard Lemasle, were for the new Duke to a man; and if Herrick did not hold his power by the will of the people exactly, he certainly could not have held it without Lemasle. The fact was not unrecognized in the Place Beauvoisin, where Felix still remained, and elsewhere. Lemasle might be bought presently, it was argued; for to men who are not scrupulous themselves every man has his price. Those who hated Roger Herrick could afford to wait. Herrick issued his orders from the same room whence Count Felix had issued his, and Jean squatted beside him as he had done beside Felix. Herrick had wished to do away with the gaudy raiment and the cap and bells, but the dwarf had pleaded that he might retain them. "They have proved useful, they may prove so again," said Jean. Herrick was busy, and the dwarf had not spoken for nearly an hour, when the door opened, and two men Herrick signed to the men who had remained near the door to come forward. "Do you recognize me?" he asked. "No, my lord; but I know you are the Duke," answered one. The other was not so certain. "One of you helped to cut my bonds one night when I was bound by robbers to a tree in the forest near your hut," said Herrick. The men remembered at once. "You little thought your services were given to the Duke of Montvilliers, who does not forget them. We would find you better service in the Castle of Vayenne; but not at once. We have other work for you to do. You remember our speaking of an old, toothless hag who was with those robbers?" "Yes, my lord." "She must be found. Can you find her?" "We can try," was the answer. "We are more likely to be able to trace her than anyone else perhaps." Herrick struck a gong, and sent for Pierre Briant, who was instructed to take half a dozen men and go with the charcoal-burners. "This hag must be brought to Vayenne," he said. "Tie her up as you will, but do not injure her. She has a secret, and we shall find means here to make her tell it." Jean looked at Herrick as the men left the room. "This mission is a secret, Jean; I would have no one told of it." The dwarf nodded. "Vayenne would be alive with rumor in an hour, and that we cannot afford." "Will you tell Mademoiselle?" Jean asked. "Why should I tell my enemy?" "To make her a friend," was the answer. Herrick laughed, but there was no mirth in his laughter. "You have changed a good deal, friend Roger," said the dwarf after a pause. "Is that wonderful? Does a man become a duke without changing? To be nobody particular is the happiest condition, Jean. When you climb up into the seats of the mighty, you get a wider view of the world and the men and women in it. The sight is not pleasant, and the heart and head grow quickly sick of it all." "Why climb then?" asked Jean. "We are children of circumstances, and our own inclinations count for little," Herrick returned. "Twice, at least, you might have ridden to the frontier and left Montvilliers to settle its own quarrels. Why didn't you?" "Ah! Why didn't I?" said Herrick, asking himself a question rather than making a reply to the dwarf. There was a long silence, and presently Jean rose to his feet, and going to Herrick, touched him on the arm with his fool's bauble sharply enough to make the bells jingle. "I alone wear the uniform, friend Roger, but maybe I am not the only fool. There are different kinds of fools. Dukes may be of the brotherhood, and perchance Herrick laughed again, still mirthlessly, as he passed out of the room. His days were full of arduous business. A few stanch friends he had, but mostly enemies surrounded him, enemies who were silent because they feared him. Was it a marvel that he had changed? A man forced to hold his position by inspiring fear must necessarily live apart and take care to show no weaknesses. Sentiment is not for him, and any kindness he may do must be begged for, not given freely. Such a man must own to no mistakes, cannot confess to an ill-judged action, theoretically he must be incapable of doing wrong. From her window Christine saw Herrick cross the court-yard, and drew back as he glanced up. He had made no attempt to see her, had sent her no message, since that night in the great hall, and not wishing to meet him she had remained in her rooms, although she was at liberty to wander anywhere in the castle. Lucille was her constant companion, and although she was not allowed to go abroad in the city, she did go about in the castle, and from her Christine learned much of what was happening. She heard that many nobles had refused to submit to the new Duke; that rioting had been suppressed with a quick and heavy hand; that the coming and going to and from the castle and the city were under strict supervision. "They say everywhere that the new Duke is a strong man," said Lucille. "Has he captured your fancy?" asked Christine. "Do you see in him the prince who, passing all others, was to come and kneel at your feet?" "Oh, mademoiselle, of course not," the girl answered, blushing. "I have passed through such excitement since I told you my dream that I had almost forgotten it. Besides——" "Well, child?" "Ah, you will be angry, but I thought—I really thought you loved the Duke." "You have strange fancies. Am I likely to have any feeling but hatred for a tyrant and a usurper?" And then Christine had wished to be left alone, and Lucille wondered whether her anger was as great as it seemed. Who shall understand the heart of a woman? Truly, not even her lover. Christine told herself that she was glad Roger Herrick had not been to see her, yet she watched from her window at those times she expected to see him in the court-yard. As Duke he might be nothing more than an ambitious tyrant, but she could not altogether forget what manner of man he had been in the charcoal-burners' hut and at the house in the Place Beauvoisin. She was alone, and Roger Herrick filled her thoughts, when the door opened, and Herrick entered. He came unannounced, the door was closed behind him, and they were alone. Jean's advice had not passed unheeded. Herrick had come determined to make an explanation. A slight color stole into Christine's face. Perhaps she was glad he had come, yet she resented the manner of his coming; and face to face with her, the memory of her scorn the other night rose vividly in Herrick's mind. In the short pause which ensued, Fate seemed to draw barriers between them. "Am I denied privacy then?" she asked. "Had I sent to ask you to see me, you would probably have refused," said Herrick. "Probably." "Therefore I use the only way open to me," he answered. "At present you are master. A prisoner complains of insult in vain." "You are free to go where you will in the castle, mademoiselle. I thought you understood that." "I wish to leave the castle," she answered. "At present that is impossible," he replied. "I have too many enemies abroad as it is." "Why not crush them while you have the opportunity?" she said. "Kill the Count, kill me. Why do you hesitate?" "Count Felix certainly merits death," Herrick returned, "but I fear others more than I do the Count." "Is it Maurice you fear? Your ambition hadn't fully blossomed that day in the forest, or you would not have saved him." "You are unjust, mademoiselle." "Do you suppose your action the other night would have been possible had you spoken the whole truth, and declared that Maurice was alive, that you were the one man who knew that he was alive?" "I took the throne by right of birth, mademoiselle, you forget that. Why should I trouble to explain away Maurice's claim when his cousin Felix had had him buried in St. Etienne?" "You know Maurice was not buried there?" "But I do not know for certain that he is alive. Surely I am a better Duke than Felix?" "You? An Englishman! A mere adventurer!" "You used kinder language, mademoiselle, when you chose to accept my service." "Like others I have played into your hands," she answered. "I fail to see the use in prolonging this interview." "Mademoiselle, I came to explain certain things to you." "You can force me to listen to you, but there is no explanation I will willingly hear." "Trust me, there shall be no explanation that you do not willingly listen to," said Herrick. "You compel me to silence, you drive me to harsh measures. Your enmity lends strength to these nobles who refuse to submit to my rule. They await their opportunity to rebel, but alone they are powerless. Their only hope of success is to bring a foreign nation into Montvilliers to help them, and already there are rumors that such negotiations are taking place. I may fall, but with me falls the independence of Montvilliers, and the fault will lie at the door of the woman who has so loudly professed her love for her country—your door, mademoiselle." "Montvilliers is in the hands of a foreigner now," she answered quietly. "If you believe that, you know little of your country's history," Herrick answered; "but you do not believe it. I have a claim, and you know it, whether it is a good one in your eyes or not. If there is one man necessary to the state at the present moment, I am that man; and if there is one person who has it in her power to ruin the state, you are that person; therefore you are confined to the castle. Some day, mademoiselle, you may understand that I have given you a lesson in patriotism." "In words you are indeed a bold man," she said. "My deeds speak for themselves. They have saved Montvilliers from Count Felix; with your help they should save the land from invasion and conquest. Will you ask me to explain all I came to say to you to-day?" "Is it necessary?" she asked. "You are afraid of me, I want no explanation to understand that." "You once said that for your country's good you would marry Count Felix. Were they words merely, or did you mean it?" "I meant it." "And you hated him?" "It would have been a sacrifice." "Are you still prepared to make such a sacrifice?" Herrick asked. "It is in your power to save the country from the double peril of civil war and invasion. Will you do it?" "Marry Felix? Now?" "Why not, if your country demands it, or a worse than Felix if necessary. To-day Felix is nothing, he holds no power. The power is with me. Make the sacrifice, mademoiselle; trust me to fulfil my part—marry me." "Marry you!" she said, shrinking back from him. "That you hate me does not count, that is altogether beside the bargain. It is the country you have to consider; you make the sacrifice for your country." "Enough. I refuse to make such a sacrifice as this," she answered. "That I love you counts for nothing, I suppose?" said Herrick after a pause. She did not answer at once. She saw again the man kneeling to her in the hut, and again that night when "Less than nothing," she said slowly after a pause. Herrick's face hardened. In his heart was love, passionate longing, and the madness of desire, but he suppressed all outward sign of the tempest that raged within him. "I had built much on your friendship, mademoiselle," he said quietly, "I had even dared to hope that my love had touched an answering chord in your heart. I little thought to stand alone in my love for this land of ours." "Ours!" "Truly its ruin cannot hurt you much since you care for it so little. Could I leave it, and all that belongs to it, I would do so, for I have learned hard lessons in it." "You have reached your ambition," she said. "Have I? I believed in a woman's trust, and I have awakened from a dream. I will trouble you no more. The times demand the Duke; Roger Herrick ceases to exist. The Duke lives to hold Montvilliers against her enemies. Roger Herrick was a poor fool who loved and trusted you, mademoiselle." He turned, and left her, the door closing heavily behind him. For a moment Christine stood where she was, angry, defiant, then she sank into a chair, and sobbed. Wounded pride, disappointment, loneliness, and love were in her tears. "If he were only Roger Herrick and no Duke," she said, "I could have loved, I would have done all that he— But he shall suffer. I have power, and right is on my side. He has defied the law, why should not I? The people would make me Duchess. Why should I not wear the crown?" And then she rose quickly, stepping back into the "Did your master send you to me?" she asked. "Mademoiselle, I have no masters but the Church and my conscience." She laughed, dashing the last tears from her eyes. "The Duke you have helped to make should reward you well." "Even a priest may be mistaken, mademoiselle," Father Bertrand said slowly. "I came to talk to you about the Duke. Already they do not love him in Vayenne." "And you, father?" The priest went to the door, opened it quickly to surprise any listener there might be, then closed it again, and stepped to Christine's side. "His friends were chiefly his friends because of you, mademoiselle. They thought you believed in Roger Herrick, that he had your support. At your word Vayenne would rise to-morrow." Christine did not answer for a moment. Her power suddenly frightened her. Then she said slowly: "I will listen attentively to all you have to say, Father Bertrand. You find me a prisoner and in the mood to be rebellious." And the room grew dark as the priest talked, yet she did not call for lights. |