Part 143 (1/2)

”Gentlemen,” said Coconnas, drawing his sword and raising it, ”gentlemen, we surrender.”

The light-horse dropped their muskets.

”But first tell us why we must do so?”

”You must ask that of the King of Navarre.”

”What crime have we committed?”

”Monsieur d'Alencon will inform you.”

Coconnas and La Mole looked at each other. The name of their enemy at such a moment did not greatly rea.s.sure them.

Yet neither of them made any resistance. Coconnas was asked to dismount, a manoeuvre which he executed without a word. Then both were placed in the centre of the light-horse and took the road to the pavilion.

”You always wanted to see the pavilion of Francois I.,” said Coconnas to La Mole, perceiving through the trees the walls of a beautiful Gothic structure; ”now it seems you will.”

La Mole made no reply, but merely extended his hand to Coconnas.

By the side of this lovely pavilion, built in the time of Louis XII., and named after Francois I., because the latter always chose it as a meeting-place when he hunted, was a kind of hut built for p.r.i.c.kers, partly hidden behind the muskets, halberds, and s.h.i.+ning swords like an ant-hill under a whitening harvest.

The prisoners were conducted to this hut.

We will now relate what had happened and so throw some light on the situation, which looked very dark, especially for the two friends.

The Protestant gentlemen had a.s.sembled, as had been agreed on, in the pavilion of Francois I., of which, as we know, De Mouy had the key.

Masters of the forest, or at least so they had believed, they had placed sentinels here and there whom the light-horse, having exchanged their white scarfs for red ones (a precaution due to the ingenious zeal of Monsieur de Nancey), had surprised and carried away without a blow.

The light-horse had continued their search surrounding the pavilion; but De Mouy, who, as we know, was waiting for the king at the end of the Allee des Violettes, had perceived the red scarfs stealing along and had instantly suspected them. He sprang to one side so as not to be seen, and noticed that the vast circle was narrowing in such a way as to beat the forest and surround the meeting-place. At the same time, at the end of the princ.i.p.al alley, he had caught a glimpse of the white aigrettes and the s.h.i.+ning arquebuses of the King's bodyguard.

Finally he saw the King himself, while in the opposite direction he perceived the King of Navarre.

Then with his hat he had made a sign of the cross, which was the signal agreed on to indicate that all was lost.

At this signal the king had turned back and disappeared. De Mouy at once dug the two wide rowels of his spurs into the sides of his horse and galloped away, shouting as he went the words of warning which we have mentioned, to La Mole and Coconnas.

Now the King, who had noticed the absence of Henry and Marguerite, arrived, escorted by Monsieur d'Alencon, just as the two men came out of the hut to which he had said that all those found, not only in the pavilion but in the forest, were to be conducted.

D'Alencon, full of confidence, galloped close by the King, whose sharp pains were augmenting his ill humor. Two or three times he had nearly fainted and once he had vomited blood.

”Come,” said he on arriving, ”let us make haste; I want to return to the Louvre. Bring out all these rascals from their hole. This is Saint Blaise's day; he was cousin to Saint Bartholomew.”

At these words of the King the entire ma.s.s of pikes and muskets began to move, and one by one the Huguenots were forced out not only from the forest and the pavilion but from the hut.

But the King of Navarre, Marguerite, and De Mouy were not there.

”Well,” said the King, ”where is Henry? Where is Margot? You promised them to me, D'Alencon, and, by Heaven, they will have to be found!”