"Why? How should I know that? He came before when you asked him."
Desiree leant over the table and wrote six words:
"Come, if you can come safely."
Barlasch took up the paper, and, pushing up the bandage which had served to bring him unharmed through Russia, he frowned at it without understanding.
"It is not all writings that I can read," he admitted. "Have you signed it?"
"No."
"Then sign something that he will know, and no other--they might shoot me. Your baptismal name."
And she wrote "Desiree" after the six words.
Barlasch folded the paper carefully and placed it in the lining of an old felt hat of Sebastian"s which he now wore. He bound a scarf over his ears, after the manner of those who live on the Baltic sh.o.r.es in winter.
"You can leave the rest to me," he said; and, with a nod and a grimace expressive of cunning, he left her.
He did not return that night. The days were short now, for the winter was well set in. It was nearly dark the next afternoon and very cold when he came back. He sent Lisa upstairs for Desiree.
"First," he said, "there is a question for the patron. Will he quit Dantzig?--that is the question."
"No," answered Desiree.
"Rapp is coming," said Barlasch, emphasizing each point with one finger against the side of his nose. "He will hold Dantzig. There will be a siege. Let the patron make no mistake. It will not be like the last one.
Rapp was outside then; he will be inside this time. He will hold Dantzig till the bottom falls out of the world."
"My father will not leave," said Desiree. "He has said so. He knows that Rapp is coming, with the Russians behind him."
"But," interrupted Barlasch, "he thinks that Prussia will turn and declare war against Napoleon. That may be. Who knows? The question is, Can the patron be induced to quit Dantzig?"
Desiree shook her head.
"It is not I," said Barlasch, "who ask the question. You understand?"
"Yes, I understand. My father will not quit Dantzig."
Whereupon Barlasch made a gesture conveying a desire to think as kindly of Antoine Sebastian as he could.
"In half an hour," he said, "when it is dark, will you come for a walk with me along the Langfuhr road--where the unfinished ramparts are?"
Desiree looked at him and hesitated.
"Oh--good--if you are afraid--" said Barlasch.
"I am not afraid--I will come," she answered quickly.
The snow was hard when they set out, and squeaked under their feet, as it does with a low thermometer.
"We shall leave no tracks," said Barlasch, as he led the way off the Langfuhr road towards the river. There was broken ground here, where earthworks had been begun and never completed. The trees had been partly cut, and beneath the snow were square mounds showing where the timber had been piled up. But since the departure of Rapp, all had been left incomplete.
Barlasch turned towards Desiree and pointed out a rising knoll of land with fir-trees on it--an outline against the sky where a faint aurora borealis lit the north. She understood that Louis was waiting there, and must necessarily see them approaching across the untrodden snow. For an instant she lingered, and Barlasch turning, glanced at her sharply over his shoulder. She had come against her will, and her companion knew it.
Her feet were heavy with misgiving, like the feet of one who treads an uncertain road into a strange country. She had been afraid of Louis d"Arragon when she first caught sight of him in the Frauenga.s.se. The fear of him was with her now, and would not depart until he himself swept it away by the first word he spoke.
He came out from beneath the trees, made a few steps forward, and then stopped. Again Desiree lingered, and Barlasch, who was naturally impatient, turned and took her by the arm.
"Is it the snow--that you find slippery?" he asked, not requiring an answer. A moment later Louis came forward.
"There is nothing but bad news," he said laconically. "Barlasch will have told you; but there is no need to give up hope. The army has reached the Niemen; the rearguard has quitted Vilna. There is nothing for it but to go and look for him."
"Who will go?" she asked quietly.
"I."
He was looking at her with grave eyes trained to darkness. But she looked past him towards the sky, which was faintly lighted by the aurora. Her averted eyes and rigid att.i.tude were not without some suggestion of guilt.
"My ship is ice-bound at Reval," said D"Arragon, in a matter-of-fact way. "They have no use for me until the winter is over, and they have given me three months" leave."
"To go to England?" she asked.
"To go anywhere I like," he said, with a short laugh. "So I am going to look for Charles, and Barlasch will come with me."
"At a price," put in that soldier, in a shrewd undertone. "At a price."
"A small one," corrected Louis, turning to look at him with the close attention of one exploring a new country.
"Bah! You give what you can. One does not go back across the Niemen for pleasure. We bargained, and we came to terms. I got as much as I could."
Louis laughed, as if this were the blunt truth.
"If I had more, I would give you more. It is the money I placed in a Dantzig bank for my cousin. I must take it out again, that is all."
The last words were addressed to Desiree, as if he had acted in a.s.surance of her approval.
"But I have more," she said; "a little--not very much. We must not think of money. We must do everything to find him--to give him help, if he needs it."
"Yes," answered Louis, as if she had asked him a question. "We must do everything; but I have no more money."
"And I have none with me. I have nothing that I can sell."
She withdrew her fur mitten and held out her hand, as if to show that she had no rings, except the plain gold one on her third finger.
"You have the ikon I brought you from Moscow," said Barlasch gruffly.
"Sell that."
"No," answered Desiree; "I will not sell that."
Barlasch laughed cynically.