That same deadly pang of jealousy which had a.s.sailed his heart after the midnight interview at the inn now held him in its cruel grip again. He felt that he hated the man to whom he owed his life, and that he hated himself for this mean and base ingrat.i.tude. He would not trust himself to speak or to look on Bobby at all, lest the ugly thoughts which were floating through his mind set their stamp upon his face.
"Will you ride on to Brussels?" he said at last. "I can wait here . . .
and perhaps you could send a conveyance for me later on. M. le Comte de Cambray would . . ."
"M. le Comte de Cambray and Mademoiselle Crystal are even now devoured with anxiety about you," broke in Clyffurde as firmly as he could. "And I could not ride to Brussels--even though some one were waiting for me there--I really am not able to ride further. I would prefer to sit here and rest."
"I don"t like to leave you . . . after . . . after what you have done for me . . . I would like to . . ."
"I would like you to scramble into that saddle and go," retorted Bobby with a momentary return to his usual good-natured irony, "and to leave me in peace."
"I"ll send out a conveyance for you," rejoined St. Genis. "I know M. le Comte de Cambray would wish . . ."
"Mention my name to M. le Comte at your peril . . ." began Clyffurde.
"But . . ."
"By the Lord, man," now exclaimed Bobby with a sudden burst of energy, "if you do not go, I vow that sick as I am, and sick though you may be, I"ll yet manage to punch your aching head."
Then as the other--still reluctantly--turned to take hold of the horse"s bridle, he added more gently: "Can you mount?"
"Oh, yes! I am better now."
"You won"t turn giddy, and fall off your horse?"
"I don"t think so."
"Talk about the halt leading the blind!" murmured Clyffurde as he stretched himself out once more upon the soft ground, whilst Maurice contrived to hoist himself up into the saddle. "Are you safe now?" he added as the young man collected the reins in his hand, and planted his feet firmly into the stirrups.
"Yes! I am safe enough," replied St. Genis. "It is only my head that aches: and Brussels is not far."
Then he paused a moment ere he started to go--with lips set tight and looking down on Bobby, whose pale face had taken on an ashen hue:
"How you must despise me," he said bitterly.
But Bobby made no reply: he was just longing to be left alone, whilst the other still seemed inclined to linger.
"Would to G.o.d," Maurice said with a sigh, "that M. le Comte heard the evil news from other lips than mine."
"Evil news?" And Bobby, whom semi-consciousness was already taking off once more to the land of visions and of dreams--was brought back to reality--as if with a sudden jerk--with those two preposterous little words.
"What evil news?" he asked.
"The allied armies have retreated all along the line . . . the Corsican adventurer is victorious . . . our poor King . . ."
"Hold your tongue, you young fool," cried Bobby hoa.r.s.ely. "The Lord help you but I do believe you are about to blaspheme . . ."
"But . . ."
"The Allied Armies--the British Army, G.o.d bless it!--have covered themselves with glory--Napoleon and his Empire have ceased to be. The Grand Army is in full retreat . . . the Prussians are in pursuit. . . .
The British have won the day by their pluck and their endurance. . . .
Thank G.o.d I lived just long enough to see it all, ere I fell . . ."
"But when we charged the cuira.s.siers . . ." began St. Genis, not knowing really if Bobby was raving in delirium, or speaking of what he knew. He wanted to ask further questions, to hear something more before he started for Brussels . . . the only thing which he remembered with absolute certainty was that awful charge of his regiment against the cuira.s.siers, then the panic and the rout: and he judged the whole issue of the battle by what had happened to a detachment of Brunswickers.
And yet, of course--before the charge--he had seen and known all that Bobby told him now. That rush of the Brunswickers and the Dutch down the hillside was only a part of the huge and glorious charge of the whole of the Allied troops against the routed Grand Army of Napoleon. He had neither the physical strength nor the desire to think out all that it would mean to him personally if what Bobby now told him was indeed absolutely true.
He was longing to make the wounded man rouse himself just once more and reiterate the glad news which meant so much to him--Maurice--and to Crystal. But it was useless to think of that now. Bobby was either unconscious or asleep. For a moment a twinge of real pity made St.
Genis" heart ache for the man who seemed to be left so lonely and so desolate: jealousy itself gave way before that more gentle feeling.
After all, Crystal could only be true to the love of her childhood; her heart belonged to the companion, the lover, the ideal of her girlish dreams. This stranger here loved her--that was obvious--but Crystal had never looked on him with anything but indifference. Even that dance last night . . . but of this Maurice would not think lest pity die out of his heart again . . . and jealousy and hate walk hand in hand with base ingrat.i.tude.
He turned his horse"s head round to the road, pressed his knees into its sides, and then as the poor, weary beast started to amble leisurely down the road, Maurice looked back for the last time on the prostrate, pathetic figure of the lonely man who had given his all for him: he looked at every landmark which would enable him to find that man again--the angle of the forest where it touched the meadow,--the milestone, the trees by the roadside--oh! he meant to do his duty, to do it well and quickly, to send the conveyance, to neglect nothing; then, with a sigh--half of bitterness, yet full of satisfaction--he finally turned away and looked straight out before him into the distance where Brussels lay, and where the happiness of Crystal"s love called to him, and he would find rest and peace in the warm affection of her faithful heart.
CHAPTER XI
THE LOSING HANDS
I
An hour later Maurice de St. Genis was in Brussels. Though his head still ached his mind was clear, and thoughts of Crystal--of happiness with her now at last within sight--had chased every other thought away.
His home had been with the de Cambrays ever since those old, sad days in England; he had a home to go to now:--a home where the kindly friendship of the Comte as well as the love of Crystal was ready to welcome him.
The warmth of antic.i.p.ated happiness and well-being warmed his heart and gave strength to his body. The horrors of the past few hours seemed all to have melted away behind him on the Brussels road as did the remembrance of a man--wounded himself and spent--risking his life for the sake of a friend. Not that St. Genis meant to be ungrateful--nor did he forget that wounded man--lying alone and sick on the fringe of the wood by the roadside.
As soon as he had taken his horse round to the barracks in the rue des Comediens, and before even he had a wash or had his uniform cleaned of stains and mud, he rushed to the headquarters of the Army Service to see how soon a conveyance could be sent out to his friend--and when he was unable to obtain what he wanted there, he rushed from hospital to hospital, thence to two or three doctors whom he knew of to see what could be done. But the hospitals were already over-full and over-busy: their ambulances were all already on the way: as for the doctors, they were all from home--all at work where their skill was most needed--an army of doctors, of ambulances and drivers would not suffice at this hour to bring all the wounded in from the spot where that awful battle was raging.
And Maurice saw time slipping by: he had already spent an hour in a fruitless quest. He longed to see Crystal and waxed impatient at the delay. Anon at the English hospital a kindly person--who listened sympathetically to his tale--promised him that the ambulance which was just setting out in the direction of Mont Saint Jean would be on the look-out for his wounded friend by the roadside; and Maurice with a sigh of relief felt that he had indeed done his duty and done his best.
At the English hospital Clyffurde would be splendidly looked after--nowhere else could he find such sympathetic treatment! And Maurice with a light heart went back to the barracks in the rue des Comediens, where he had a wash and had his uniform cleaned. Somewhat refreshed, though still very tired, he hurried round to the rue du Marais, where the Comte de Cambray had his lodgings. The first sight of Brussels had already told him the whole pitiable tale of panic and of desolation which had filled the city in the wake of the fugitive troops.
The streets were enc.u.mbered with vehicles of every kind--carts, barouches, barrows--with horses loosely tethered, with the wounded who lay about on litters of straw along the edges of the pavement, in doorways, under archways in the centre of open places, with crowds of weeping women and crying children wandering aimlessly from place to place trying to find the loved one who might be lying here, hurt or mayhap dying.
And everywhere men in tattered uniforms, with grimy hands and faces, and boots knee-deep in stains of mud, stood about or sat in the empty carts, talking, gesticulating, giving sundry, confused and contradictory accounts of the great battle--describing Napoleon"s decisive victory--Wellington"s rout--the prolonged absence of Blucher and the Prussians, cause of the terrible disaster.
M. le Comte d"Artois had rushed precipitately from Brussels up to Ghent to warn His Majesty the King of France that all hope of saving his throne was now at an end, and that the wisest course to pursue was to return to England and resign himself once more to obscurity and exile.
M. le Prince de Conde too had gone off to Antwerp in a huge barouche, having under his care the treasure and jewels of the crown hastily collected three months ago at the Tuileries.
In every open s.p.a.ce a number of prisoners were being guarded by mixed patrols of Dutch, Belgian or German soldiers, and their cry of "Vive l"Empereur!" which they reiterated with unshakable obstinacy roused the ire of their captors, and provoked many a savage blow, and many a broken head.
But St. Genis did not pause to look on these sights: he had not the strength to stand up in the midst of these confused ma.s.ses of terror-driven men and women, and to shout to them that they were fools--that all their panic must be turned to joy, their lamentations to shouts of jubilation. News of victory was bound to spread through the city within the next hour, and he himself longed only to see Crystal, to rea.s.sure her as to his own safety, to see the light of happiness kindled in her eyes by the news which he brought. He had not the strength for more.
It was old Jeanne who opened the door at the lodgings in the rue du Marais when Maurice finally rang the bell there.
"M. le Marquis!" she exclaimed. "Oh! but you are ill."
"Only very tired and weak, Jeanne," he said. "It has been an awful day."