Part 76 (1/2)

”I depend on you,” replied Henry smiling. Then turning to De Mouy:

”Now,” said the king, in a low tone, as if in spite of the a.s.surance of Marguerite his fears were not wholly overcome, ”what are you here for?”

”Here?” said De Mouy.

”Yes, here, in this room,” repeated Henry.

”He had nothing to do here,” said Marguerite; ”I induced him to come.”

”You?”

”I guessed everything.”

”You see, De Mouy, we can discover what is going on.”

”This morning,” continued Marguerite, ”Monsieur de Mouy was with Duc Francois in the apartment of two of his gentlemen.”

”You see, De Mouy,” repeated Henry, ”we know everything.”

”That is true,” said De Mouy.

”I was sure,” said Henry, ”that Monsieur d'Alencon had taken possession of you.”

”That is your fault, sire. Why did you so persistently refuse what I offered you?”

”You refused!” exclaimed Marguerite. ”The refusal I feared, then, was real?”

”Madame,” said Henry, shaking his head, ”and you, my brave De Mouy, really, you make me laugh with your exclamations. What! a man enters my chamber, speaks to me of a throne, of a revolt, of a revolution, to me, Henry, a prince tolerated provided that I eat humble pie, a Huguenot spared on condition that I play the Catholic; and I am expected to accept, when these propositions are made in a room without padding or double wainscoting! _Ventre saint gris!_ You are either children or fools!”

”But, sire, could not your majesty have left me some hope, if not by word, at least by a gesture or sign?”

”What did my brother-in-law say to you, De Mouy?” asked Henry.

”Oh, sire, that is not my secret.”

”Well, my G.o.d!” continued Henry, with a certain impatience at having to deal with a man who so poorly understood his words. ”I do not ask what you proposed to him, I ask you merely if he listened to you, if he heard you.”

”He listened, sire, and he heard.”

”He listened and he heard! You admit it yourself, De Mouy, tactless conspirator that you are! Had I said one word you would have been lost, for I did not know, I merely suspected that he was there, or if not he, someone else, the Duc d'Anjou, Charles IX., or the queen mother, for instance. You do not know the walls of the Louvre, De Mouy; it was for them that the proverb was made which says that walls have ears; and knowing these walls you expected me to speak! Well, well, De Mouy, you pay a small compliment to the common sense of the King of Navarre, and I am surprised that not esteeming him more highly you should have offered him a crown.”

”But, sire,” said De Mouy, ”could you not even while refusing this crown have given me some sign? In that case I should not have considered everything hopeless and lost.”

”Well! _Ventre saint gris!_” exclaimed Henry, ”if one can hear cannot one see also? and is not one lost by a sign as much as by a word? See, De Mouy,” continued the king, looking around him, ”at the present moment, so near to you that my words do not reach beyond the circle of our three chairs, I still fear I may be overheard when I say: De Mouy, repeat your proposal to me.”

”But, sire,” cried De Mouy in despair, ”I am now engaged with Monsieur d'Alencon.”

Marguerite angrily clasped and unclasped her beautiful hands.

”Then it is too late?” said she.