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'Yes,' rejoins d'Inchy impatiently. 'Cannot you see? You say the people
no longer believe in the coming of His Highness. Our spies and the news
they bring no longer carry weight. But if we say that the Duke hath sent a
token....'
'I understand,' murmurs the Chief Magistrate, and the others nod in
comprehension.
The city dignitaries—the old men for the most part, and with impaired
health after weeks of privation—have but little real resistance in them.
D'Inchy was always a man of arbitrary will and persuasive eloquence. De
Balagny is soon won over. He ranges himself on the side of the governor,
and helps in the work of demolishing the bulwark of the Magistrate's
opposition. The latter yields—reluctantly, perhaps—but still he yields. After
all, there is no harm whatever in the deception. No one could possibly
suffer in consequence. Madame Jacqueline has always expressed herself
ready to marry the Duc d'Anjou—a hero and a doughty knight, if ever there
was one!—and in any case it were an inestimable boon to put fresh heart
into the starving population.
VI
Thus we see the third and last picture which Enguerrand de Manuchet
shows us of Cambray in her agony. It is a picture that is even more vivid
than the others, more alive in the intensity of its pathos. We see inside the
citadel on the last day of July, 1581. And of all the episodes connected with
the memorable siege of Cambray and with its heroic defence, not one
perhaps is more moving than that of this huge concourse of people—men,
women and tiny children—assembled here and for such a purpose, under
the blue dome of the sky.
The grim walls of the ancient castle around them are hung with worn and
tattered flags; they are like the interior of a church, decked out with all the
solemnity of a marriage ceremony and all the pathos of a De Profundis.
With her heart for ever buried beneath the ramparts of Cambray, side by
side with the gallant knight who had given his life for the beloved city, she
cared little, if at all, what became of her. The Duc d'Anjou or another—
what did it matter?—but preferably the Duc d'Anjou if her country's welfare
demands that he should be the man.
No wonder that this last picture stirs even the heart of the dry-as-dust old
historian to enthusiasm. Noble and churl, burghers and dignitaries and
soldiers, toilers and ragamuffins, all are there—those who can walk or stand
or crawl. Those who are hale drag or support those that are sick, bring
tattered mattresses along or a litter of straw for them to lie on. But they all
come to see a woman make a solemn profession of faith in the man who is
to bring deliverance to the agonizing city.
They come in their thousands; but thousands more are unable to find
room upon the Place or within the Citadel. Even so, they line the streets all
the way to the Archiepiscopal Palace, whilst all those who are so privileged
watch Madame Jacqueline's progress through the streets from their
windows or their balconies. Fortunately the day has been brilliantly fine
ever since morning, and the sun shines radiant upon this one day which is
almost a happy one.
For many hours before that fixed for the ceremony, the streets seethe
with the crowd—a pathetic crowd, in truth: gaunt, feeble, weary, in tattered
clothes, some scarce able to drag themselves along, others sick and
emaciated, clinging to the posts at the corners of the streets, just to get one
peep at what has come to be regarded as a tangible ray of hope. A silent,
moveless crowd, whose husky voice has scarce a cheer in it; as Jacqueline
passes by, walking between Monseigneur the governor and the Chief
Magistrate, bare arms are waved here and there, in a feeble attempt at
jubilation. But there is no music, no beating of drums or waving of banners;
there is no alms-giving, no largesse! All that the rich and the prosperous
possessed in the past has been shared and distributed long ago.
In spite of the brilliant weather, the scene is dark and dreary. The weary,
begrimed faces do not respond to the joyous kiss of the sun; the smile of
hope has not the power to dry every tear.
VII
And now Jacqueline stands, like a white Madonna lily, in the centre of
the Place d'Armes. Monseigneur the governor is beside her and around her
are grouped the high dignitaries of the city, standing or sitting upon low
velvet-covered stools. The Chief Magistrate and Messire de Balagny are in
the forefront, and behind them are the members of the States General and of
the Town, the Provosts and Captains of the City Guard. The picture is
sombre still, despite the banners of the guilds and the flags of various
provinces which hang along the walls of the Citadel. The russets and
browns, the blacks and dull reds, absorb the evening light without throwing
back any golden reflections. The shadows are long and dense.
The white satin of Jacqueline's gown is the one bright note of colour
against the dull and drab background; its stiff folds gleam with honey-
coloured lights in the slowly sinking sun. She has allowed old Nicolle to
deck her out in all her finery, the gown which she wore on that night—oh!
so very long ago—at the banquet, the one with the pale green underdress
which Messire declared made her look so like a lily; the pearls in her hair;
the velvet shoes on her feet.
'I will plight my troth publicly to the Defender of Cambray!' she had said
to her guardian, when Monseigneur had first spoken of the proposed
ceremony.
''Tis to the Defender of Cambray that I will dedicate my faith,' she had
continued obstinately.
'Let the child be!' de Lalain had interposed, seeing that d'Inchy was
about to lose his temper. 'After all, what does it matter, seeing that the
Defender of Cambray and Monsieur Duc d'Anjou are one and the same?'
D'Inchy gave in. It did not really matter. If Jacqueline still harboured a
doubt as to the identity of the masked stranger, it would soon be dispelled
when Monsieur entered Cambray and came to claim her openly. Women
were apt to have strange fancies; and this one, on Jacqueline's part, was
harmless enough.
In any case, she appeared satisfied, and henceforth was quite submissive.
In the midst of her sorrow, she felt a sweet, sad consolation in the thought
that she would publicly plight her troth to the man whom she loved,
proclaim before the whole world—her world that is, the only one that
mattered—that she was for ever affianced to the brave man who had given
his life, that Cambray might be saved.
In an inward vision she could see him still, as she saw him on that day
upon the ramparts, with the April sun gilding his close-cropped head, with
the light of enthusiasm dancing in his eyes, his arms bare, his clothes torn,
his vibrant voice resounding from wall to wall and from bastion to bastion,
till something of his own fire was communicated to all those who fought
under his command.
And the Chief Magistrate, speaking in the name of the States General
and of the City and Provincial Council, then gave answer:
'The bridegroom,' replied d'Inchy, slowly and loudly, so that his voice
could be heard, clear and distinct, in every corner of the great courtyard.
'The bridegroom is even at this hour within sight of our beleaguered city.
He is at the head of his armies and only waits a favourable opportunity for
demanding from the Spanish commander that the latter do give him battle.
The bridegroom, I say, hath sent us a token of his goodwill and an
assurance that he will not tarry. He hath asked that Madame Jacqueline do
plight her troth to him before the assembled people of Cambray, so that they
may know that he is true and faithful unto them and take heart of courage
against his speedy coming for their deliverance.'
A murmur—it could not be called a cheer, for voices were hoarse and
spent—went the round of the crowd. There were nods of approval; and a
gleam of hope, almost of joy, lit up many a wan face and many a sunken
eye. After so many deceptions, so much weary waiting and hope deferred,
this was at least something tangible, something to cling to, whilst battling
against the demons of hunger and disease which so insidiously called for
surrender.
The Chief Magistrate, who together with Monseigneur had been chiefly
instrumental in engineering the present situation, waited for a moment or
two, giving time for the governor's cheering words to soak well into the
minds of the people. He was a tall, venerable-looking old burgher, with a
white beard clipped close to his long, thin face, and a black velvet bonnet,
now faded to a greenish hue by exposure to all weathers, set upon his scanty
hair. He drew up his bent shoulders and threw back his head with a gesture
expressive both of confidence and of determination, and he allowed his
deep-set eyes beneath their bushy brows to wander over the populace, as if
to say: 'See how right I was to bid you hope! Here you have an actual proof
that the end of your sufferings is in sight, that the deliverance for which you
pray is already at your gate!' After which, he turned once again to d'Inchy
and said loftily:
Once more a murmur of approval went round the Place. Wearied, aching
heads nodded approval; firm lips, thin and pale, were set with a
recrudescence of energy. All the stoicism of this heroic race was expressed
in their simple acceptance of this fresh term of endurance imposed upon
them, in their willingness to hope on again, to wait and to submit, and in
their mute adhesion to the profession of faith loudly proclaimed by their
Chief dignitary: 'awaiting tranquilly and with fortitude the hour of our
deliverance.'
Monseigneur the governor now drew his sword, held it upright and
placed on it a hat and round his arm a mantle; then he took the ring, which
had been borrowed from the city treasury for the occasion, and hung it on a
projecting ornament of his sword-hilt. After which he said, with great
solemnity:
After which he lowered his sword, put down the hat and the mantle and
presented the ring to Jacqueline, together with seven gloves, saying the
while:
'Jacqueline, take these in exchange for the emblems of marital authority
which I herewith hold for and on behalf of your future lord, and in the
presence of all the people of Cambray here assembled, I demand that you
do plight your troth to him and that you swear to be true and faithful unto
him, to love and cherish him with your heart and your body, to obey and
serve him loyally as his wife and helpmate, until death.'
Jacqueline, by all the canons of this quaint custom, should have held the
ring and the gloves in her left hand and taken the solemn oath with her right
raised above her head. Instead of which, Manuchet assures us that she laid
down the ring and the gloves upon the chair nearest to her, and clasped her
two hands together as if in prayer. She raised her small head and looked out
upon the sky—there where the setting sun hid its glory behind a filmy veil
of rose-tinted clouds.
'In the name of the living God who made me,' she said, with solemn and
earnest fervour, 'I do hereby plight my troth to my lord, the noble and
puissant hero who defended Cambray in the hour of her gravest peril, who
saved her from destruction and taught her citizens how to conquer and to
endure, and I swear upon my life and upon my every hope of salvation that
I will be true and faithful unto him, that I will love and cherish him with my
heart and with my body and will serve him loyally and unswervingly now
and alway until our souls meet in the presence of God.'
The city dignitaries crowded round Jacqueline, kissing and pressing her
hands. Monseigneur the governor was looking greatly relieved. From the
tower of Notre Dame, the bells set forth a joyous peal—the first that had
been heard for many months. And that peal was presently taken up, first by
one church tower and then another, from St. Waast to St. Martin, Ste. Croix
to St. Géry. The happy sound echoed and reverberated along the city walls,
broke with its insidious melody the gloomy silence which had lain over the
streets like a pall.
Far away in the west the sun was slowly sinking in a haze of translucent
crimson, and tipped every church spire, every bastion and redoubt with rose
and orange and gold. For the space of a few more minutes the citadel with
its breathless and fervid crowd, with its waving banners and grey walls, was
suffused as with a flush of life and hope. Then the shadows lengthened—
longer and longer they grew, deeper and more dense, like great, drab arms
that enfold and conceal and smother. Slowly the crimson glow faded out of
the sky.
Now the group in the centre appeared only like a sombre mass of dull
and lifeless colours; Jacqueline's white satin gown took on a leaden hue; the
brilliance of the sky had become like a presage of storm. The women
shivered beneath their ragged kerchiefs; some of the children started to cry.
And once more silence descended on the hapless city, and the mantle of
night lay mercifully upon her grievous wounds.
VIII
And far away in the Spanish camps, the soldiers and their captains
marvelled how joy-bells could be ringing in a city which was in the throes
of her death agony. But the Duke of Parma knew what it meant, as did the
members of his staff—del Fuente, his second in command, de Salvado,
Bracamonte, de Landas and the others. More than one of their wily spies
had succeeded before now in swimming across the Schelde and in scaling
the tumble-down walls of the heroic city, and had brought back the news of
what was doing in there, in the midst of a starving and obstinate population.
'The public betrothal to a fickle Prince who will never come,' said the
Duke grimly, between his teeth. 'At any rate, not before we have worked
our will with those mulish rebels.'
'Bah!' retorted the Duke. 'Let them rot! Why should we waste valuable
lives and precious powder, when the next few days must see the final
surrender of that peccant rat-hole?'
'I believe,' he said to de Landas, 'that I once promised you Cambray and
all that it contains—what?'
'For ridding your Highness of the abominable rebel who organized the
defence last April,' assented de Landas. 'Yes! Cambray and all that it
contains was to be my reward.'
'I shot him through the heart. He lies rotting now beneath the walls.'
'Well!' riposted the Duke. 'You earned your reward easily enough. There
will be plenty left in Cambray, even after I have had my first pick of its
treasures.'
De Landas made no protest. It would have been not only useless, but
also impolitic to remind His Highness that, at the moment when he offered
Cambray and all its contents to the man who would rid him of a valiant foe,
he had made no proviso that he himself should fill his pockets first. There
was no honour among these thieves and no probity in these savage tyrants
—brute beasts, most of them, who destroyed and outraged whatever
resisted their might. So de Landas held his tongue; for even so, he was not
dissatisfied. The Duke, being rid of the rebel whom he feared, might easily
have repudiated the ignoble bargain in its entirety, and de Landas would
have had no redress.
'So long as the heiress is there for me,' he said carelessly to the Duke, 'I
am satisfied to let every other treasure go.'
'Oh! you shall have the heiress,' riposted His Highness hilariously.
'Rumour hath described her as passing fair. You lucky devil! Methinks you
were even betrothed to her once.'
'Oh! long ago, your Highness. Since then the oily promises of the Duc
d'Anjou have helped to erase my image from the tablets of Madame
Jacqueline's heart.'
'Then she'll be all the more ready to fall back into your arms, now that
she has discovered the value of a Valois prince's faith.'
His lusty toast was greeted with loud laughter. Metal goblets clicked one
against the other, every one drank to the downfall of the rebellious city. De
Landas accepted the jocose congratulations of his boon-companions. He,
too, raised his goblet aloft, and having shouted: 'To Jacqueline!' drained it to
its last drop.
But when he set the goblet down, his hand was shaking perceptibly.
Cain-like, he had seen a vision of the man whom he had so foully
murdered. Accidentally he knocked over a bottle of red Burgundy, which
stood on the table close by, and the linen cloth all around him was spread
over with a dark crimson stain, which to the assassin appeared like the
colour of blood.
CHAPTER XXVI
And when, after many days' enforced rest and a good deal of attention
from a skilful leech backed by Maître Jehan's unwavering care, he was once
more on his feet and was able to relate to Madame la Reyne de Navarre the
many vicissitudes of his perilous adventure, it seemed to him as if he were
recounting to a child, fairy tales and dream stories which had never been.
It was only at evening, when he wandered round the little Dutch garden
at the back of the house where he lodged, that Jacqueline came to him,
aglow with life—a living, breathing, exquisite reality. For the Madonna
lilies were all abloom in that garden just then: tall, stately white lilies,
which bordered one of the narrow paths. They had slender, pale green
stems, their fragrance filled the evening air and the soft breeze stirred their
delicate crowns. Then it would seem to Gilles as if his Jacqueline were
walking down the path beside him, that the breeze blew the tendrils of her
fair hair against his nostrils and that her voice filled his ear with its sweet,
melodious sound. A big heartache would make the rough soldier sigh with
longing then. Unseen by any one, alone with his thoughts of her, he would
stretch out his arms to that tantalizing vision which seemed so real and was
yet so far, so very far away.
Madame la Reyne would at times chaff him about his moodiness, and he
himself was ready to laugh aloud at his own folly. What right had he—the
uncouth soldier of fortune, the homeless adventurer—to think of the great
and noble lady, who was as far removed from him as were the stars? What
right indeed? Even though Marguerite de Navarre, lavish in her gratitude,
had already showered honours and wealth upon the man who had served
her so faithfully.
Even so, that gift—so graciously offered, so welcome to the man's pride
of ancestry—had but little value in his sight, since he could not do with it
the one thing that mattered, which was to lay it at Jacqueline's feet.
'Monseigneur is still far from being Lord of the Netherlands,' Gilles said
dryly, chiefly with a view to inducing a fresh train of thought in the royal
lady's mind.
'He has found something else to distract him,' rejoined Gilles, with
unconscious bitterness. 'Perhaps Mme. de Marquette has resumed her sway
over him, the while Cambray waits and starves.'
II
The while Cambray waits and starves! That was indeed the deathly sting
which poisoned Gilles de Crohin's very life during those four dreary
months, while Monsieur Duc d'Anjou was ostensibly making preparations
for his expedition for the relief of the beleaguered city. Ostensibly in truth,
for very soon his fond sister had to realize that, now as always, that fickle
brother of hers was playing his favourite game of procrastination and
faithlessness. With him, in fact, faithlessness had become an obsession. It
seemed as if he could not act or think straight, as if he could not keep his
word. Now, while he was supposed to recruit his troops, to consult with his
officers, to provide for engines and munitions of war, he actually deputed
his long-suffering and still faithful friend, Gilles de Crohin, to do the work
for him. His own thoughts had once more turned to a possible marriage—
not with Jacqueline de Broyart, to whom he was bound by every
conceivable tie of honour and of loyalty—but with Elizabeth of England,
whom he coveted because of her wealth, and the power which so brilliant
an alliance would place in his hands.
But of these thoughts he did not dare to speak even to the adoring sister,
who most certainly would have turned her back on him for ever had she
known that he harboured such dishonourable projects. He did not dare to
speak of them even to Gilles, for he felt that this would strain his friend's
loyalty to breaking point. He entered outwardly into the spirit of the
proposed expedition with all the zest which he could muster, but the
moment he was no longer under Marguerite de Navarre's own eyes he did
not lift another finger in its organization.
'Turenne and la Voute are quite capable of going to the relief of Cambray
without me,' he said to Gilles with a yawn and a lazy stretch of his long,
loose limbs. 'I have never been counted a good commander, and Parma is
always a difficult problem to tackle. Let Turenne go, I say. My brother
Henri lauds him as the greatest general of the day, and the rogue hath fought
on the Spanish side before now, so he hath all their tricks at his fingers'
ends.'
Gilles looked down on him with a contempt that was no longer good-
humoured. Cambray was waiting and starving whilst this miserable
coxcomb idled away the hours! Two months had gone by and practically
nothing had been done. There were no troops, no munitions, no arms; and
Cambray was waiting and starving! God alone knew what miseries were
being endured by those valiant burghers over there, whom Gilles' own voice
had so easily rallied once to a stubborn and heroic defence! God alone knew
what his exquisite Jacqueline was being made to suffer! At the thought, his
very soul writhed in torment. He could have raised his hands in measureless
anger against that effeminate nincompoop, and crushed the last spark of a
profligate and useless life out of him. As it was, he had to entreat, to argue,
almost to kneel, pleading the cause of Cambray and of his proud Jacqueline
—his perfect and unapproachable lily, whom this miserable rag of manhood
was casting aside and spurning with a careless wave of the hand.
Ye gods! That he, of all men, should have been assigned such a rôle!
That Fate should have destined him to plead for the very honour and safety
of the woman whom he worshipped, with a man whom he despised! And
yet he argued and he entreated because Madame la Reyne herself vowed
that no one could keep her brother in the path of integrity now, except his
friend Gilles de Crohin. She had begged him not to leave Monsieur, not for
a day, not if possible for an hour!
'He will give us the slip again,' she begged most earnestly; 'and be off to
England after his wild-goose chase. Elizabeth will never marry him—
never! And we shall remain before the world, uselessly discredited and
shamed.'
Alas! much precious time had in the meanwhile been lost. News had
come through that the Duke of Parma had given up the thought of taking
Cambray by storm and had left del Fuente in temporary command with
orders to reduce her by starvation.
III
We know how signally that failed. The blame naturally was lavishly
distributed. M. de Turenne, ignorant of his ground, had, it was averred,
employed guides who led him astray. Spies and traitors amongst his troops
were also supposed to have got wind of his plans and to have betrayed them
to the Spanish commander. Certain it is that Turenne's small force was
surprised, cut up, Turenne himself taken prisoner and that la Voute, his
second, only escaped a like fate by disguising himself as a woman and
running with the best of them back to La Fère.
The blow had fallen, sudden, swift and terrible. When the news was
brought to Marguerite of Navarre she was seized with so awful an attack of
choler, that she fell into unconsciousness and had to take to her bed.
She sent for Gilles, who was eating out his heart in Paris, playing the
watch-dog over a dissolute Prince. At her command he proceeded at once to
La Fère.
'All is not lost, Messire,' she said to him, as soon as his calm, trust-
inspiring presence had infused some semblance of hope into her heart. 'But
we must not allow Monsieur to exert himself any more in the matter. His
incapacity alone matches his indolence.'
She felt so ashamed and so humiliated, that Gilles wellnigh forgot the
grudge, which he really owed her for that pitiable adventure into which she
had thrust him, and which was even now ending in disaster.
'No! No!' she said. 'You cannot, must not leave your post. If you do not
keep watch over Monsieur, we shall lose him altogether.'
'Better that,' he retorted grimly, 'than that we should lose Cambray.'
'There you are right, Messire. Cambray now is bound up with our
honour.'
Marguerite was soon swept off her feet by his determination and his
enthusiasm. With naïve surrender, she laid down her burden and left Gilles
to shoulder it. Now at last he could work for his Jacqueline! He could fight
for her, die for her when the time came! He could drive the foe from her
gates and bequeath to her, ere he fell, the freedom of the country she loved
so well.
Night and day he toiled, not only with heart and will but with the frenzy
of despair; while Marguerite, ever hopeful, ever deluded where that
contemptible brother of hers was concerned, flew to Paris to keep a watch
over him, then back to La Fère to concert with Gilles—hoping against hope
that all would still be well, ready to forgive Monsieur even for the seventy
times seventh time, confident that she would still see him entering Cambray