There being at least two compliments wrapped up along with a commonplace, Nigel took another look at the priest and saw that the priest was a man of benign countenance, very courtly, and that his face was lined with many fine lines about the brow and eyes, which themselves were very penetrating. Nigel reflected on the Latin poet who feared Greeks and people bringing gifts. So he asked--
"Is there a college of your order in Vienna?"
"What makes you think so, sir? Does one swallow make a summer?"
"Would not three in succession lead one to imagine it was near?" Nigel asked again.
"See how the Scotsman answers a question by asking another!" the priest observed with a smile, which was very becoming to his countenance.
"Is that the way of my nation?" Nigel asked.
"In the parts about Haddington!" the priest replied very gently, and Nigel was very much perplexed at the reply. "But did you say just now that you had seen three swallows, or was it three brethren of my order, this morning?"
"I met two on the staircase of the palace this morning, and you are the third!" said Nigel.
"It will have been Father George and Father John. There is a small hostel of our order in Vienna."
"They resembled two gentlemen I met a few days back, two cavaliers!"
"Ah?" said the priest, inviting confidence.
"But _they_ were cavaliers!" said Nigel. "So there was nothing in the resemblance. There seem a good many people in the world who resemble one another!" he added.
Father Lamormain was a little disappointed in this exuberant young officer, who went off into mere plat.i.tudes. But there was an element of persistence in his nature.
"You have doubtless come some distance to Vienna?" he went on. "I inferred from what you said just now that you had business in the palace, and I happened to notice that one of the Emperor"s gentlemen brought you hither; and I know, I think I may say, all the people who dwell therein." He indicated the palace with his hand. "So I judged you to be a stranger. Did you have a peaceful journey?"
"On the whole it was so!" said the Scot.
"You had peradventure an encounter with robbers?"
"If it could be called so, an encounter! Two men set upon me in the dark as I slept, and having bound and gagged me, ransacked my holsters, my saddle-bags, my clothes, and went away having taken nothing."
"And did you not see their faces, hear their voices?"
"Neither sight nor sound!"
"And you accomplished your errand successfully?"
"Quite, Father!"
"You were either very astute or very fortunate! You will doubtless be employed again. Now let me introduce myself. I am Father Lamormain, the Emperor"s confessor."
"I am much honoured by your company," said Nigel. "My name is Nigel Charteris, Captain of Musketeers."
"From Magdeburg, is it not?" The priest smiled.
CHAPTER XIII.
A FATHER, A CONFESSOR, AND A DAUGHTER.
The Emperor Ferdinand and Father Lamormain were together in the Emperor"s private apartments.
"She was always Stephanie the intractable!" said the Emperor, with something like a smile on his grave face. After all he had many memories of her that Father Lamormain could never have of any child.
"Yes!" said Father Lamormain. "But in this case your Imperial Majesty should permit itself to use its parental authority."
"Even to harshness?"
"Even to harshness!" said the priest in a gentle voice. "Your Majesty knows that the Elector Maximilian still claims that the Empire owes him thirteen millions of crowns for his aid in the war against the Elector Palatine, and that he wanted the Palatinate, and would have had it but for the opposition of Brandenburg and Saxony. Now if Brandenburg and Saxony join Gustavus, as they must, what can we say to Maximilian if he prefers his claim again?"
"He must have it, I suppose!" said the Emperor in a tone that suggested that he was rather tired.
"Then he will ask for Bohemia as the price for allowing his army to support Tilly against Gustavus."
"Bohemia is another affair!" said the Emperor more briskly.
"Now if her Highness the Archd.u.c.h.ess would only consent to marry the Elector Maximilian, we should hear nothing more of the thirteen millions, or of the Palatinate, or of Bohemia," reflected Father Lamormain aloud.
"She is very young!" objected his Majesty.
"Not too young for mischief, sire."
"What new freak have you discovered, Father?"
"This!" said the Father, producing the letter he had had before him on the previous day. "It is a summary of the roll of Tilly"s army, and it was found upon a messenger, who was unfortunately killed on his way to the north _before he could be questioned_."
"But what has this to do with the Archd.u.c.h.ess Stephanie?"
"It is marvellously like her handwriting! It is in cipher, of course; but look for yourself, sire." The Emperor looked at it.
"It appears to be a woman"s, and it is a most unclerkly scrawl. I should hesitate to attribute it to Stephanie! And, if it were hers, what possible object could she have in obtaining it, and how could she have obtained it?"
"It was in my hands, your Majesty, before the despatches arrived."
"But the seal on the despatches was intact. It was Count Tilly"s seal.
The Chancellor was satisfied?"
"Yes, sire!" The tone signified that Chancellors as a rule were easily satisfied.
"Come, Father, do you seriously suggest that the officer who brought it allowed the despatches to leave his hands?"
Father Lamormain had every cause to suppose so, but was unable for reasons of his own to state so.