The Helmet of Navarre - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"When? How?"
"Soon," M. etienne answered, "and easily, if you will tell me what they are like. Are they open?"
"I fear by now they may be. There are three sheets of names, and a fourth sheet, a letter--all in cipher."
"Ah, but in that case--"
Monsieur cut short his son's jubilation.
"But--Lucas."
"Of course--I forgot him. He knows your ciphers, then?"
"Dolt that I was, he knows everything."
"Then must we lay hands on the papers before they reach Mayenne, and all is saved," M. etienne declared cheerfully. "These fellows can't read a cipher. If the packet be not open, Monsieur?"
"It was a span long, and half as wide; for all address, the letters _St.
Q._ in the corner. It was tied with red cord and bore the seal of a flying falcon, and the motto, _Je reviendrai_."
"What! the king's seal? That's serious. Expect, then, Monsieur, to see the papers in an hour's time."
"etienne, etienne," Monsieur cried, "are you mad?"
"No madder than is proper for a St. Quentin. It's simple enough. I told you I recognized that worthy back there for one Bernet, who lodged at an inn I wot of over beyond the markets. Do we betake ourselves thither, we may easily fall in with some comrades of his bosom who have not the misfortune to be lying dead in a back lane, who will know something of your loss. Bernet's sort are no bigots; while they work for the League, they will lend a kindly ear to the c.h.i.n.k of Kingsmen's florins."
"Ah," cried Monsieur, "then let us go." But M. etienne laid a restraining hand on his shoulder.
"Not you. I. They will kill you in the Halles just as cheerfully as in the Quartier Marais. This is my affair."
He looked at Monsieur with kindling eyes, seeing his chance to prove his devotion. The duke yielded to his eagerness.
"But," M. etienne added generously, "you may have the honour of paying the piper."
"I give you carte blanche, my son. etienne, if you put that packet into my hand, it is more than if you brought the sceptre of France."
"Then go practise, Monsieur, at feeling more than king."
He embraced his father, and we turned off down the street.
The sun was well up by this time, and the city rousing to the labours of the day. Half was I glad of the lateness of the hour, for we ran no risk now of cutthroats; and half was I sorry, for it behooves not a man supposed to be in the Bastille to show himself too liberally to the broad eye of the streets. Every time--and it was often--that we approached a person who to my nervous imagination looked official, I shook in my shoes. The way seemed fairly to bristle with soldiers, officers, judges; for aught I knew, members of the Sixteen, Governor Belin himself. It was a great surprise to me when at length we arrived without let or hindrance before the door of a mean little drinking-place, our goal.
We went in, and M. etienne ordered wine, much to my satisfaction. My stomach was beginning to remind me that I had given it nothing for twelve hours or so, while I had worked my legs hard.
"Does M. Bernet lodge with you?" my master asked of the landlord. We were his only patrons at the moment.
"M. Bernet? Him with the eye out?"
"The same."
"Why, no, monsieur. I don't let lodgings. The building is not mine. I but rent the ground floor for my purposes."
"But M. Bernet lodges in the house, then?"
"No, he doesn't. He lodges round the corner, in the court off the Rue Clichet."
"But he comes here often?"
"Oh, aye. Every morning for his gla.s.s. And most evenings, too."
M. etienne laid down the drink-money, and something more.
"Sometimes he has a friend with him, eh?"
The man laughed.
"No, monsieur; he comes in here alone. Many's the time I'll standing in my door when he'll go by with some gallant, and he never chances to see me or my shop. While if he's alone it's 'Good morning, Jean. Anything in the casks to-day?' He can no more get by my door than he'll get by Death's when the time comes."
"No," agreed M. etienne; "we all stop there, soon or late. Those friends of M. Bernet, then--there is none you could put a name to?"
"Why, no, monsieur, more's the pity. He has none lives in this quarter.
M. Bernet's in low water, you understand, monsieur. If he lives here, it is because he can't help it. But he goes elsewhere for his friends."
"Then you can tell us, my man, where he lodges?"
"Aye, that can I," mine host answered, bustling out from behind the bar, eager in the interest of the pleasant-spoken, open-handed gallant. "Just round the corner of the Rue Clichet, in the court. The first house on the left, that is his. I would go with monsieur, only I cannot leave the shop alone, and the wife not back from market. But monsieur cannot miss it. The first house in the court. Thank you, monsieur. Au revoir, monsieur."
In the doorway of the first house on the left in the little court stood an old man with a wooden leg, sweeping heaps of refuse out of the pa.s.sage.
"It appears that every one on this stair lacks something," M. etienne murmured to me. "It is the livery of the house. Can you tell me, friend, where I may find M. Bernet?"
The concierge regarded us without cordiality, while by no means ceasing his endeavours to cover our shoes with his sweepings.
"Third story back," he said.
"Does M. Bernet lodge alone?"
"One of him's enough," the old fellow growled, whacking out his dirty broom on the door-post, powdering us with dust. M. etienne, coughing, pursued his inquiries:
"Ah, I understood he shared his lodgings with a comrade. He has a friend, then, in the building?"
"Aye, I suppose so," the old chap grinned, "when monsieur walks in."
"But he has another friend besides me, has he not?" M. etienne persisted. "One who, if he does not live here, comes often to see M.
Bernet?"
"You seem to know all about it. Better see Bernet himself, instead of chattering here all day."
"Good advice, and I'll take it," said M. etienne, lightly setting foot on the stair, muttering to himself as he mounted, "and come back to break your head, mon vieillard."