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<h2> Chapter Six </h2>
<p>In the outer room, Winterset, unable to find Lady Mary, and supposing her
to have joined Lady Rellerton, disposed of his negus, then approached the
two visitors to pay his respects to the young prince, whom he discovered
to be a stripling of seventeen, arrogant looking, but pretty as a girl.
Standing beside the Marquis de Mirepoix—a man of quiet bearing—he
was surrounded by a group of the great, among whom Mr. Nash naturally
counted himself. The Beau was felicitating himself that the foreigners had
not arrived a week earlier, in which case he and Bath would have been
detected in a piece of gross ignorance concerning the French nobility—making
much of de Mirepoix's ex-barber.</p>
<p>"'Tis a lucky thing that fellow was got out of the way," he ejaculated,
under cover.</p>
<p>"Thank me for it," rejoined Winterset.</p>
<p>An attendant begged Mr. Nash's notice. The head bailiff sent word that
Beaucaire had long since entered the building by a side door. It was
supposed Mr. Nash had known of it, and the Frenchman was not arrested, as
Mr. Molyneux was in his company, and said he would be answerable for him.
Consternation was so plain on the Beau's trained face that the Duke leaned
toward him anxiously.</p>
<p>"The villain's in, and Molyneux hath gone mad!"</p>
<p>Mr. Bantison, who had been fiercely elbowing his way toward them, joined
heads with them. "You may well say he is in," he exclaimed "and if you
want to know where, why, in yonder card-room. I saw him through the
half-open door."</p>
<p>"What's to be done?" asked the Beau.</p>
<p>"Send the bailiffs—"</p>
<p>"Fie, fie! A file of bailiffs? The scandal!"</p>
<p>"Then listen to me," said the Duke. "I'll select half-a-dozen gentlemen,
explain the matter, and we'll put him in the center of us and take him out
to the bailiffs. 'Twill appear nothing. Do you remain here and keep the
attention of Beaujolais and de Mirepoix. Come, Bantison, fetch Townbrake
and Harry Rakell yonder; I'll bring the others."</p>
<p>Three minutes later, his Grace of Winterset flung wide the card-room door,
and, after his friends had entered, closed it.</p>
<p>"Ah!" remarked M. Beaucaire quietly. "Six more large men."</p>
<p>The Duke, seeing Lady Mary, started; but the angry signs of her interview
had not left her face, and reassured him. He offered his hand to conduct
her to the door. "May I have the honor?"</p>
<p>"If this is to be known, 'twill be better if I leave after; I should be
observed if I went now."</p>
<p>"As you will, madam," he answered, not displeased. "And now, you impudent
villain," he began, turning to M. Beaucaire, but to fall back astounded.
"'Od's blood, the dog hath murdered and robbed some royal prince!" He
forgot Lady Mary's presence in his excitement. "Lay hands on him!" he
shouted. "Tear those orders from him!"</p>
<p>Molyneux threw himself between. "One word!" he cried. "One word before you
offer an outrage you will repent all your lives!"</p>
<p>"Or let M. de Winterset come alone," laughed M. Beaucaire.</p>
<p>"Do you expect me to fight a cut-throat barber, and with bare hands?"</p>
<p>"I think one does not expec' monsieur to fight anybody. Would I fight you,
you think? That was why I had my servants, that evening we play. I would
gladly fight almos' any one in the won'; but I did not wish to soil my
hand with a—"</p>
<p>"Stuff his lying mouth with his orders!" shouted the Duke.</p>
<p>But Molyneux still held the gentlemen back. "One moment," he cried.</p>
<p>"M. de Winterset," said Beaucaire, "of what are you afraid? You calculate
well. Beaucaire might have been belief—an impostor that you yourself
expose'? Never! But I was not goin' reveal that secret. You have not
absolve me of my promise."</p>
<p>"Tell what you like," answered the Duke. "Tell all the wild lies you have
time for. You have five minutes to make up your mind to go quietly."</p>
<p>"Now you absolve me, then? Ha, ha! Oh, yes! Mademoiselle," he bowed to
Lady Mary, "I have the honor to reques' you leave the room. You shall miss
no details if these frien's of yours kill me, on the honor of a French
gentleman."</p>
<p>"A French what?" laughed Bantison.</p>
<p>"Do you dare keep up the pretense?" cried Lord Town brake. "Know, you
villain barber, that your master, the Marquis de Mirepoix, is in the next
room."</p>
<p>Molyneux heaved a great sigh of relief. "Shall I—" He turned to M.
Beaucaire.</p>
<p>The young man laughed, and said: "Tell him come here at once.</p>
<p>"Impudent to the last!" cried Bantison, as Molyneux hurried from the room.</p>
<p>"Now you goin' to see M. Beaucaire's master," said Beaucaire to Lady Mary.
"'Tis true what I say, the other night. I cross from Prance in his suite;
my passport say as his barber. Then to pass the ennui of exile, I come to
Bath and play for what one will. It kill the time. But when the people
hear I have been a servant they come only secretly; and there is one of
them—he has absolve' me of a promise not to speak—of him I
learn something he cannot wish to be tol'. I make some trouble to learn
this thing. Why I should do this? Well—that is my own rizzon. So I
make this man help me in a masque, the unmasking it was, for, as there is
no one to know me, I throw off my black wig and become myself—and so
I am 'Chateaurien,' Castle Nowhere. Then this man I use', this Winterset,
he—"</p>
<p>"I have great need to deny these accusations?" said the Duke.</p>
<p>"Nay," said Lady Mary wearily.</p>
<p>"Shall I tell you why I mus' be 'Victor' and 'Beaucaire' and
'Chateaurien,' and not myself?"</p>
<p>"To escape from the bailiffs for debts for razors and soap," gibed Lord
Townbrake.</p>
<p>"No, monsieur. In France I have got a cousin who is a man with a very bad
temper at some time', and he will never enjoy his relatives to do what he
does not wish—"</p>
<p>He was interrupted by a loud commotion from without. The door was flung
open, and the young Count of Beaujolais bounded in and threw his arms
about the neck of M. Beaucaire.</p>
<p>"Philippe!" he cried. "My brother, I have come to take you back with me."</p>
<p>M. de Mirepoix followed him, bowing as a courtier, in deference; but M.
Beaucaire took both his hands heartily. Molyneux came after, with Mr.
Nash, and closed the door.</p>
<p>"My warmest felicitations," said the Marquis. "There is no longer need for
your incognito."</p>
<p>"Thou best of masters!" said Beaucaire, touching him fondly on the
shoulder. "I know. Your courier came safely. And so I am forgiven! But I
forget." He turned to the lady. She had begun to tremble exceedingly.
"Faires' of all the English fair," he said, as the gentlemen bowed low to
her deep courtesy, "I beg the honor to presen' to Lady Mary Carlisle, M.
le Comte de Beaujolais. M. de Mirepoix has already the honor. Lady Mary
has been very kind to me, my frien's; you mus' help me make my
acknowledgment. Mademoiselle and gentlemen, will you give me that favour
to detain you one instan'?"</p>
<p>"Henri," he turned to the young Beaujolais, "I wish you had shared my
masque—I have been so gay!" The surface of his tone was merry, but
there was an undercurrent, weary—sad, to speak of what was the mood,
not the manner. He made the effect of addressing every one present, but he
looked steadily at Lady Mary. Her eyes were fixed upon him, with a silent
and frightened fascination, and she trembled more and more. "I am a great
actor, Henri. These gentlemen are yet scarce convince' I am not a lackey!
And I mus' tell you that I was jus' now to be expelled for having been a
barber!"</p>
<p>"Oh, no!" the ambassador cried out. "He would not be content with me; he
would wander over a strange country."</p>
<p>"Ha, ha, my Mirepoix! And what is better, one evening I am oblige' to
fight some frien's of M. de Winterset there, and some ladies and cavaliers
look on, and they still think me a servant. Oh, I am a great actor! 'Tis
true there is not a peasant in France who would not have then known one
'born'; but they are wonderful, this English people, holding by an idea
once it is in their heads—a mos' worthy quality. But my good
Molyneux here, he had speak to me with courtesy, jus' because I am a man
an' jus' because he is always kind. (I have learn' that his
great-grandfather was a Frenchman.) So I sen' to him and tell him
ev'rything, and he gain admittance for me here to-night to await my
frien's.</p>
<p>"I was speaking to messieurs about my cousin, who will meddle in the
affair' of his relatives. Well, that gentleman, he make a marriage for me
with a good and accomplish' lady, very noble and very beautiful—and
amiable." (The young count at his elbow started slightly at this, but
immediately appeared to wrap himself in a mantle of solemn thought.)
"Unfortunately, when my cousin arrange' so, I was a dolt, a little
blockhead; I swear to marry for myself and when I please, or never if I
like. That lady is all things charming and gentle, and, in truth, she is—very
much attach' to me—why should I not say it? I am so proud of it. She
is very faithful and forgiving and sweet; she would be the same, I think,
if I—were even—a lackey. But I? I was a dolt, a little
unsensible brute; I did not value such thing' then; I was too yo'ng, las'
June. So I say to my cousin, 'No, I make my own choosing!' 'Little fool,'
he answer, 'she is the one for you. Am I not wiser than you?' And he was
very angry, and, as he has influence in France, word come' that he will
get me put in Vincennes, so I mus' run away quick till his anger is gone.
My good frien' Mirepoix is jus' leaving for London; he take' many risk'
for my sake; his hairdresser die before he start', so I travel as that
poor barber. But my cousin is a man to be afraid of when he is angry, even
in England, and I mus' not get my Mirepoix in trouble. I mus' not be
discover' till my cousin is ready to laugh about it all and make it a
joke. And there may be spies; so I change my name again, and come to Bath
to amuse my retreat with a little gaming—I am always fond of that.
But three day' ago M. le Marquis send me a courier to say that my brother,
who know where I had run away, is come from France to say that my cousin
is appease'; he need me for his little theatre, the play cannot go on. I
do not need to espouse mademoiselle. All shall be forgiven if I return,
and my brother and M. de Mirepoix will meet me in Bath to felicitate.</p>
<p>"There is one more thing to say, that is all. I have said I learn' a
secret, and use it to make a man introduce me if I will not tell. He has
absolve' me of that promise. My frien's, I had not the wish to ruin that
man. I was not receive'; Meestaire Nash had reboff me; I had no other way
excep' to use this fellow. So I say, 'Take me to Lady Malbourne's ball as
"Chateaurien."' I throw off my wig, and shave, and behol', I am M. le Duc
de Castle Nowhere. Ha, ha! You see?"</p>
<p>The young man's manner suddenly changed. He became haughty, menacing. He
stretched out his arm, and pointed at Winterset. "Now I am no 'Beaucaire,'
messieurs. I am a French gentleman. The man who introduce' me at the price
of his honor, and then betray' me to redeem it, is that coward, that
card-cheat there!"</p>
<p>Winterset made a horrible effort to laugh. The gentlemen who surrounded
him fell away as from pestilence. "A French gentleman!" he sneered
savagely, and yet fearfully. "I don't know who you are. Hide behind as
many toys and ribbons as you like; I'll know the name of the man who dares
bring such a charge!"</p>
<p>"Sir!" cried de Mirepoix sharply, advancing a step towards him; but he
checked himself at once. He made a low bow of state, first to the young
Frenchman, then to Lady Mary and the company. "Permit me, Lady Mary and
gentlemen," he said, "to assume the honor of presenting you to His
Highness, Prince Louis-Philippe de Valois, Duke of Orleans, Duke of
Chartres, Duke of Nemours, Duke of Montpeti'sier, First Prince of the
Blood Royal, First Peer of France, Lieutenant-General of French Infantry,
Governor of Dauphine, Knight of the Golden Fleece, Grand Master of the
Order of Notre Dame, of Mount Carmel, and of St. Lazarus in Jerusalem; and
cousin to His most Christian Majesty, Louis the Fifteenth, King of
France."</p>
<p>"Those are a few of my brother's names," whispered Henri of Beaujolais to
Molyneux. "Old Mirepoix has the long breath, but it take' a strong man two
day' to say all of them. I can suppose this Winterset know' now who bring
the charge!"</p>
<p>"Castle Nowhere!" gasped Beau Nash, falling back upon the burly prop of
Mr. Bantison's shoulder.</p>
<p>"The Duke of Orleans will receive a message from me within the hour!" said
Winterset, as he made his way to the door. His face was black with rage
and shame.</p>
<p>"I tol' you that I would not soil my hand with you," answered the young
man. "If you send a message no gentleman will bring it. Whoever shall bear
it will receive a little beating from Francois."</p>
<p>He stepped to Lady Mary's side. Her head was bent low, her face averted.
She seemed to breathe with difficulty, and leaned heavily upon a chair.
"Monseigneur," she faltered in a half whisper, "can you—forgive me?
It is a bitter—mistake-I have made. Forgive."</p>
<p>"Forgive?" he answered, and his voice was as broken as hers; but he went
on, more firmly: "It is—nothing—less than nothing. There is—only
jus' one—in the—whole worl' who would not have treat' me the
way that you treat' me. It is to her that I am goin' to make reparation.
You know something, Henri? I am not goin' back only because the king
forgive' me. I am goin' to please him; I am goin' to espouse mademoiselle,
our cousin. My frien's, I ask your felicitations."</p>
<p>"And the king does not compel him!" exclaimed young Henri.</p>
<p>"Henri, you want to fight me?" cried his brother sharply. "Don' you think
the King of France is a wiser man than me?"</p>
<p>He offered his hand to Lady Mary. "Mademoiselle is fatigue'. Will she
honor me?"</p>
<p>He walked with her to the door. Her hand fluttering faintly in his. From
somewhere about the garments of one of them a little cloud of faded
rose-leaves fell, and lay strewn on the floor behind them. He opened the
door, and the lights shone on a multitude of eager faces turned toward it.
There was a great hum of voices, and, over all, the fiddles wove a
wandering air, a sweet French song of the voyageur.</p>
<p>He bowed very low, as, with fixed and glistening eyes, Lady Mary Carlisle,
the Beauty of Bath, passed slowly by him and went out of the room.</p>
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