Part 7 (1/2)

The boy a.s.sented.

”Who are you, then?”

Jehan opened his mouth to answer, but Father Bernard interposed. ”Tell His Majesty,” he said, ”what you told me.”

After a moment's hesitation the boy complied, speaking fast, with his face on his breast and a flushed cheek. Nevertheless, in the silence every word reached the ear. ”I am Jehan de Bault,” he pattered in his treble voice, ”seigneur of I know not where, and lord of seventeen lords.h.i.+ps in the county of Perigord----” and so on, and so on, through the quaint formula to which we have listened more than once.

Ninety-nine out of a hundred who heard him, heard him with incredulous surprise, and took the tale for a mountebank's patter; though patter, they acknowledged it was of a novel kind, aptly made and well spoken. Two or three of the bolder laughed. There had been little to laugh at before. The king moved restlessly in his chair, saying, ”Pis.h.!.+ Wh-hat is this rubbish? What is he s-saying?”

The President frowned, and taking his cue from the king, was about to rebuke the boy sharply, when one who had not before spoken, but whose voice in an instant produced silence among high and low, intervened. ”The tale rings true!” the Cardinal said, in low, suave accents. ”But there is no family of Bault in Perigord, is there?”

”With His Majesty's permission, no!” replied a bluff, hearty voice; and therewith the elderly soldier who had come in with the king advanced a pace to the side of his master's chair. ”I am of Perigord, and know, your Eminence,” he continued. ”More. Two months ago I saw this lad--I recognise him now--at the fair of Fecamp. He was differently dressed then, but he had the same tale, except that he did not mention Perigord.”

”S-someone has taught it him,” said the king.

”Your Majesty is doubtless right,” the President answered obsequiously. Then to the boy he continued, ”Speak, boy; who taught it you?”

But Jehan only shook his head and looked puzzled. At last, being pressed, he said, ”At Bault, in Perigord.”

”There is no such place!” M. de Bresly cried roundly.

Father Bernard looked distressed. He began to repent that he had led the child to tell the tale; he began to fear that it might hurt instead of helping. Perhaps after all he had been too credulous. But again the Cardinal came to the rescue.

”Is there any family in Perigord can boast of three marshals, M. de Bresly?” he asked, in his thin incisive tones.

”None that I know of. Several that can boast of two.”

”The blood of Roland?”

M. de Bresly shrugged his shoulders. ”It is common to all of us,” he said, smiling.

The great Cardinal smiled, too--a flickering, quickly-pa.s.sing smile. Then he leaned forward and fixed the boy with his fierce black eyes. ”What was your father's name?” he said.

Jehan shook his head, impotently, miserably.

”Where did you live?”

The same result. The king threw himself back and muttered, ”It is no good.” The President moved in his seat. Some in the galleries began to whisper.