It is there that you will be happy, as the bon Dieu meant you to be. It is only in England that no one fears Napoleon. One may have a husband there and not fear that he will be killed. One may have children and not tremble for them--and it is that that makes you happy--you women."
Presently he rose and led the way down the slope. At the foot of it, he paused, and pointing out a long line of trees, said in a whisper--
"He is there--where there are three taller trees. Between us and those trees are the French outposts. At dawn the Russians attack the outposts, and during the attack we have simply to go through it to those trees.
There is no other way--that is the rendezvous. Those three tall trees.
When I give the word, you get up and run to those trees--run without pausing, without looking round. I will follow. It is you he has come for--not Barlasch. You think I know nothing. Bah! I know everything. I have always known it--your poor little secret."
They lay on the snow crouching in a ditch until a grey line appeared low down in the Eastern sky and the horizon slowly distinguished itself from the thin thread of cloud that nearly always awaits the rising of the sun in Northern lat.i.tudes.
A minute later the dark group of trees broke into intermittent flame and the sharp, short "Hurrah!" of the Cossacks, like an angry bark, came sweeping across the plain on the morning breeze.
"Not yet," whispered Barlasch, with a gay chuckle of enjoyment. "Not yet--not yet. Listen, the bullets are not coming here, but are going past to the right of us. When you go, keep to the left. Slowly at first--keep a little breath till the end. Now, up! Mademoiselle, run; name of thunder, let us run!"
Desiree did not understand which were the French lines and which the line of Russian attack. But there was a clear way to the three trees which stood above the rest, and she went towards them. She knew she could not run so far, so she walked. Then the bullets, instead of pa.s.sing to the right, seemed to play round her--like bees in a garden on a summer day--and she ran until she was tired.
The trees were quite close now, and the sky was light behind them. Then she saw Louis coming towards her, and she ran into his arms. The sound of the humming bullets was still in her dazed brain, and she touched him all over with her gloved hand as she clung to him, as a mother touches her child when it has fallen, to see whether it be hurt.
"How was I to know?" she whispered breathlessly. "How was I to know that you were to come into my life?"
The bullets did not matter, it seemed, nor the roar of the firing to the right of them. Nothing mattered--except that Louis must know that she had never loved Charles.
He held her and said nothing. And she wanted him to say nothing. Then she remembered Barlasch, and looked back over her shoulder.
"Where is Barlasch?" she asked, with a sudden sinking at her heart.
"He is coming slowly," replied Louis. "He came slowly behind you all the time, so as to draw the fire away from you."
They turned and waited for Barlasch, who seemed to be going in the wrong direction with an odd vagueness in his movements. Louis ran towards him with Desiree at his heels.
"Ca-y-est," said Barlasch; which cannot be translated, and yet has many meanings. "Ca-y-est."
And he sat down slowly on the snow. He sat quite upright and rigid, and in the cold light of the Baltic dawn they saw the meaning of his words.
One hand was within his fur coat. He drew it out, and concealed it from Desiree behind his back. He did not seem to see them, but presently he put out his hand and lightly touched Desiree. Then he turned to Louis with that confidential drop of the voice with which he always distinguished his friends from those who were not his friends.
"What is she doing?" he asked. "I cannot see in the dark. Is it not dark? I thought it was. What is she doing? Saying a prayer?
What--because I have my affair? Hey, mademoiselle. You may leave it to me. I will get in, I tell you that."
He put his finger to his nose, and then shook it from side to side with an air of deep cunning.
"Leave it to me. I shall slip in. Who will stop an old man, who has many wounds? Not St. Peter, a.s.suredly. Let him try. And if the good G.o.d hears a commotion at the gate, He will only shrug His shoulders. He will say to St. Peter, "Let pa.s.s; it is only Papa Barlasch!""
And then there was silence. For Barlasch had gone to his own people.