The Lady of the Mount - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"'By this time the s.h.i.+p of the Black Seigneur had drawn nearer and our men put about and made for the Mount with a number of prisoners.
Several shots were sent after us, but we managed to reach port.'"
"The officer in charge of the troops thinks this fellow, their leader, was wounded severely--fatally perhaps?"
"He thinks it most probable, your Excellency."
For some time the Governor, with frowning brows, sipped silently from a gla.s.s of liquor at his elbow, and, stiff, motionless, the commandant waited; close at hand, a dove plumed itself on the roof of the cloister walk; beyond, the girl again began to sing fitfully.
Out of the corner of his eye the commandant dared look at her, leaning now against the wall, the clear-cut, white features outlined against an illimitable blue background.
"_Les amours--_"
Involuntarily he started to raise a hand to his warlike mustache, when abruptly was his wandering attention recalled. "The man ash.o.r.e I spoke to you about, has been taken into custody?"
"Yes, your Excellency; and is now at the barracks."
"Send him here. One moment--" The commandant paused, vaguely conscious the girl had moved away from the wall. "You spoke of there being a lack of room--these new prisoners must be confined in the dungeons; if necessary, crowd more of the others in the upper cells, and--there is still the Devil's Cage."
"The Devil's Cage?" Through the rose-tinted columns, above the Governor's head, the commandant could discern the figure of the Lady Elise, who had approached and now was gazing inquiringly at them.
"Your Excellency would use that? One can neither lie down in it, nor sit in it, upright?"
"Well," the cold eyes flashed, "it is not intended for upright people!
But the man you were ordered to arrest!" with sudden sharpness; "the man from the sh.o.r.e! Send him to me!"
"At once, your Excellency!" And responding promptly to his superior's mood, the commandant saluted briskly, and retired.
"What man?" The drapery of her gown drawn back, the Lady Elise stood poised on the court's low coping between the fairy-like pillars.
"No one you know, my dear."
"Which means--it is none of my concern?"
"Not at all." His voice was now perfunctory; and his expression, as he surveyed her, slightly questioning. "You are looking somewhat pale to-day?"
"Am I?" carelessly. "I--I feel very well." As she spoke, she went to him and leaned over the back of his chair. "_Mon pere_, won't you do something for me?"
"What?"
"Promise first." With her hand on his shoulder.
He reached up; the long, cold fingers stroked the shapely, warm ones.
"One should never leap into the dark with a promise," he answered.
"Especially to a woman."
"Not even when that woman is one's own daughter?" she asked, sliding to the arm of the chair.
He regarded the bright face now thoughtful; the lips, usually laughing, set sensitively. "Is it another trip to the court, or do you wish to turn this stern old Mount again into a palace of pleasure? To invite once more the Paris lords and ladies--the King, himself, perhaps? It would not be the first time a monarch has been entertained at the Mount--or a Marquis, either, eh? Shall we ask the Marquis?"
She made an impatient movement. "I want you to promise to break up the terrible iron cage, and--"
"Tut!" Jocosely he pinched the fair cheek. "A girl's thoughts should be of the court and the cavaliers."
She turned away her head. "You treat me like a child," she said with a flash in her eyes.
"No, no! Like a woman," he laughed. "But the Marquis--perhaps he could not come here; perhaps he is too much concerned with the gaieties of Paris!" Her figure straightened; she was about to walk away, when--
"You ride this afternoon?" he asked.
"I had not thought of it."
"If you do I desire that some one accompany you." Her face changed; she looked at him quickly, and half turned. "Remember Saladin as well, and--keep closer to the Mount in the future."
"Poor Saladin!" she breathed, with averted glance.
"He got his deserts!" answered the Governor harshly. "An ugly trick that of his--to bolt and leave you stranded at the extreme point of the mainland where the bay swings around!"
"The 'grand' tide--it came in so fast--and made so much noise--"
"It frightened him! Well, fortunate it was, indeed, you were not on his back; that you had already reached the point, and had had time to dismount! An unpleasant experience, nevertheless--with the water separating you from the Mount, and a great curve of land to be walked before you could arrive at a human habitation!"
"I--it wasn't a very comfortable feeling," she acknowledged, flus.h.i.+ng.
"And if the fisherman hadn't subsequently seen you and taken you across in his little boat, you would have been more uncomfortable later. You rewarded him well, I trust?"
"He--wouldn't take anything."
"And you neglected to inquire his name?"
"I--did not think."
"You were so glad to get back?" remarked the Governor, regarding her closely. "What sort of man was he?" abruptly.
"Old."
"And--"
"That--is all I remember."
"Hum! Not very lucid. No doubt you were too overwrought, my dear, to be in an observant mood." His voice sank absently; his fingers sought among the papers, and, as his glance fell, the girl walked away. Again she leaned on the parapet, and once more regarded the barren waste below--the figures of the c.o.c.kle-seekers, mere specks, the shadow of the Mount, stamped on the sand, with the saint, a shapeless form, holding up a tapering black line--a sword--at the apex.
"She is keeping back something. What?" Above an official-looking doc.u.ment the Governor watched her, his lips compressed, his eyes keen; then shrugged his shoulders and resumed his occupation. The death-like hush of an aerial region surrounded them; the halcyon peace of a seemingly chimerical cloister; until suddenly broken by an indubitable clangor--harsh, hard!--of a door, opening; shutting. The Governor lifted his head in annoyance; the dove on the roof of the cloister-walk flew away, and a short, fat man, breathing hard, appeared.
"Pardon, your Excellency! But the drafts! They seem sometimes to sweep up from the very dungeons themselves, and--"
"Well?"
Beppo cut short excuse, or explanation. "A prisoner is waiting without. The man, Sanchez, from the sh.o.r.e! Monsieur le Commandant, who brought him, told me to inform you."