"Indeed, you deceive yourself, sir; without taking account of a thousand general facts with which I might corroborate my opinion, I will cite on this subject a fact quite personal and particular to the very man of whom we are now talking."
"To Lord Mortimer?"
"To him, sir. I shall never forget that once I saw him seized with frightful convulsions under circ.u.mstances almost similar. There were nervous starts--swoons----"
"However, your highness, Lord Mortimer has an athletic const.i.tution."
"An athletic const.i.tution? Come, then, it only remained that I should encounter a Hercules in this run-mad Pylades," thought Croustillac. He spoke aloud:
"You don"t know, sir, that it is these very men of great strength who are just the ones who most keenly feel such shocks. I will even tell you--but this is entirely between ourselves--at least----"
"Your highness may be sure of my discretion."
"You will understand my reserve, sir. I will tell you then that, on the occasion of which I speak--this unfortunate Mortimer was so stupefied--(if it were not for our intimate friendship, I should say rendered stupid) by seeing too suddenly some one he had not met for a long time--that his head--you comprehend----"
"What, your highness, his reason----"
"Alas! yes, in this instance only--. You now comprehend why I demand secrecy of you?"
"Yes, yes, your highness."
"But that was not all; the shock suffered by poor Mortimer was such that, after having remained several moments stupefied with surprise, he no longer recognized this person; no, sir, he did not recognize him, though he had seen him a thousand times!"
"Is it possible, your highness?" said De Chemerant, in a tone of respectful doubt.
"It is, alas! only too true, sir, for you have no idea of the excitability of this good fellow. So I, who am his friend, should watch carefully that no trouble come to him. Think, then, if I should expose him to the risk of not knowing me. Mortimer is now the one whom I love most in the world, and you know, alas! sir, if the consolations of friendship are necessary to me."
"Still these unhappy memories, your highness?"
"Yes, I am weak, I own it--it is stronger than I."
"What is this ship anch.o.r.ed not far from the frigate?" demanded De Chemerant of the master of the long boat, in order to change the conversation, out of regard for the feelings of the supposed duke.
"That, sir, is a merchantman, which arrived last night from St. Pierre,"
said the sailor, respectfully removing his cap.
"Ah! I know," said De Chemerant; "it is probably the ship of that fool of a merchant-captain who demanded our escort. But here we are, your highness--the lights are all out--you are not expected."
"So much the better, so much the better; provided Mortimer is not there."
"It seems to me that I see him on the bridge, your highness."
Croustillac raised his mantle almost to his eyes.
"Ah! there is the officer of the watch on the ladder. What a pity to arrive so late, your highness. It is to the beat of drums, the flourish of trumpets, that your highness should have been received, with the ship"s crew presenting arms."
"Honors to-morrow--honors to-morrow," said Croustillac; "the hour of these frivolities always comes soon enough."
Chemerant drew aside to allow the Gascon to mount the ladder first. The latter breathed freely again on seeing on deck only an officer of marines, who received him with bared head and a profoundly respectful air. Croustillac responded with great dignity, and above all, very briefly, enveloping himself in his mantle with the utmost care, and casting uneasy glances around him, fearing to see the terrible Mortimer.
Fortunately he saw only the sailors talking together or reclining by the side of the guns.
The officer, who was speaking in a low tone to De Chemerant, saluting Croustillac again, said to him:
"Your highness, since you command it, I will not awaken the captain, and I shall have the honor of conducting you to your cabin."
Croustillac inclined his head.
"Till to-morrow, your highness," said De Chemerant.
"Till to-morrow," responded the adventurer.
The officer descended by the hatchway to the gun-deck, opened the door of a large, wide cabin perfectly lighted by a skylight, and said to the Gascon: "Your highness, there is your cabin; there are two other small rooms to the right and left."
"This is admirable, sir; do me the favor, I pray you, to give the strictest orders that no one enters my cabin to-morrow until I call. No one, sir, you understand--absolutely no one!--this is of the last importance."
"Very well, my lord. Your highness does not wish that I should send one of the people to a.s.sist you to disrobe?"
"I am a soldier, sir," said Croustillac proudly, "and I disrobe without a.s.sistance."
The young officer bowed, taking this response for a lesson in stoicism; he went out, ordering one of the orderlies to allow no one to enter the cabin of the duke, and again ascended on deck to rejoin De Chemerant.
"Your duke is a veritable Spartan, my dear De Chemerant," said he to him. "Why! he has not brought even a lackey."
"That is true," responded De Chemerant; "such strange things have taken place on land that neither he nor I thought of it; but I will give him one of my people. Just now the important thing is to set sail."
"That is also the opinion of the captain. He gave me orders to wake him if you judged it necessary to depart at once."
"We will start on the instant, for both wind and tide are in our favor, I think," answered De Chemerant.
"So favorable," said the officer, "that if this wind holds, to-morrow by sunrise we shall no longer be able to see the sh.o.r.es of Martinique."
A half-hour after the arrival of the Gascon on board, the Thunderer got under sail with an excellent breeze from the southwest.
When De Chemerant saw the frigate leaving the roads, he could not refrain from rubbing his hands, saying to himself, "Faith it is not that I am vain and boastful, but I would only have given this mission in a hundred to the most skillful of men--to unravel the projects of the English envoy, to conquer the scruples of the duke, to aid him to revenge himself on a guilty wife, to tear him by force of eloquence from the overwhelming feelings this conjugal accident has roused in his soul, to bring him back to England at the head of his partisans--by my faith, Chemerant, my friend, that was left to you to do! Your fortune, already on the road to success, behold it forever a.s.sured; this good success delights me the more that the king regards this affair as important.
Once more, bravo!"
Chemerant with a light and joyful heart slept, cradled by the most pleasing and ambitious thoughts.
It was half-past ten in the morning; the wind was fresh, the sea a little rough, but very beautiful; the Thunderer left behind her a shining wake. The land was no longer to be seen. The ship was in mid-ocean.
The officer of the watch, armed with a gla.s.s, examined with attention a three-masted vessel about two cannon shots distant, which kept precisely the same route as the frigate and sailed as quickly as she did, although carrying a few light sails the less.
On the extreme horizon the officer remarked also another ship which he as yet distinguished vaguely, but which seemed to follow the same direction as the three-master, whose maneuver we have just pointed out.
Wishing to find out if this latter ship would persist in imitating the movements of the Thunderer, the officer ordered the man at the wheel to bear away a little more to the north.
The three-master bore away a little more to the north.
The officer gave orders to bear away to the west.