Part 41 (2/2)
She touched him softly and he woke, continuing to smile. He kissed the hand he held and looked at the wretched woman with eyes so sparkling that she could not endure their light and slowly lowered her large eyelids. Her husband might justly have accused her of coquetry if she were not concealing the terrors of her soul by thus evading the fire of his looks. Together they raised their charming heads and made each other a sign of grat.i.tude for the pleasures they had tasted; but after a rapid glance at the beautiful picture his wife presented, the marquis was struck with an expression on her face which seemed to him melancholy, and he said in a tender voice, ”Why sad, dear love?”
”Poor Alphonse,” she answered, ”do you know to what I have led you?”
”To happiness.”
”To death!”
Shuddering with horror she sprang from the bed; the marquis, astonished, followed her. His wife motioned him to a window and raised the curtain, pointing as she did so to a score of soldiers. The moon had scattered the fog and was now casting her white light on the muskets and the uniforms, on the impa.s.sible Corentin pacing up and down like a jackal waiting for his prey, on the commandant, standing still, his arms crossed, his nose in the air, his lips curling, watchful and displeased.
”Come, Marie, leave them and come back to me.”
”Why do you smile? I placed them there.”
”You are dreaming.”
”No.”
They looked at each other for a moment. The marquis divined the whole truth, and he took her in his arms. ”No matter!” he said, ”I love you still.”
”All is not lost!” cried Marie, ”it cannot be! Alphonse,” she said after a pause, ”there is hope.”
At this moment they distinctly heard the owl's cry, and Francine entered from the dressing-room.
”Pierre has come!” she said with a joy that was like delirium.
The marquise and Francine dressed Montauran in Chouan clothes with that amazing rapidity that belongs only to women. As soon as Marie saw her husband loading the gun Francine had brought in she slipped hastily from the room with a sign to her faithful maid. Francine then took the marquis to the dressing-room adjoining the bed-chamber. The young man seeing a large number of sheets knotted firmly together, perceived the means by which the girl expected him to escape the vigilance of the soldiers.
”I can't get through there,” he said, examining the bull's-eye window.
At that instant it was darkened by a thickset figure, and a hoa.r.s.e voice, known to Francine, said in a whisper, ”Make haste, general, those rascally Blues are stirring.”
”Oh! one more kiss,” said a trembling voice beside him.
The marquis, whose feet were already on the liberating ladder, though he was not wholly through the window, felt his neck clasped with a despairing pressure. Seeing that his wife had put on his clothes, he tried to detain her; but she tore herself roughly from his arms and he was forced to descend. In his hand he held a fragment of some stuff which the moonlight showed him was a piece of the waistcoat he had worn the night before.
”Halt! fire!”
These words uttered by Hulot in the midst of a silence that was almost horrible broke the spell which seemed to hold the men and their surroundings. A volley of b.a.l.l.s coming from the valley and reaching to the foot of the tower succeeded the discharges of the Blues posted on the Promenade. Not a cry came from the Chouans. Between each discharge the silence was frightful.
But Corentin had heard a fall from the ladder on the precipice side of the tower, and he suspected some ruse.
”None of those animals are growling,” he said to Hulot; ”our lovers are capable of fooling us on this side, and escaping themselves on the other.”
The spy, to clear up the mystery, sent for torches; Hulot, understanding the force of Corentin's supposition, and hearing the noise of a serious struggle in the direction of the Porte Saint-Leonard, rushed to the guard-house exclaiming: ”That's true, they won't separate.”
”His head is well-riddled, commandant,” said Beau-Pied, who was the first to meet him, ”but he killed Gudin, and wounded two men. Ha! the savage; he got through three ranks of our best men and would have reached the fields if it hadn't been for the sentry at the gate who spitted him on his bayonet.”
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