Part 150 (1/2)
Charles leaned on her and reached his room.
”Now,” said Charles, ”I will put myself to bed.”
”If Maitre Ambroise Pare comes?”
”Tell him that I am better and that I do not need him.”
”But, meanwhile, what will you take?”
”Oh! a very simple medicine,” said Charles, ”the whites of eggs beaten in milk. By the way, nurse,” he continued, ”my poor Acteon is dead.
To-morrow morning he must be buried in a corner of the garden of the Louvre. He was one of my best friends. I will have a tomb made for him--if I have time.”
CHAPTER LIV.
THE FOREST OF VINCENNES.
According to the order given by Charles IX., Henry was conducted that same evening to Vincennes. Such was the name given at that time to the famous castle of which to-day only a fragment remains, colossal enough, however, to give an idea of its past grandeur.
The trip was made in a litter, on either side of which walked four guards.
Monsieur de Nancey, bearing the order which was to open to Henry the door of the protecting abode, walked first.
At the postern of the prison they stopped. Monsieur de Nancey dismounted from his horse, opened the gate, which was closed with a padlock, and respectfully asked the king to follow.
Henry obeyed without uttering a word. Any dwelling seemed to him safer than the Louvre, and ten doors closed on him were at the same time ten doors shut between him and Catharine de Medicis.
The royal prisoner crossed the drawbridge between two soldiers, pa.s.sed through the three doors on the ground floor and the three at the foot of the staircase; then, still preceded by Monsieur de Nancey, he ascended one flight. Arrived there, the captain of the guards, seeing that the king was about to mount another flight, said to him:
”My lord, you are to stop here.”
”Ah!” said Henry, pausing, ”it seems that I am given the honors of the first floor.”
”Sire,” replied Monsieur de Nancey, ”you are treated like a crowned head.”
”The devil! the devil!” said Henry to himself, ”two or three floors more would in no way have humiliated me. I shall be too comfortable here; I suspect something.”
”Will your majesty follow me?” asked Monsieur de Nancey.
”_Ventre saint gris!_” said the King of Navarre, ”you know very well, monsieur, that it is not a question of what I will or will not do, but of what my brother Charles orders. Did he command that I should follow you?”
”Yes, sire.”
”Then I will do so, monsieur.”
They reached a sort of corridor at the end of which they came to a good-sized room, with dark and gloomy looking walls. Henry gazed around him with a glance not wholly free from anxiety.
”Where are we?” he asked.