The robbery of
the jewels of the Duke of
Bavaria
The next day, about nine in the morning,
as Louis XI. was leaving his chapel after hearing
mass, he found Maitre Cornelius on his path.
“Good luck to you, crony,”
he said, shoving up his cap in his hasty way.
“Sire, I would willingly pay
a thousand gold crowns if I could have a moment’s
talk with you; I have found the thief who stole the
rubies and all the jewels of the Duke of—”
“Let us hear about that,”
said Louis XI., going out into the courtyard of Plessis,
followed by his silversmith, Coyctier his physician,
Olivier de Daim, and the captain of his Scottish guard.
“Tell me about it. Another man to hang
for you! Hola, Tristan!”
The grand provost, who was walking
up and down the courtyard, came with slow steps, like
a dog who exhibits his fidelity. The group paused
under a tree. The king sat down on a bench and
the courtiers made a circle about him.
“Sire, a man who pretended to
be a Fleming has got the better of me—”
began Cornelius.
“He must be crafty indeed, that
fellow!” exclaimed Louis, wagging his head.
“Oh, yes!” replied the
silversmith, bitterly. “But methinks he’d
have snared you yourself. How could I distrust
a beggar recommended to me by Oosterlinck, one hundred
thousand francs of whose money I hold in my hands.
I will wager the Jew’s letter and seal were forged!
In short, sire, I found myself this morning robbed
of those jewels you admired so much. They have
been ravished from me, sire! To steal the jewels
of the Elector of Bavaria! those scoundrels respect
nothing! they’ll steal your kingdom if you don’t
take care. As soon as I missed the jewels I went
up to the room of that apprentice, who is, assuredly,
a past-master in thieving. This time we don’t
lack proof. He had forced the lock of his door.
But when he got back to his room, the moon was down
and he couldn’t find all the screws. Happily,
I felt one under my feet when I entered the room.
He was sound asleep, the beggar, tired out. Just
fancy, gentlemen, he got down into my strong-room
by the chimney. To-morrow, or to-night, rather,
I’ll roast him alive. He had a silk ladder,
and his clothes were covered with marks of his clambering
over the roof and down the chimney. He meant to
stay with me, and ruin me, night after night, the
bold wretch! But where are the jewels? The
country-folks coming into town early saw him on the
roof. He must have had accomplices, who waited
for him by that embankment you have been making.
Ah, sire, you are the accomplice of fellows who come
in boats; crack! they get off with everything, and
leave no traces! But we hold this fellow as a
key, the bold scoundrel! ah! a fine morsel he’ll
be for the gallows. With a little bit of questioning
beforehand, we shall know all. Why, the glory
of your reign is concerned in it! there ought not
to be robbers in the land under so great a king.”
The king was not listening. He
had fallen into one of those gloomy meditations which
became so frequent during the last years of his life.
A deep silence reigned.
“This is your business,”
he said at length to Tristan; “take you hold
of it.”
He rose, walked a few steps away,
and the courtiers left him alone. Presently he
saw Cornelius, mounted on his mule, riding away in
company with the grand provost.
“Where are those thousand gold
crowns?” he called to him.
“Ah! sire, you are too great
a king! there is no sum that can pay for your justice.”
Louis XI. smiled. The courtiers
envied the frank speech and privileges of the old
silversmith, who promptly disappeared down the avenue
of young mulberries which led from Tours to Plessis.
Exhausted with fatigue, the young
seigneur had indeed fallen soundly asleep. Returning
from his gallant adventure, he no longer felt the
same ardor and courage to defend himself against distant
or imaginary dangers with which he had rushed into
the perils of the night. He had even postponed
till the morrow the cleaning of his soiled garments;
a great blunder, in which all else conspired.
It was true that, lacking the moonlight, he had missed
finding all the screws of that cursed lock; he had
no patience to look for them. With the “laisser-aller”
of a tired man, he trusted to his luck, which had
so far served him well. He did, however, make
a sort of compact with himself to awake at daybreak,
but the events of the day and the agitations of the
night did not allow him to keep faith with himself.
Happiness is forgetful. Cornelius no longer seemed
formidable to the young man when he threw himself
on the pallet where so many poor wretches had wakened
to their doom; and this light-hearted heedlessness
proved his ruin. While the king’s silversmith
rode back from Plessis, accompanied by the grand provost
and his redoubtable archers. The false Goulenoire
was being watched by the old sister, seated on the
corkscrew staircase oblivious of the cold, and knitting
socks for Cornelius.
The young man continued to dream of
the secret delights of that charming night, ignorant
of the danger that was galloping towards him.
He saw himself on a cushion at the feet of the countess,
his head on her knees in the ardor of his love; he
listened to the story of her persecutions and the
details of the count’s tyranny; he grew pitiful
over the poor lady, who was, in truth, the best-loved
natural daughter of Louis XI. He promised her
to go on the morrow and reveal her wrongs to that
terrible father; everything, he assured her, should
be settled as they wished, the marriage broken off,
the husband banished,—and all this within
reach of that husband’s sword, of which they
might both be the victims if the slightest noise awakened
him. But in the young man’s dream the gleam
of the lamp, the flame of their eyes, the colors of
the stuffs and the tapestries were more vivid, more
of love was in the air, more fire about them, than
there had been in the actual scene. The Marie
of his sleep resisted far less than the living Marie
those adoring looks, those tender entreaties, those
adroit silences, those voluptuous solicitations, those
false generosities, which render the first moments
of a passion so completely ardent, and shed into the
soul a fresh delirium at each new step in love.
Following the amorous jurisprudence
of the period, Marie de Saint-Vallier granted to her
lover all the superficial rights of the tender passion.
She willingly allowed him to kiss her foot, her robe,
her hands, her throat; she avowed her love, she accepted
the devotion and life of her lover; she permitted
him to die for her; she yielded to an intoxication
which the sternness of her semi-chastity increased;
but farther than that she would not go; and she made
her deliverance the price of the highest rewards of
his love. In those days, in order to dissolve
a marriage it was necessary to go to Rome; to obtain
the help of certain cardinals, and to appear before
the sovereign pontiff in person armed with the approval
of the king. Marie was firm in maintaining her
liberty to love, that she might sacrifice it to him
later. Nearly every woman in those days had sufficient
power to establish her empire over the heart of a
man in a way to make that passion the history of his
whole life, the spring and principle of his highest
resolutions. Women were a power in France; they
were so many sovereigns; they had forms of noble pride;
their lovers belonged to them far more than they gave
themselves to their lovers; often their love cost
blood, and to be their lover it was necessary to incur
great dangers. But the Marie of his dream made
small defence against the young seigneur’s ardent
entreaties. Which of the two was the reality?
Did the false apprentice in his dream see the true
woman? Had he seen in the hotel de Poitiers a
lady masked in virtue? The question is difficult
to decide; and the honor of women demands that it be
left, as it were, in litigation.
At the moment when the Marie of the
dream may have been about to forget her high dignity
as mistress, the lover felt himself seized by an iron
hand, and the sour voice of the grand provost said
to him:—
“Come, midnight Christian, who
seeks God on the roofs, wake up!”
The young man saw the black face of
Tristan l’Hermite above him, and recognized
his sardonic smile; then, on the steps of the corkscrew
staircase, he saw Cornelius, his sister, and behind
them the provost guard. At that sight, and observing
the diabolical faces expressing either hatred or curiosity
of persons whose business it was to hang others, the
so-called Philippe Goulenoire sat up on his pallet
and rubbed his eyes.
“Mort-Dieu!” he cried,
seizing his dagger, which was under the pillow.
“Now is the time to play our knives.”
“Ho, ho!” cried Tristan,
“that’s the speech of a noble. Methinks
I see Georges d’Estouteville, the nephew of
the grand master of the archers.”
Hearing his real name uttered by Tristan,
young d’Estouteville thought less of himself
than of the dangers his recognition would bring upon
his unfortunate mistress. To avert suspicion he
cried out:—
“Ventre-Mahom! help, help to me, comrades!”
After that outcry, made by a man who
was really in despair, the young courtier gave a bound,
dagger in hand, and reached the landing. But
the myrmidons of the grand provost were accustomed
to such proceedings. When Georges d’Estouteville
reached the stairs they seized him dexterously, not
surprised by the vigorous thrust he made at them with
his dagger, the blade of which fortunately slipped
on the corselet of a guard; then, having disarmed
him, they bound his hands, and threw him on the pallet
before their leader, who stood motionless and thoughtful.
Tristan looked silently at the prisoner’s
hands, then he said to Cornelius, pointing to them:—
“Those are not the hands of
a beggar, nor of an apprentice. He is a noble.”
“Say a thief!” cried the
torconnier. “My good Tristan, noble or serf,
he has ruined me, the villain! I want to see his
feet warmed in your pretty boots. He is, I don’t
doubt it, the leader of that gang of devils, visible
and invisible, who know all my secrets, open my locks,
rob me, murder me! They have grown rich out of
me, Tristan. Ha! this time we shall get back
the treasure, for the fellow has the face of the king
of Egypt. I shall recover my dear rubies, and
all the sums I have lost; and our worthy king shall
have his share in the harvest.”
“Oh, our hiding-places are much
more secure than yours!” said Georges, smiling.
“Ha! the damned thief, he confesses!”
cried the miser.
The grand provost was engaged in attentively
examining Georges d’Estouteville’s clothes
and the lock of the door.
“How did you get out those screws?”
Georges kept silence.
“Oh, very good, be silent if
you choose. You will soon confess on the holy
rack,” said Tristan.
“That’s what I call business!” cried
Cornelius.
“Take him off,” said the grand provost
to the guards.
Georges d’Estouteville asked
permission to dress himself. On a sign from their
chief, the men put on his clothing with the clever
rapidity of a nurse who profits by the momentary tranquillity
of her nursling.
An immense crowd cumbered the rue
du Murier. The growls of the populace kept increasing,
and seemed the precursors of a riot. From early
morning the news of the robbery had spread through
the town. On all sides the “apprentice,”
said to be young and handsome, had awakened public
sympathy, and revived the hatred felt against Cornelius;
so that there was not a young man in the town, nor
a young woman with a fresh face and pretty feet to
exhibit, who was not determined to see the victim.
When Georges issued from the house, led by one of
the provost’s guard, who, after he had mounted
his horse, kept the strong leathern thong that bound
the prisoner tightly twisted round his arm, a horrible
uproar arose. Whether the populace merely wished
to see this new victim, or whether it intended to rescue
him, certain it is that those behind pressed those
in front upon the little squad of cavalry posted around
the Malemaison. At this moment, Cornelius, aided
by his sister, closed the door, and slammed the iron
shutters with the violence of panic terror. Tristan,
who was not accustomed to respect the populace of
those days (inasmuch as they were not yet the sovereign
people), cared little for a probable riot.
“Push on! push on!” he said to his men.
At the voice of their leader the archers
spurred their horses towards the end of the street.
The crowd, seeing one or two of their number knocked
down by the horses and trampled on, and some others
pressed against the sides of the horses and nearly
suffocated, took the wiser course of retreating to
their homes.
“Make room for the king’s
justice!” cried Tristan. “What are
you doing here? Do you want to be hanged too?
Go home, my friends, go home; your dinner is getting
burnt. Hey! my good woman, go and darn your husband’s
stockings; get back to your needles.”
Though such speeches showed that the
grand provost was in good humor, they made the most
obstreperous fly as if he were flinging the plague
upon them.
At the moment when the first movement
of the crowd took place, Georges d’Estouteville
was stupefied at seeing, at one of the windows of the
hotel de Poitiers, his dear Marie de Saint-Vallier,
laughing with the count. She was mocking at him,
poor devoted lover, who was going to his death for
her. But perhaps she was only amused at seeing
the caps of the populace carried off on the spears
of the archers. We must be twenty-three years
old, rich in illusions, able to believe in a woman’s
love, loving ourselves with all the forces of our being,
risking our life with delight on the faith of a kiss,
and then betrayed, to understand the fury of hatred
and despair which took possession of Georges d’Estouteville’s
heart at the sight of his laughing mistress, from
whom he received a cold and indifferent glance.
No doubt she had been there some time; she was leaning
from the window with her arms on a cushion; she was
at her ease, and her old man seemed content.
He, too, was laughing, the cursed hunchback!
A few tears escaped the eyes of the young man; but
when Marie de Saint-Vallier saw them she turned hastily
away. Those tears were suddenly dried, however,
when Georges beheld the red and white plumes of the
page who was devoted to his interests. The count
took no notice of this servitor, who advanced to his
mistress on tiptoe. After the page had said a
few words in her ear, Marie returned to the window.
Escaping for a moment the perpetual watchfulness of
her tyrant, she cast one glance upon Georges that
was brilliant with the fires of love and hope, seeming
to say:—
“I am watching over you.”
Had she cried the words aloud, she
could not have expressed their meaning more plainly
than in that glance, full of a thousand thoughts,
in which terror, hope, pleasure, the dangers of their
mutual situation all took part. He had passed,
in that one moment, from heaven to martyrdom and from
martyrdom back to heaven! So then, the brave young
seigneur, light-hearted and content, walked gaily to
his doom; thinking that the horrors of the “question”
were not sufficient payment for the delights of his
love.
As Tristan was about leaving the rue
du Murier, his people stopped him, seeing an officer
of the Scottish guard riding towards them at full
speed.
“What is it?” asked the provost.
“Nothing that concerns you,”
replied the officer, disdainfully. “The
king has sent me to fetch the Comte and Comtesse de
Saint-Vallier, whom he invites to dinner.”
The grand provost had scarcely reached
the embankment leading to Plessis, when the count
and his wife, both mounted, she on her white mule,
he on his horse, and followed by two pages, joined
the archers, in order to enter Plessis-lez-Tours in
company. All were moving slowly. Georges
was on foot, between two guards on horseback, one of
whom held him still by the leathern thong. Tristan,
the count, and his wife were naturally in advance;
the criminal followed them. Mingling with the
archers, the young page questioned them, speaking sometimes
to the prisoner, so that he adroitly managed to say
to him in a low voice:—
“I jumped the garden wall and
took a letter to Plessis from madame to the king.
She came near dying when she heard of the accusation
against you. Take courage. She is going
now to speak to the king about you.”
Love had already given strength and
wiliness to the countess. Her laughter was part
of the heroism which women display in the great crises
of life.
In spite of the singular fancy which
possessed the author of “Quentin Durward”
to place the royal castle of Plessis-lez-Tours upon
a height, we must content ourselves by leaving it
where it really was, namely on low land, protected
on either side by the Cher and the Loire; also
by the canal Sainte-Anne, so named by Louis XI. in
honor of his beloved daughter, Madame de Beaujeu.
By uniting the two rivers between the city of Tours
and Plessis this canal not only served as a formidable
protection to the castle, but it offered a most precious
road to commerce. On the side towards Brehemont,
a vast and fertile plain, the park was defended by
a moat, the remains of which still show its enormous
breadth and depth. At a period when the power
of artillery was still in embryo, the position of
Plessis, long since chosen by Louis XI. for his favorite
retreat, might be considered impregnable. The
castle, built of brick and stone, had nothing remarkable
about it; but it was surrounded by noble trees, and
from its windows could be seen, through vistas cut
in the park (plexitium), the finest points of view
in the world. No rival mansion rose near this
solitary castle, standing in the very centre of the
little plain reserved for the king and guarded by
four streams of water.
If we may believe tradition, Louis
XI. occupied the west wing, and from his chamber he
could see, at a glance the course of the Loire, the
opposite bank of the river, the pretty valley which
the Croisille waters, and part of the slopes of Saint-Cyr.
Also, from the windows that opened on the courtyard,
he saw the entrance to his fortress and the embankment
by which he had connected his favorite residence with
the city of Tours. If Louis XI. had bestowed upon
the building of his castle the luxury of architecture
which Francois I. displayed afterwards at Chambord,
the dwelling of the kings of France would ever have
remained in Touraine. It is enough to see this
splendid position and its magical effects to be convinced
of its superiority over the sites of all other royal
residences.
Louis XI., now in the fifty-seventh
year of his age, had scarcely more than three years
longer to live; already he felt the coming on of death
in the attacks of his mortal malady. Delivered
from his enemies; on the point of increasing the territory
of France by the possessions of the Dukes of Burgundy
through the marriage of the Dauphin with Marguerite,
heiress of Burgundy (brought about by means of Desquerdes,
commander of his troops in Flanders); having established
his authority everywhere, and now meditating ameliorations
in his kingdom of all kinds, he saw time slipping
past him rapidly with no further troubles than those
of old age. Deceived by every one, even by the
minions about him, experience had intensified his
natural distrust. The desire to live became in
him the egotism of a king who has incarnated himself
in his people; he wished to prolong his life in order
to carry out his vast designs.
All that the common-sense of publicists
and the genius of revolutions has since introduced
of change in the character of monarchy, Louis XI.
had thought of and devised. Unity of taxation,
equality of subjects before the law (the prince being
then the law) were the objects of his bold endeavors.
On All-Saints’ eve he had gathered together the
learned goldsmiths of his kingdom for the purpose of
establishing in France a unity of weights and measures,
as he had already established the unity of power.
Thus, his vast spirit hovered like an eagle over his
empire, joining in a singular manner the prudence of
a king to the natural idiosyncracies of a man of lofty
aims. At no period in our history has the great
figure of Monarchy been finer or more poetic.
Amazing assemblages of contrasts! a great power in
a feeble body; a spirit unbelieving as to all things
here below, devoutly believing in the practices of
religion; a man struggling with two powers greater
than his own—the present and the future;
the future in which he feared eternal punishment,
a fear which led him to make so many sacrifices to
the Church; the present, namely his life itself, for
the saving of which he blindly obeyed Coyctier.
This king, who crushed down all about him, was himself
crushed down by remorse, and by disease in the midst
of the great poem of defiant monarchy in which all
power was concentrated. It was once more the gigantic
and ever magnificent combat of Man in the highest
manifestation of his forces tilting against Nature.
While awaiting his dinner, a repast
which was taken in those days between eleven o’clock
and mid-day, Louis XI., returning from a short promenade,
sat down in a huge tapestried chair near the fireplace
in his chamber. Olivier de Daim, and his doctor,
Coyctier, looked at each other without a word, standing
in the recess of a window and watching their master,
who presently seemed asleep. The only sound that
was heard were the steps of the two chamberlains on
service, the Sire de Montresor, and Jean Dufou, Sire
de Montbazon, who were walking up and down the adjoining
hall. These two Tourainean seigneurs looked at
the captain of the Scottish guard, who was sleeping
in his chair, according to his usual custom.
The king himself appeared to be dozing. His head
had drooped upon his breast; his cap, pulled forward
on his forehead, hid his eyes. Thus seated in
his high chair, surmounted by the royal crown, he
seemed crouched together like a man who had fallen
asleep in the midst of some deep meditation.
At this moment Tristan and his cortege
crossed the canal by the bridge of Sainte-Anne, about
two hundred feet from the entrance to Plessis.
“Who is that?” said the king.
The two courtiers questioned each other with a look
of surprise.
“He is dreaming,” said Coyctier, in a
low voice.
“Pasques-Dieu!” cried
Louis XI., “do you think me mad? People
are crossing the bridge. It is true I am near
the chimney, and I may hear sounds more easily than
you. That effect of nature might be utilized,”
he added thoughtfully.
“What a man!” said de Daim.
Louis XI. rose and went toward one
of the windows that looked on the town. He saw
the grand provost, and exclaimed:—
“Ha, ha! here’s my crony
and his thief. And here comes my little Marie
de Saint-Vallier; I’d forgotten all about it.
Olivier,” he said, addressing the barber, “go
and tell Monsieur de Montbazon to serve some good
Bourgeuil wine at dinner, and see that the cook doesn’t
forget the lampreys; Madame le comtesse likes both
those things. Can I eat lampreys?” he added,
after a pause, looking anxiously at Coyctier.
For all answer the physician began
to examine his master’s face. The two men
were a picture in themselves.
History and romance-writers have consecrated
the brown camlet coat, and the breeches of the same
stuff, worn by Louis XI. His cap, decorated with
leaden medallions, and his collar of the order of
Saint-Michel, are not less celebrated; but no writer,
no painter has represented the face of that terrible
monarch in his last years,—a sickly, hollow,
yellow and brown face, all the features of which expressed
a sour craftiness, a cold sarcasm. In that mask
was the forehead of a great man, a brow furrowed with
wrinkles, and weighty with high thoughts; but in his
cheeks and on his lips there was something indescribably
vulgar and common. Looking at certain details
of that countenance you would have thought him a debauched
husbandman, or a miserly pedler; and yet, above these
vague resemblances and the decrepitude of a dying
old man, the king, the man of power, rose supreme.
His eyes, of a light yellow, seemed at first sight
extinct; but a spark of courage and of anger lurked
there, and at the slightest touch it could burst into
flames and cast fire about him. The doctor was
a stout burgher, with a florid face, dressed in black,
peremptory, greedy of gain, and self-important.
These two personages were framed, as it were, in that
panelled chamber, hung with high-warped tapestries
of Flanders, the ceiling of which, made of carved beams,
was blackened by smoke. The furniture, the bed,
all inlaid with arabesques in pewter, would seem to-day
more precious than they were at that period when the
arts were beginning to produce their choicest masterpieces.
“Lampreys are not good for you,” replied
the physician.
That title, recently substituted for
the former term of “myrrh-master,” is
still applied to the faculty in England. The
name was at this period given to doctors everywhere.
“Then what may I eat?” asked the king,
humbly.
“Salt mackerel. Otherwise,
you have so much bile in motion that you may die on
All-Souls’ Day.”
“To-day!” cried the king in terror.
“Compose yourself, sire,”
replied Coyctier. “I am here. Try not
to fret your mind; find some way to amuse yourself.”
“Ah!” said the king, “my
daughter Marie used to succeed in that difficult business.”
As he spoke, Imbert de Bastarnay,
sire of Montresor and Bridore, rapped softly on the
royal door. On receiving the king’s permission
he entered and announced the Comte and Comtesse de
Saint-Vallier. Louis XI. made a sign. Marie
appeared, followed by her old husband, who allowed
her to pass in first.
“Good-day, my children,” said the king.
“Sire,” replied his daughter
in a low voice, as she embraced him, “I want
to speak to you in secret.”
Louis XI. appeared not to have heard
her. He turned to the door and called out in
a hollow voice, “Hola, Dufou!”
Dufou, seigneur of Montbazon and grand
cup-bearer of France, entered in haste.
“Go to the maitre d’hotel,
and tell him I must have salt mackerel for dinner.
And go to Madame de Beaujeu, and let her know that
I wish to dine alone to-day. Do you know, madame,”
continued the king, pretending to be slightly angry,
“that you neglect me? It is almost three
years since I have seen you. Come, come here,
my pretty,” he added, sitting down and holding
out his arms to her. “How thin you have
grown! Why have you let her grow so thin?”
said the king, roughly, addressing the Comte de Poitiers.
The jealous husband cast so frightened
a look at his wife that she almost pitied him.
“Happiness, sire!” he stammered.
“Ah! you love each other too
much,—is that it?” said the king,
holding his daughter between his knees. “I
did right to call you Mary-full-of-grace. Coyctier,
leave us! Now, then, what do you want of me?”
he said to his daughter the moment the doctor had gone.
“After sending me your—”
In this danger, Marie boldly put her
hand on the king’s lips and said in his ear,—
“I always thought you cautious and penetrating.”
“Saint-Vallier,” said
the king, laughing, “I think that Bridore has
something to say to you.”
The count left the room; but he made
a gesture with his shoulders well known to his wife,
who could guess the thoughts of the jealous man, and
knew she must forestall his cruel designs.
“Tell me, my child, how do you
think I am,—hey? Do I seem changed
to you?”
“Sire, do you want me to tell
you the real truth, or would you rather I deceived
you?”
“No,” he said, in a low
voice, “I want to know truly what to expect.”
“In that case, I think you look
very ill to-day; but you will not let my truthfulness
injure the success of my cause, will you?”
“What is your cause?”
asked the king, frowning and passing a hand across
his forehead.
“Ah, sire,” she replied,
“the young man you have had arrested for robbing
your silversmith Cornelius, and who is now in the hands
of the grand provost, is innocent of the robbery.”
“How do you know that?”
asked the king. Marie lowered her head and blushed.
“I need not ask if there is
love in this business,” said the king, raising
his daughter’s head gently and stroking her chin.
“If you don’t confess every morning, my
daughter, you will go to hell.”
“Cannot you oblige me without
forcing me to tell my secret thoughts?”
“Where would be the pleasure?”
cried the king, seeing only an amusement in this affair.
“Ah! do you want your pleasure to cost me grief?”
“Oh! you sly little girl, haven’t you
any confidence in me?”
“Then, sire, set the young nobleman at liberty.”
“So! he is a nobleman, is he?”
cried the king. “Then he is not an apprentice?”
“He is certainly innocent,” she said.
“I don’t see it so,”
said the king, coldly. “I am the law and
justice of my kingdom, and I must punish evil-doers.”
“Come, don’t put on that
solemn face of yours! Give me the life of that
young man.”
“Is it yours already?”
“Sire,” she said, “I am pure and
virtuous. You are jesting at—”
“Then,” said Louis XI.,
interrupting her, “as I am not to know the truth,
I think Tristan had better clear it up.”
Marie turned pale, but she made a violent effort and
cried out:—
“Sire, I assure you, you will
regret all this. The so-called thief stole nothing.
If you will grant me his pardon, I will tell you everything,
even though you may punish me.”
“Ho, ho! this is getting serious,”
cried the king, shoving up his cap. “Speak
out, my daughter.”
“Well,” she said, in a
low voice, putting her lips to her father’s
ear, “he was in my room all night.”
“He could be there, and yet
rob Cornelius. Two robberies!”
“I have your blood in my veins,
and I was not born to love a scoundrel. That
young seigneur is the nephew of the captain-general
of your archers.”
“Well, well!” cried the king; “you
are hard to confess.”
With the words the king pushed his
daughter from his knee, and hurried to the door of
the room, but softly on tiptoe, making no noise.
For the last moment or two, the light from a window
in the adjoining hall, shining through a space below
the door, had shown him the shadow of a listener’s
foot projected on the floor of his chamber. He
opened the door abruptly, and surprised the Comte
de Saint-Vallier eavesdropping.
“Pasques-Dieu!” he cried;
“here’s an audacity that deserves the axe.”
“Sire,” replied Saint-Vallier,
haughtily, “I would prefer an axe at my throat
to the ornament of marriage on my head.”
“You may have both,” said
Louis XI. “None of you are safe from such
infirmities, messieurs. Go into the farther hall.
Conyngham,” continued the king, addressing the
captain of the guard, “you are asleep!
Where is Monsieur de Bridore? Why do you let me
be approached in this way? Pasques-Dieu! the
lowest burgher in Tours is better served than I am.”
After scolding thus, Louis re-entered
his room; but he took care to draw the tapestried
curtain, which made a second door, intended more to
stifle the words of the king than the whistling of
the harsh north wind.
“So, my daughter,” he
said, liking to play with her as a cat plays with
a mouse, “Georges d’Estouteville was your
lover last night?”
“Oh, no, sire!”
“No! Ah! by Saint-Carpion,
he deserves to die. Did the scamp not think my
daughter beautiful?”
“Oh! that is not it,”
she said. “He kissed my feet and hands with
an ardor that might have touched the most virtuous
of women. He loves me truly in all honor.”
“Do you take me for Saint-Louis,
and suppose I should believe such nonsense? A
young fellow, made like him, to have risked his life
just to kiss your little slippers or your sleeves!
Tell that to others.”
“But, sire, it is true.
And he came for another purpose.”
Having said these words, Marie felt
that she had risked the life of her husband, for Louis
instantly demanded:
“What purpose?”
The adventure amused him immensely.
But he did not expect the strange confidences his
daughter now made to him after stipulating for the
pardon of her husband.
“Ho, ho, Monsieur de Saint-Vallier!
So you dare to shed the royal blood!” cried
the king, his eyes lighting with anger.
At this moment the bell of Plessis
sounded the hour of the king’s dinner.
Leaning on the arm of his daughter, Louis XI. appeared
with contracted brows on the threshold of his chamber,
and found all his servitors in waiting. He cast
an ambiguous look on the Comte de Saint-Vallier, thinking
of the sentence he meant to pronounce upon him.
The deep silence which reigned was presently broken
by the steps of Tristan l’Hermite as he mounted
the grand staircase. The grand provost entered
the hall, and, advancing toward the king, said:—
“Sire, the affair is settled.”
“What! is it all over?” said the king.
“Our man is in the hands of
the monks. He confessed the theft after a touch
of the ‘question.’”
The countess gave a sign, and turned
pale; she could not speak, but looked at the king.
That look was observed by Saint-Vallier, who muttered
in a low tone: “I am betrayed; that thief
is an acquaintance of my wife.”
“Silence!” cried the king.
“Some one is here who will wear out my patience.
Go at once and put a stop to the execution,”
he continued, addressing the grand provost. “You
will answer with your own body for that of the criminal,
my friend. This affair must be better sifted,
and I reserve to myself the doing of it. Set the
prisoner at liberty provisionally; I can always recover
him; these robbers have retreats they frequent, lairs
where they lurk. Let Cornelius know that I shall
be at his house to-night to begin the inquiry myself.
Monsieur de Saint-Vallier,” said the king, looking
fixedly at the count, “I know about you.
All your blood could not pay for one drop of mine;
do you hear me? By our Lady of Clery! you have
committed crimes of lese-majesty. Did I give
you such a pretty wife to make her pale and weakly?
Go back to your own house, and make your preparations
for a long journey.”
The king stopped at these words from
a habit of cruelty; then he added:—
“You will leave to-night to
attend to my affairs with the government of Venice.
You need be under no anxiety about your wife; I shall
take charge of her at Plessis; she will certainly
be safe here. Henceforth I shall watch over her
with greater care than I have done since I married
her to you.”
Hearing these words, Marie silently
pressed her father’s arm as if to thank him
for his mercy and goodness. As for Louis XI.,
he was laughing to himself in his sleeve.