Search      Hot    Newest Novel
HOME > Short Stories > The Scarlet Pimpernel > CHAPTER XXIII — HOPE
Font Size:【Large】【Middle】【Small】 Add Bookmark  
CHAPTER XXIII — HOPE
 “Faith, Madame!” said Sir Andrew, seeing that Marguerite seemed desirous to call her surly host back again, “I think we'd better leave him alone. We shall not get anything more out of him, and we might arouse his suspicions. One never knows what spies may be lurking around these God-forsaken places.”  
“What care I?” she replied lightly, “now I know that my husband is safe, and that I shall see him almost directly!”
 
“Hush!” he said in genuine alarm, for she had talked quite loudly, in the fulness of her glee, “the very walls have ears in France, these days.”
 
He rose quickly from the table, and walked round the bare, squalid room, listening attentively at the door, through which Brogard had just disappeared, and whence only muttered oaths and shuffling footsteps could be heard. He also ran up the rickety steps that led to the attic, to assure himself that there were no spies of Chauvelin's about the place.
 
“Are we alone, Monsieur, my lacquey?” said Marguerite, gaily, as the young man once more sat down beside her. “May we talk?”
 
“As cautiously as possible!” he entreated.
 
“Faith, man! but you wear a glum face! As for me, I could dance with joy! Surely there is no longer any cause for fear. Our boat is on the beach, the Foam Crest not two miles out at sea, and my husband will be here, under this very roof, within the next half hour perhaps. Sure! there is naught to hinder us. Chauvelin and his gang have not yet arrived.”
 
“Nay, madam! that I fear we do not know.”
 
“What do you mean?”
 
“He was at Dover at the same time that we were.”
 
“Held up by the same storm, which kept us from starting.”
 
“Exactly. But—I did not speak of it before, for I feared to alarm you—I saw him on the beach not five minutes before we embarked. At least, I swore to myself at the time that it was himself; he was disguised as a curé, so that Satan, his own guardian, would scarce have known him. But I heard him then, bargaining for a vessel to take him swiftly to Calais; and he must have set sail less than an hour after we did.”
 
Marguerite's face had quickly lost its look of joy. The terrible danger in which Percy stood, now that he was actually on French soil, became suddenly and horribly clear to her. Chauvelin was close upon his heels; here in Calais, the astute diplomatist was all-powerful; a word from him and Percy could be tracked and arrested and . . .
 
Every drop of blood seemed to freeze in her veins; not even during the moments of her wildest anguish in England had she so completely realised the imminence of the peril in which her husband stood. Chauvelin had sworn to bring the Scarlet Pimpernel to the guillotine, and now the daring plotter, whose anonymity hitherto had been his safeguard, stood revealed through her own hand, to his most bitter, most relentless enemy.
 
Chauvelin—when he waylaid Lord Tony and Sir Andrew Ffoulkes in the coffee-room of “The Fisherman's Rest”—had obtained possession of all the plans of this latest expedition. Armand St. Just, the Comte de Tournay and other fugitive royalists were to have met the Scarlet Pimpernel—or rather, as it had been originally arranged, two of his emissaries—on this day, the 2nd of October, at a place evidently known to the league, and vaguely alluded to as the “Père Blanchard's hut.”
 
Armand, whose connection with the Scarlet Pimpernel and disavowal of the brutal policy of the Reign of Terror was still unknown to his countrymen, had left England a little more than a week ago, carrying with him the necessary instructions, which would enable him to meet the other fugitives and to convey them to this place of safety.
 
This much Marguerite had fully understood from the first, and Sir Andrew Ffoulkes had confirmed her surmises. She knew, too, that when Sir Percy realised that his own plans and his directions to his lieutenants had been stolen by Chauvelin, it was too late to communicate with Armand, or to send fresh instructions to the fugitives.
 
They would, of necessity, be at the appointed time and place, not knowing how grave was the danger which now awaited their brave rescuer.
 
Blakeney, who as usual had planned and organised the whole expedition, would not allow any of his younger comrades to run the risk of almost certain capture. Hence his hurried note to them at Lord Grenville's ball—“Start myself to-morrow—alone.”
 
And now with his identity known to his most bitter enemy, his every step would be dogged, the moment he set foot in France. He would be tracked by Chauvelin's emissaries, followed until he reached that mysterious hut where the fugitives were waiting for him, and there the trap would be closed on him and on them.
 
There was but one hour—the hour's start which Marguerite and Sir Andrew had of their enemy—in which to warn Percy of the imminence of his danger, and to persuade him to give up the foolhardy expedition, which could only end in his own death.
 
But there was that one hour.
 
“Chauvelin knows of this inn, from the papers he stole,” said Sir Andrew, earnestly, “and on landing will make straight for it.”
 
“He has not landed yet,” she said, “we have an hour's start on him, and Percy will be here directly. We shall be mid-Channel ere Chauvelin has realised that we have slipped through his fingers.”
 
She spoke excitedly and eagerly, wishing to infuse into her young friend some of that buoyant hope which still clung to her heart. But he shook his head sadly.
 
“Silent again, Sir Andrew?” she said with some impatience. “Why do you shake your head and look so glum?”
 
“Faith, Madame,” he replied, “'tis only because in making your rose-coloured plans, you are forgetting the most important factor.”
 
“What in the world do you mean?—I am forgetting nothing. . . . What factor do you mean?” she added with more impatience.
 
“It stands six foot odd high,” replied Sir Andrew, quietly, “and hath name Percy Blakeney.”
 
“I don't understand,” she murmured.
 
“Do you think that Blakeney would leave Calais without having accomplished what he set out to do?”
 
“You mean . . . ?”
 
“There's the old Comte de Tournay . . .”
 
“The Comte . . . ?” she murmured.
 
“And St. Just . . . and others . . .”
 
“My brother!” she said with a heart-broken sob of anguish. “Heaven help me, but I fear I had forgotten.”
 
“Fugitives as they are, these men at this moment await with perfect confidence and unshaken............
Join or Log In! You need to log in to continue reading
   
 

Login into Your Account

Email: 
Password: 
  Remember me on this computer.

All The Data From The Network AND User Upload, If Infringement, Please Contact Us To Delete! Contact Us
About Us | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Tag List | Recent Search  
©2010-2018 wenovel.com, All Rights Reserved