Part 31 (1/2)

”But are we not to leave father and mother and children and wife for the sacred cause of Calvinism, and to suffer all things?--Oh, Christophe, Calvin, the great Calvin, the whole party, the whole world, the future counts on your courage and your greatness of soul! We want your life.”

There is this strange feature in the mind of man: the most devoted, even in the act of devoting himself, always builds up a romance of hope even in the most perilous crisis. Thus, when on the river under the Pont au Change, the prince, the soldier, and the preacher had required Christophe to carry to Queen Catherine the doc.u.ment which, if discovered, would have cost him his life, the boy had trusted to his wit, to chance, to his perspicacity, and had boldly marched on between the two formidable parties--the Guises and the Queen--who had so nearly crushed him. While in the torture-chamber he still had said to himself, ”I shall live through it--it is only pain!”

But at this brutal command, ”Die!” to a man who was still helpless, hardly recovered from the injuries he had suffered, and who clung all the more to life for having seen death so near, it was impossible to indulge in any such illusions.

Christophe calmly asked, ”What do you want of me?”

”To fire a pistol bravely, as Stuart fired at Minard.”

”At whom?”

”The Duc de Guise.”

”a.s.sa.s.sination?”

”Revenge!--Have you forgotten the hundred gentlemen ma.s.sacre on one scaffold! A child, little d'Aubigne, said as he saw the butchery, 'They have beheaded all France.'”

”We are to take blows and not to return them, is the teaching of the Gospel,” replied Christophe. ”If we are to imitate the Catholics, of what use is it to reform the Church?”

”Oh, Christophe, they have made a lawyer of you, and you argue!” said Chaudieu.

”No, my friend,” the youth replied. ”But principles are ungrateful, and you and yours will only be the playthings of the House of Bourbon.”

”Oh, Christophe, if you had only heard Calvin, you would know that we can turn them like a glove! The Bourbons are the glove, and we the hand.”

”Read this,” said Christophe, handing Pibrac's letter to the minister.

”Alas, boy! you are ambitious; you can no longer sacrifice yourself;” and Chaudieu went away.

Not long after this visit, Christophe, with the families of Lallier and Lecamus, had met to celebrate the plighting of Babette and Christophe in the old parlor, whence Christophe's couch was now removed, for he could climb the stairs now, and was beginning to drag himself about without crutches. It was nine in the evening, and they waited for Ambroise Pare.

The family notary was sitting at a table covered with papers. The furrier was selling his house and business to his head-clerk, who was to pay forty thousand livres down for the house, and to mortgage it as security for the stock-in-trade, besides paying twenty thousand livres on account.

Lecamus had purchased for his son a magnificent house in the Rue de Saint-Pierre aux Boeufs, built of stone by Philibert de l'Orme, as a wedding gift. The Syndic had also spent two hundred and fifty thousand livres out of his fortune, Lallier paying an equal sum, for the acquisition of a fine manor and estate in Picardy, for which five hundred thousand livres were asked. This estate being a dependence of the Crown, letters patent from the King--called letters of rescript--were necessary, besides the payment of considerable fines and fees. Thus the actual marriage was to be postponed till the royal signature could be obtained.

Though the citizens of Paris had obtained the right of purchasing manors and lands, the prudence of the Privy Council had placed certain restrictions on the transfer of lands belonging to the Crown; and the estate on which Lecamus had had his eye for the last ten years was one of these. Ambroise had undertaken to produce the necessary permission this very evening. Old Lecamus went to and fro between the sitting-room and the front door with an impatience that showed the eagerness of his ambition.

At last Ambroise appeared.

”My good friend!” exclaimed the surgeon in a great fuss, and looking at the supper-table, ”what is your napery like?--Very good.--Now bring waxlights, and make haste, make haste. Bring out the best of everything you have.”

”What is the matter?” asked the priest of Saint-Pierre aux Boeufs.

”The Queen-mother and the King are coming to sup with you,” replied the surgeon. ”The Queen and King expect to meet here an old Councillor, whose business is to be sold to Christophe, and Monsieur de Thou, who has managed the bargain. Do not look as if you expected them; I stole out of the Louvre.”

In an instant all were astir. Christophe's mother and Babette's aunt trotted about in all the flurry of housewives taken by surprise. In spite of the confusion into which the announcement had thrown the party, preparations were made with miraculous energy. Christophe, amazed, astounded, overpowered by such condescension, stood speechless, looking on at all the bustle.

”The Queen and the King here!” said the old mother.