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His next accusation brought the blood in scarlet flags to her pale cheeks; she made him no answer but burned him with her indignant eyes.
"Mordieu, monsieur!" Lucas cried. "This is Mlle. de Montluc."
"Then why did you come?" demanded Mayenne.
"Because I had done harm to the lad and was sorry," she said. "You defend me now, Paul, but you did not hesitate to make a tool of me in your cowardly schemes."
"It was kindly meant, mademoiselle," Lucas retorted. "Since I shall kill M. le Comte de Mar in any case, I thought it would pleasure you to have a word with him first."
I think it did not need the look she gave him to make him regret the speech. This Lucas was an extraordinary compound of shrewdness and recklessness, one separating from the other like oil and vinegar in a sloven's salad. He could plan and toil and wait, to an end, with skill and fort.i.tude and patience; but he could not govern his own gusty tempers.
"You have been crying, Lorance," Mayenne said in a softer tone.
"For my sins, monsieur," she answered quickly. "I am grieved most bitterly to have been the means of bringing this lad into danger. Since Paul cozened me into doing what I did not understand, and since this is not the man you wanted but only his servant, will you not let him go free?"
"Why, my pretty Lorance, I did not mean to harm him," Mayenne protested, smiling. "I had him flogged for his insolence to you; I thought you would thank me for it."
"I am never glad over a flogging, monsieur."
"Then why not speak? A word from you and it had stopped."
She flushed red for very shame.
"I was afraid--I knew you vexed with me," she faltered. "Oh, I have done ill!" She turned to me, silently imploring forgiveness. There was no need to ask.
"Then you will let him go, monsieur? Alack that I did not speak before!
Thank you, my cousin!"
"Of what did you suspect me? The boy was whipped for a bit of impertinence to you; I had no cause against him."
My heart leaped up; at the same time I scorned myself for a craven that I had been overcome by groundless terror.
"Then I have been a goose so to disturb myself," mademoiselle laughed out in relief. "You do well to rebuke me, cousin. I shall never meddle in your affairs again."
"That will be wise of you," Mayenne returned. "For I did mean to let the boy go. But since you have opened his door and let him hear what he should not, I have no choice but to silence him."
"Monsieur!" she gasped, cowering as from a blow.
"Aye," he said quietly. "I would have let him go. But you have made it impossible."
Never have I seen so piteous a sight as her face of misery. Had my hands been free, Mayenne had been startled to find a knife in his heart.
"Never mind, mademoiselle," I cried to her. "You came and wept over me, and that is worth dying for."
"Monsieur," she cried, recovering herself after the first instant of consternation, "you are degrading the greatest n.o.ble in the land! You, the head of the house of Lorraine, the chief of the League, the commander of the allied armies, debase yourself in stooping to take vengeance on a stable-boy."
"It is no question of vengeance; it is a question of safety," he answered impatiently. Yet I marvelled that he answered at all, since absolute power is not obliged to give an account of itself.
"Is your estate then so tottering that a stable-boy can overturn it? In that case be advised. Go hang yourself, monsieur, while there is yet time."
He flushed with anger, and this time he offered no justification. He advanced on the girl with outstretched hand.
"Mademoiselle, it is not my habit to take advice from the damsels of my household. Nor do I admit them to my council-room. Permit me then to conduct you to the staircase."
She retreated toward the threshold where I stood, still covering me as with a s.h.i.+eld.
"Monsieur, you are very cruel to me."
"Your hand, mademoiselle."
She did not yield it to him but held out both hands, clasped in appeal.
"Monsieur, you have always been my loving kinsman. I have always tried to do your pleasure. I thought you meant harm to the boy because he was a servant to M. de Mar, and I knew that M. de St. Quentin, at least, had gone over to the other side. I did not know what you would do with him, and I could not rest in my bed because it was through me he came here.
Monsieur, if I was foolish and frightened and indiscreet, do not punish the lad for my wrong-doing."
Mayenne was still holding out his hand for her.
"I wish you sweet dreams, my cousin Lorance."
"Monsieur," she cried, shrinking back till she stood against the door-jamb, "will you not let the boy go?"
"How will you look to-morrow," he said with his unchanged smile, "if you lose all your sleep to-night, my pretty Lorance?"
"A reproach to you," she answered quickly. "You will mark my white cheeks and my red eyes, and you will say, 'Now, there is my little cousin Lorance, my good ally Montluc's daughter, and I have made her cry her eyes blind over my cruelty. Her father, dying, gave her to me to guard and cherish, and I have made her miserable. I am sorry. I wish I had not done it.'"
"Mademoiselle," the duke repeated, "will you get to your bed?"
She did not stir, but, fixing him with her brilliant eyes, went on as if thinking aloud.
"I remember when I was a tiny maid of five or six, and you and your brother Guise (whom G.o.d rest!) would come to our house. You would ask my father to send for me as you sat over your wine, and I would run in to kiss you and be fed comfits from your pockets. I thought you the handsomest and gallantest gentleman in France, as indeed you were."
"You were the prettiest little creature ever was," Mayenne said abruptly.
"And my little heart was bursting with love and admiration of you," she returned. "When I first could lisp, I learned to pray for my cousin Henri and my cousin Charles. I have never forgotten them one night in all these years. 'G.o.d receive and bless the soul of Henri de Guise; G.o.d guard and prosper Charles de Mayenne.' But you make it hard for me to ask it for my cousin Charles."
"This is a great coil over a horse-boy," Mayenne said curtly.
"Life is as dear to a horse-boy as to M. le Duc de Mayenne."
"I tell you I did not mean to kill the boy," Mayenne said. "With the door shut he could hear nothing. I meant to question him and let him go.
But you have seen fit to meddle in what is no maid's business, mademoiselle. You have unlocked the door and let him listen to my concerns. Dead men, mademoiselle, tell no tales."
"M. de Mayenne," she said, "I cannot see that you need trouble for the tales of boys--you, the lord of half France. But if you must needs fear his tongue, why, even then you should set him free. He is but a serving-boy sent here with a message. It is wanton murder to take his life; it is like killing a child."
"He is not so harmless as you would lead one to suppose, mademoiselle,"
the duke retorted. "Since you have been eavesdropping, you have heard how he upset your cousin Paul's arrangements."
"For that you should be thankful to him, monsieur. He has saved you the stain of a cowardly crime."