Part 129 (1/2)
”No doubt; possibly before then.”
”Listen, sire; everything seems perfectly quiet. The Duc d'Anjou has left; no one thinks of him. The King is getting better every day. The persecution against us has almost ceased. Play the amiable with the queen mother and Monsieur d'Alencon; keep telling him that you cannot go without him, and try to make him believe you, which is more difficult.”
”Do not worry, he will believe me.”
”Do you think he has such confidence in you?”
”No, G.o.d forbid, but he believes everything the queen says.”
”And is the queen true to us?”
”Oh! I have proof of it. Besides, she is ambitious and is dying for this far-off crown of Navarre.”
”Well! three days before the hunt send me word where it will take place--whether it is to be at Bondy, at Saint Germain, or at Rambouillet. Monsieur de la Mole will ride ahead of you; follow him, and ride fast. Once out of the forest if the queen mother wants you she will have to run after you; and I trust that her Norman horses will not see even the hoofs of our Barbary steeds and our Spanish ponies.”
”Agreed, De Mouy.”
”Have you any money, sire?”
Henry made the same grimace he made all his life at this question.
”Not much,” said he; ”but I think Margot has some.”
”Well! whether it is yours or hers, bring as much as you can.”
”And in the meantime what are you going to do?”
”Having paid some attention to your majesty's affairs, as you see, will your majesty permit me to devote a little time to my own?”
”Certainly, De Mouy, certainly, but what are yours?”
”Yesterday Orthon told me (he is a very intelligent boy, whom I recommend to your majesty) that he met that scoundrel of a Maurevel near the a.r.s.enal, that thanks to Rene he has recovered, and that he was warming himself in the sun like the snake that he is.”
”Ah, yes, I understand,” said Henry.
”Very good, then. You will be king some day, sire, and if you have anything such as I have to avenge you can do so in a kingly way. I am a soldier and must avenge myself like a soldier. So while all our little affairs are being arranged, which will give that scoundrel five or six days in which to recover more fully, I too shall take a stroll around the a.r.s.enal, and I will pin him to the gra.s.s with four blows of my rapier, after which I shall leave Paris with a lighter heart.”
”Attend to your affairs, my friend, by all means,” said the Bearnais.
”By the way, you are pleased with La Mole, are you not?”
”Yes; he is a charming fellow, devoted to you body and soul, sire, and on whom you can depend as you can on me--brave”--
”And above all, discreet. So he must follow us to Navarre, De Mouy; once there we will look about and see what we can do to recompense him.”
As Henry concluded these words with a sly smile, the door opened or rather was broken in, and the man they had just been praising appeared, pale and agitated.
”Quick, sire,” cried he; ”quick, the house is surrounded.”
”Surrounded!” cried Henry, rising; ”by whom?”