Part 38 (1/2)

_Oct. 6._--Ben Gillam and Governor Brigdar this day sent back to New England. There will be great complaints against us in the English court before we can reach London.

_Nov. 11._--Sailed for France in the French frigate.

_Dec. 18._--Reach Roch.e.l.le--hear of M. Colbert's death.

_Jan. 30._--Paris--all our furs seized by the French Government in order to keep M. Radisson powerless--Lord Preston, the English amba.s.sador, complaining against us on the one hand, and battering our doors down on the other, with spies offering M. Radisson safe pa.s.sage from Paris to London.

I would that I had time to tell you of that hard winter in Paris, M.

Radisson week by week, like a fort resisting siege, forced to take cheaper and cheaper lodgings, till we were housed between an attic roof and creaking rat-ridden floor in the Faubourg St. Antoine. But not one jot did M. Radisson lose of his kingly bearing, though he went to some fete in Versailles with beaded moccasins and frayed plushes and tattered laces and hair that one of the pretty wits declared the birds would be anesting in for hay-coils. In that Faubourg St. Antoine house, I mind, we took grand apartments on the ground floor, but up and up we went, till M. Radisson vowed we'd presently be under the stars--as the French say when they are homeless--unless my Lord Preston, the English amba.s.sador, came to our terms.

That starving of us for surrender was only another trick of the gamestering in which we were enmeshed. Had Captain G.o.dey, Lord Preston's messenger, succeeded in luring us back to England without terms, what a pretty pickle had ours been! France would have set a price on us. Then must we have accepted any kick-of-toe England chose to offer--and thanked our new masters for the same, else back to France they would have sent us.

But attic dwellers stave off many a woe with empty stomachs and stout courage. When April came, boats for the fur-trade should have been stirring, and my Lord Preston changes his tune. One night, when Pierre Radisson sat spinning his yarns of captivity with Iroquois to our attic neighbours, comes a rap at the door, and in walks Captain G.o.dey of the English Emba.s.sy. As soon as our neighbours had gone, he counts out one hundred gold pieces on the table. Then he hands us a letter signed by the Duke of York, King Charles's brother, who was Governor of the Hudson's Bay Company, granting us all that we asked.

Thereupon, Pierre Radisson asks leave of the French court to seek change of air; but the country air we sought was that of England in May, not France, as the court inferred.

[1] The reference is evidently to the secret treaty by which King Charles of England received annual payment for compliance with King Louis's schemes for French aggression.

CHAPTER XXIV

UNDER THE AEGIS OF THE COURT

The roar of London was about us.

Sign-boards creaked and swung to every puff of wind. Great hackney-coaches, sunk at the waist like those old gallipot boats of ours, went ploughing past through the mud of mid-road, with bepowdered footmen clinging behind and saucy coachmen perched in front. These flunkeys thought it fine sport to splash us pa.s.sers-by, or beguiled the time when there was stoppage across the narrow street by las.h.i.+ng rival drivers with their long whips and knocking c.o.c.k-hats to the gutter. 'Prentices stood ringing their bells and shouting their wares at every shop-door. ”What d'ye lack? What d'ye lack? What d'ye please to lack, good sirs? Walk this way for kerseys, sayes, and perpetuanoes! Bands and ruffs and piccadillies! Walk this way! Walk this way!”

”Pardieu, lad!” says M. Radisson, elbowing a saucy spark from the wall for the tenth time in as many paces. ”Pardieu, you can't hear yourself think! Shut up to you!” he called to a bawling 'prentice dressed in white velvet waistcoat like a showman's dummy to exhibit the fas.h.i.+on.

”Shut up to you!”

And I heard the fellow telling his comrades my strange companion with the tangled hair was a pirate from the Barbary States. Another saucy vender caught at the chance.

”Perukes! Perukes! Newest French periwigs!” he shouts, jangling his bell and putting himself across M. Radisson's course. ”You'd please to lack a periwig, sir! Walk this way! Walk this way--”

”Out of my way!” orders Radisson with a hiss of his rapier round the fellow's fat calves. ”'Tis a milliner's doll the town makes of a man!

Out of my way!”

And the 'prentice went skipping. We were to meet the directors of the Hudson's Bay Company that night, and we had come out to refurbish our scant, wild attire. But bare had we turned the corner for the linen-draper's shops of Fleet Street when M. Radisson's troubles began.

Idlers eyed us with strange looks. Hucksters read our necessitous state and ran at heel shouting their wares. Shopmen saw needy customers in us and sent their 'prentices running. Chairmen splashed us as they pa.s.sed; and impudent dandies powdered and patched and laced and bewigged like any fizgig of a girl would have elbowed us from the wall to the gutter for the sport of seeing M. Radisson's moccasins slimed.

”Egad,” says M. Radisson, ”an I spill not some sawdust out o' these dolls, or cut their stay-strings, may the gutter take us for good and all! Pardieu! An your wig's the latest fas.h.i.+on, the wits under 't don't matter--”

”Have a care, sir,” I warned, ”here comes a fellow!”

'Twas a dandy in pink of fas.h.i.+on with a three-cornered hat coming over his face like a waterspout, red-cheeked from carminative and with the high look in his eyes of one who saw common folk from the top of church steeple. His lips were parted enough to show his teeth; and I warrant you my fine spark had posed an hour at the looking-gla.s.s ere he got his neck at the angle that brought out the swell of his chest. He was dressed in red plush with silk hose of the same colour and a square-cut, tailed coat out of whose pockets stuck a roll of paper missives.

”Verse ready writ by some penny-a-liner for any wench with cheap smiles,”

says M. Radisson aloud.