Barrington gasped as a man who receives a heavy blow. His hand fell on a chair-back to steady himself. He saw nothing but that filthy crowd, and that coach swaying in the midst of it. Jeanne was the woman within, and he had made no effort to save her.
CHAPTER XII
CITIZEN BRUSLART
The two men stared at each other with unseeing eyes, neither conscious, it would seem, of the other"s presence. The circ.u.mstances called for prompt action, for swift decision, for keen and subtle energy, yet they were silent, helpless, looking into vacancy, and seeing visions.
Suddenly Lucien sat down and let his head fall upon his arms thrown out across the table, a personification of despair which might take the heart out of any observer. The action served, however, to bring.
Barrington back into the present, to conserve his energies, to make him a man of action again. His frame stiffened, much as it had done that afternoon when the crowd with the coach in its midst had pa.s.sed him.
Then came the memory of the restraining hand laid on his arm. It acquired a new significance.
"Tell me the whole story," he said. "There is no time to lose."
"I was a fool. Lafayette was right. I ought never to have brought her here," wailed Bruslart, utter despair in his voice; and then, after a moment"s pause, he went on with desperate energy as though he had a difficult confession to make and must tell it in a rush of words, or be afraid to tell it at all. "It took me more than two hours to arrange with my friend. He was out when I got there and I had to wait, then he was a long time discussing the best means of securing mademoiselle"s safety, and how she could most easily be taken to his house unseen.
Nearer four hours had pa.s.sed than two when I returned to find Jeanne gone."
"Your friend had fooled you, keeping you out of the way."
"No, no. He did not know where Jeanne was. Some one must have seen her, recognized her when you came in at the barrier this morning perchance, followed her and betrayed her. They did not come asking for her, searching for her, but knowing that she was here. When the door was opened they rushed in, thrusting my servant aside, asking no questions.
The reek of them is still in the room. What shall I do?"
Bruslart let his head again fall on his outstretched arms and sobs shook him. Such grief in a man is difficult to witness and remain unmoved, yet no expression of pity came into Barrington"s face. He was a man of a different fiber altogether; his emotions were seldom shown, and deep though they really were, he pa.s.sed for a hard man. Even in anger he was calm, calculating, a set face masking the truth; and in such a crisis as this, after the first staggering blow of it, his whole force was concentrated on action. Misery for what had happened was so much energy wasted, there was something to do and every faculty became focused upon the best means of doing it.
Barrington went to the table and laid his hand firmly on Bruslart"s shoulder.
"This is no time for grieving over what cannot be undone; our business is to act. Let me understand the position, for I swear to you that I am ready to do all that a man can do. Since mademoiselle was taken in your house you are in danger, I suppose. They will remember that you are an aristocrat, too, and easily forget that you wear the outward signs of a patriot."
"Mademoiselle seems to have thought of that, and let them believe that she had rushed to my house for safety without my knowledge."
"It was like her," said Barrington. "She will be brave, no matter how sorely she is tried. To-day, monsieur, I saw a coach surrounded by a yelling crowd. It was a new sight to me and I stood to see it pa.s.s. It contained an aristocrat, a woman, they said, but I could not see the prisoner. The time corresponds; it may have been Mademoiselle St.
Clair."
"Ah! If you had only known!"
"Indeed, monsieur, the fact that the prisoner was a woman, made me foolish enough to think of rushing into that filthy crowd single handed; had I imagined it was mademoiselle I certainly should have done so. And what could I have done, one man against a mult.i.tude? I should have been killed, and mademoiselle might have been torn to pieces by the fiends who surrounded her. They were in the mood for such work. Fortunately, a man beside me, seeing the intention in my face, laid a restraining hand upon me."
"Was he a friend?" Bruslart asked.
"Indeed, I think he proved himself one though he was a stranger. His name was Latour, he told me."
Barrington mentioned the name with set purpose. Over the wine the stranger had certainly expressed distrust of Lucien Bruslart, an aristocrat turned patriot. The question of Bruslart"s honesty had been in Barrington"s mind all day. It would be worth noting what effect the name had upon his companion.
"Latour? Raymond Latour?" said Bruslart, starting to his feet, more alert than he had yet been since Barrington had entered the room.
"The same. What do you know of him?"
"No more than all Paris knows, monsieur, but it is enough. He is a red republican, a leading man among the Jacobins, hand in glove with all who hate aristocrats. We need look no further for Jeanne"s betrayer."
"I am not so certain of his hatred against all aristocrats," said Barrington, slowly.
"He has a tongue that would persuade the devil himself to believe in him," said Bruslart.
"And I do not think he knew who was in the coach," Barrington went on.
"I have a reason for saying so, and I may find out the truth presently."
"You are a stranger in Paris, you cannot hope to be a match for Raymond Latour."
"At least there is work for me to do in this matter, and I shall not run needlessly into danger. Freedom is precious to us both, monsieur, at the present time, since we must use it to help mademoiselle. You pose as a leader of the people, therefore some authority you must have; tell me, what power have you to open the door of mademoiselle"s prison?"
"Alas, none."
"Think, think. Patriotism, wrong headed though it may be, will clothe its enthusiasts with a kind of honor which cannot be bribed, but how many real patriots are there in Paris? Are the ragged and filthy men and women of the streets patriots? I warrant a fistful of gold thrown by the man they cursed would bring him a very hurricane of blessings."
"You do not understand the people, monsieur," answered Bruslart. "They would scramble for your gold and cry for more, but they would still curse you. The mob is king."
"There is the individual, monsieur," said Barrington. "Try a golden key on his cupidity. I do not mean on a man who is swaggering with new authority, but some jailer in the prison."
"It might be done," said Bruslart.
"It can. It must. You may use me as you will," Barrington returned. "I am ready to take any risk."
"Mademoiselle would certainly approve your loyalty."
"I feel that I am responsible for bringing her to Paris," Barrington answered. "I would risk my life to carry her safely back to Beauvais."
Bruslart looked at him keenly for a moment, then held out his hand.
"Monsieur, I am ungenerous, if not in words in my thoughts. It is not to be supposed that I should be the only man to be attracted by Mademoiselle St. Clair, yet I am a little jealous. You have had an opportunity of helping her that has not been given to me. You have been able to prove yourself in her eyes; I have not. Has not my folly been her ruin?"
"You have the opportunity now," said Barrington, whose hand was still clasped in Lucien"s.
"You do not understand my meaning."
"Only that we pledge ourselves to release mademoiselle."
"And the real strength underlying this resolve? Is it not that we both love her?"
Barrington drew back a little, and felt the color tingle in his face.
Since the moment he had first seen her this woman had hardly been absent from his thoughts, yet from the first he had known that she was pledged to another man, and therefore she was sacred. Deep down in his nature, set there perchance by some long-forgotten ancestor, cavalier in spirit, yet with puritan tendencies in thought, there was a stronger sense of right and wrong than is given to most men perhaps. As well might he allow himself to love another"s wife, as to think of love for another man"s promised wife. The standard of morality had been easy to keep, since, until now, love for neither wife nor maid had tempted him; but during the last two or three days the fierce testing fires had burned within him. It had been easy to think evil of the man who stood before him, easy to hope that there might be evil in him, so that Jeanne St.
Clair being free because of this evil, he might have the right to win her if he could. Lucien Bruslart"s quiet statement came like an accusation; it showed him in a moment that in one sense at any rate he had fallen before the temptation, for if he had not allowed himself to think of love, he had yielded to the mean wish that her lover might prove unworthy. It helped him also to rise superior to the temptation.
"I may have had ungenerous thoughts, too," he said, "but they have gone."
"And only love remains," Bruslart returned, the slight rise in his tone making the words a question rather than a statement.