Complete works of a e w.., p.350
Complete Works of a E W Mason, page 350
“You rode it the first time you came to Ohlau,” said the Princess.
“Do you indeed remember that?” cried Wogan, with so much pleasure that Gaydon stirred in his corner, and Clementina said, “Hush!”
Wogan waited in a suspense lest Gaydon should wake up, which, to be sure, would be the most inconsiderate thing in the world. Gaydon, however, settled himself more comfortably, and in a little his regular breathing might be heard again.
“Well,” resumed Wogan, “I have a notion that the lady I shall marry will come riding some sunrise on my black horse across the plain and into my city of dreams. And she has not.”
“Ah,” said Clementina, “here’s a subterfuge, my friend. The lady you shall marry, you say. But tell me this! Has the lady you love ridden on your black horse into your city of dreams?”
“No,” said Wogan; “for there is no lady whom I love.” There Wogan should have ended, but he added rather sadly, “Nor is there like to be.”
“Then I am sure,” said Clementina.
“Sure that I speak truth?”
“No, sure that you mislead me. It is not kind; for here perhaps I might give you some small token of my gratitude, would you but let me. Oh, it is no matter. I shall find out who the lady is. You need not doubt it. I shall set my wits and eyes to work. There shall be marriages when I am Queen. I will find out!”
Wogan’s face was not visible in the darkness; but he spoke quickly and in a startled voice, —
“That you must never do. Promise that you never will! Promise me that you will never try;” and again Gaydon stirred in his corner.
Clementina made no answer to the passionate words. She did not promise, but she drew a breath, and then from head to foot she shivered. Wogan dared not repeat his plea for a promise, but he felt that though she had not given it, none the less she would keep it. They sat for awhile silent. Then Clementina came back to her first question.
“Tell me of the King,” she said very softly. And as the carriage rolled down the mountain valley through the night and its wheels struck flashes of fire from the stones, Wogan drew a picture for her of the man she was to marry. It was a relief to him to escape from the dangerous talk of the last hour, and he spoke fervently. The poet in him had always been sensitive to the glamour of that wandering Prince; he had his countrymen’s instinctive devotion for a failing cause. This was no suitable moment for dwelling upon the defects and weaknesses. Wogan told her the story of the campaign in Scotland, of the year’s residence in Avignon. He spoke most burningly. A girl would no doubt like to hear of her love’s achievements; and if James Stuart had not so many to his name as a man could wish, that was merely because chance had served him ill. So a fair tale was told, not to be found in any history book, of a night attack in Scotland and how the Chevalier de St. George, surprised and already to all purposes a prisoner, forced a way alone through nine grenadiers with loaded muskets and escaped over the roof-tops. It was a good breathless story as he told it, and he had just come to an end of it when the carriage drove through the village of Wellishmile and stopped at the posting-house. Wogan opened the door and shook Gaydon by the shoulder.
“Let us try if we can get stronger horses here,” said he, and he got out. Gaydon woke up with surprising alacrity.
“I must have fallen asleep,” said he. “I beseech your Highness’s forgiveness; I have slept this long while.” It was no business of his if Wogan chose to attribute his own escape from Newgate as an exploit of the King’s. The story was a familiar one at Bologna, whither they were hurrying; it was sufficiently known that Charles Wogan was its hero. All this was Wogan’s business, not Gaydon’s. Nor had Gaydon anything to do with any city of dreams or with any lady that might ride into it, or with any black horse that chanced to carry her. Poets no doubt talked that way. It was their business. Gaydon was not sorry that he had slept so heartily through those last stages. He got down from the carriage and met Wogan coming from the inn with a face of dismay.
“We are stopped here. There is no help for it. We have gained on the Prince of Baden, who is no more than two stages ahead. The relays which carried him from here to the next stage have only this instant come back. They are too tired to move. So we must stay until they are refreshed. And we are still three posts this side of Trent!” he cried. “I would not mind were Trent behind us. But there’s no help for it. I have hired a room where the Countess and her niece can sleep until such time as we can start.”
Clementina and Mrs. Misset descended and supped in company with Gaydon and Wogan, while Misset and O’Toole waited upon them as servants. It was a silent sort of supper, very different from the meal they had made that morning. For though the fare was better, it lacked the exhilaration. This delay weighed heavily upon them all. For the country was now for a sure thing raised behind them, and if they had gained on the Prince of Baden, their pursuers had no less certainly gained on them.
“Would we were t’other side of Trent!” exclaimed Wogan; and looking up he saw that Clementina was watching him with a strange intentness. Her eyes were on him again while they sat at supper; and when he led her to the door of her room and she gave him her hand, she stood for a little while looking deep into his eyes. And though she had much need of sleep, when she had got into the room and the door was closed behind her, she remained staring at the logs of the fire.
For she knew his secret, and to her eyes he was now another man. Before, Wogan was the untiring servant, the unflinching friend; now he was the man who loved her. The risks he had run, his journeyings, his unswerving confidence in the result, his laborious days and nights of preparation, and the swift execution, — love as well as service claimed a share in these. He was changed for ever to her eyes; she knew his secret. There was the cloud no bigger than a man’s hand. For she must needs think over all that he had said and done by the new light the secret shed. When did he first begin to care? Why? She recalled his first visit long ago to Ohlau, when he rode across the park on his black horse charged with his momentous errand. She had been standing, she remembered, before the blazing log-fire in the great stone hall, much as she was standing now. Great changes had come since then. She was James Stuart’s chosen wife — and this man loved her. He had no hope of any reward; he desired even that she should not know. She should no doubt have been properly sorry and compassionate, but she was a girl simple and frank. To be loved by a man who could so endure and strive and ask no guerdon, — that lifted her. She thought the more worthily of herself because he loved her. She was raised thereby. She could not be sorry; her blood pulsed, her heart sang, the starry eyes shone with a brighter light. He loved her. She knew his secret. A little clock chimed the hour upon the mantel-shelf, and lifting her eyes she saw that just twenty-four hours had passed since she had driven out of Innspruck up the Brenner.
As she got into bed a horse galloped up to the inn and stopped. She remembered that she had not ridden on his black horse out of the sunrise across the plain. He loved her, and since he loved her, surely — She fell asleep puzzled and wondering why. She was waked up some two hours afterwards by a rapping on the door, and she grew hot and she recognised Wogan’s voice cautiously whispering to her to rise with all speed. For in her dreams from which she had wakened, she had ridden across the flat green plain into the round city of dreams.
CHAPTER XVI
WHEN THE HORSE galloped up to the door, the Princess turned on her side and went to sleep. In the common-room below Gaydon and Wogan were smoking a pipe of tobacco over the fire. Both men rose on the instant; Wogan stealthily opened the door an inch or so and looked down the passage. Gaydon raised a corner of the blind and peered through the window. The two remaining members of the party, Misset and O’Toole, who as lackeys had served the supper of the Princess, were now eating their own. When the Princess turned over on her side, and Wogan stepped on tiptoe to the door and Gaydon peeped through the window, Misset laid down his knife and fork, and drawing a flask from his pocket emptied its contents into an earthenware water-jug which stood upon the table. O’Toole, for his part, simply continued to eat.
“He is getting off his horse,” said Gaydon.
“Has he ridden hard, do you think?” asked Misset.
“He looks in a mighty ill-humour.”
O’Toole looked up from his plate, and became gradually aware that something was occurring. Before he could speak, however, Gaydon dropped the blind.
“He is coming in. It will never do for him to find the four of us together. He may not be the courier from Innspruck; on the other hand, he may, and seeing the four of us he will ask questions of the landlord. Seeing no more than two, he will very likely ask none.”
O’Toole began to understand. He understood, at all events, that for him there was to be no more supper. If two were to make themselves scarce, he knew that he would be one of the two.
“Very well,” said he, heaving a sigh which made the glasses on the table dance, and laying his napkin down he got up. To his surprise, however, he was bidden to stay.
“Gaydon and I will go,” said Wogan. “Jack will find out the fellow’s business.”
Misset nodded his head, took up his knife and fork again. He leaned across the table to O’Toole as the others stepped out of the room.
“You speak only French, Lucius. You come from Savoy.” He had no time to say more, for the new-comer stamped blustering down the passage and flung into the room. The man, as Gaydon had remarked, was in a mighty ill-humour; his clothes and his face were splashed with mud, and he seemed, moreover, in the last stage of exhaustion. For though he bawled for the landlord it was in a weak, hoarse voice, which did not reach beyond the door.
Misset looked at him with sympathy.
“You have no doubt come far,” said he; “and the landlord’s a laggard. Here’s something that may comfort you till he comes;” and he filled a glass half full with red Tyrol wine from the bottle at his elbow.
The man thanked him and advanced to the table.
“It is a raw hot wine,” continued Misset, “and goes better with water;” and he filled up the glass from the water-jug. The courier reached out his hand for it.
“I am the thirstiest man in all Germany,” said he, and he took a gulp of the wine and immediately fell to spluttering.
“Save us,” said he, “but this wine is devilishly strong.”
“Try some more water,” said Misset, and again he filled up the glass. The courier drank it all in a single draught, and stood winking his eyes and shaking his head.
“That warms a man,” said he. “It does one good;” and again he called for the landlord, and this time in a strange voice. The landlord still lagged, however, and Misset did not doubt that Wogan had found a means to detain him. He filled up the courier’s glass again, half wine, half water. The courier sat heavily down in a chair.
“I take the liberty, gentlemen,” said he. “I am no better than a dung-heap to sit beside gentlemen. But indeed I can stand no longer. Never have I stridden across such vile slaughter-house cattle as they keep for travellers on the Brenner road. I have sprained my legs with spurring ’em. Seven times,” he cried with an oath,— “seven times has a horse dropped under me to-day. There’s not an inch of me unbruised, curse me if there is! I’m a cake of mud.”
Misset knew very well why the courier had suffered these falls. The horses he had ridden had first been tired by the Prince of Baden, and then had the last spark of fire flogged out of them by the Princess’s postillions. He merely shrugged his shoulders, however, and said, “That looks ill for us.”
The courier gazed suddenly at Misset, then at O’Toole, with a dull sort of suspicion in his eyes.
“And which way might you gentlemen be travelling?”
“To Innspruck; we’re from Trent,” said Misset, boldly.
The courier turned to O’Toole.
“And you too, sir?”
O’Toole turned a stolid, uncomprehending face upon the courier.
“Pour moi, monsieur, je suis Savoyard. Monsieur qui vous parle, c’est mon compagnon de négoce.”
The courier gazed with blank, heavy eyes at O’Toole. He had the appearance of a man fuddled with drink. He heaved a sigh or two.
“Will you repeat that,” he said at length, “and slowly?”
O’Toole repeated his remark, and the courier nodded at him. “That’s very strange,” said he, solemnly, wagging his head. “I do not dispute its truth, but it is most strange. I will tell my wife of it.” He turned in his chair, and a twinge from his bruises made him cry out. “I shall be as stiff as a mummy in the morning,” he exclaimed, and swore loudly at “the bandits” who had caused him this deplorable journey. Misset and O’Toole exchanged a quick glance, and Misset pushed the glass across the table. The courier took it, and his eyes lighted up.
“You have come from Trent,” said he. “Did you pass a travelling carriage on the road?”
“Yes,” said Misset; “the Prince of Baden with a large following drove into Trent as we came out.”
“Yes, yes,” said the courier. “But no second party behind the Prince?”
Misset shook his head; he made a pretence of consulting O’Toole in French, and O’Toole shook his head.
“Then I shall have the robbers,” cried the courier. “They are to be flayed alive, and they deserve it,” he shouted fiercely to Misset. “Gallows-birds!”
He dropped his head upon his arms and muttered “gallows-birds” again. It seemed that he was falling asleep, but he suddenly sat up and beat on the table with his fist.
“I have eaten nothing since the morning. Ah — gallows- birds — flayed alive, and hanged — no, hanged and flayed alive — no, that’s impossible.” He drank off the wine which Misset had poured out for him, and rose from his chair. “Where’s the landlord? I want supper. I want besides to speak to him;” and he staggered towards the door.
“As for supper,” said Misset, “we shall be glad if you will share ours. Travellers should be friendly.”
O’Toole caught the courier by the arm and with a polite speech in French drew him again down into his chair. The courier stared at O’Toole and forgot all about the landlord. He had eaten nothing all day, and the wine and the water-jug had gone to his head. He put a long forefinger on O’Toole’s knee.
“Say that again,” said he, and O’Toole obeyed. A slow, fat smile spread all over the courier’s face.
“I’ll tell my wife about it,” said he. He tried to clap O’Toole on the back, and missing him fell forward with his face on the table. The next minute he was snoring. Misset walked round the table and deftly picked his pockets. There was a package in one of them superscribed to “Prince Taxis, the Governor of Trent.” Misset deliberately broke the seal and read the contents. He handed the package to O’Toole, who read it, and then flinging it upon the ground danced upon it. Misset went out of the room and found Wogan and Gaydon keeping watch by Clementina’s door. To them he spoke in a whisper.
“The fellow brings letters from General Heister to the Governor of Trent to stop us at all costs. But his letters are destroyed, and he’s lying dead-drunk on the table.”
The three men quickly concerted a plan. The Princess must be roused; a start must be made at once; and O’Toole must be left behind to keep a watch upon the courier, Wogan rapped at the door and waked Clementina; he sent Gaydon to the stables to bribe the ostlers, and with Misset went down to inform O’Toole.
O’Toole, however, was sitting with his eyes closed and his head nodding, surrounded by scraps of the letter which he had danced to pieces. Wogan shook him by the shoulder, and he opened his eyes and smiled fatuously.
“He means to tell his wife,” he said with a foolish gurgle of laughter. “He must be an ass. I don’t think if I had a wife I should tell her. Would you, Wogan, tell your wife if you had one? Misset wouldn’t tell his wife.”











