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<h2> Chapter XXVI: The Terms of the Bargain </h2>
<p>Less than three minutes later, there came to Chauvelin's expectant ears
the soft sound made by a woman's skirts against the stone floor. During
those three minutes, which had seemed an eternity to his impatience, he
had sat silently watching the slumber—affected or real—of his
enemy.</p>
<p>Directly he heard the word: "Halt!" outside the door, he jumped to his
feet. The next moment Marguerite had entered the room.</p>
<p>Hardly had her foot crossed the threshold than Sir Percy rose, quietly and
without haste but evidently fully awake, and turning towards her, made her
a low obeisance.</p>
<p>She, poor woman, had of course caught sight of him at once. His presence
here, Chauvelin's demand for her reappearance, the soldiers in a small
compact group outside the door, all these were unmistakable proofs that
the awful cataclysm had at last occurred.</p>
<p>The Scarlet Pimpernel, Percy Blakeney, her husband, was in the hands of
the Terrorists of France, and though face to face with her now, with an
open window close to him, and an apparently helpless enemy under his hand,
he could not—owing to the fiendish measures taken by Chauvelin—raise
a finger to save himself and her.</p>
<p>Mercifully for her, nature—in the face of this appalling tragedy—deprived
her of the full measure of her senses. She could move and speak and see,
she could hear and in a measure understand what was said, but she was
really an automaton or a sleep-walker, moving and speaking mechanically
and without due comprehension.</p>
<p>Possibly, if she had then and there fully realized all that the future
meant, she would have gone mad with the horror of it all.</p>
<p>"Lady Blakeney," began Chauvelin after he had quickly dismissed the
soldiers from the room, "when you and I parted from one another just now,
I had no idea that I should so soon have the pleasure of a personal
conversation with Sir Percy.... There is no occasion yet, believe me, for
sorrow or fear.... Another twenty-four hours at most, and you will be on
board the 'Day-Dream' outward bound for England. Sir Percy himself might
perhaps accompany you; he does not desire that you should journey to
Paris, and I may safely say, that in his mind, he has already accepted
certain little conditions which I have been forced to impose upon him ere
I sign the order for your absolute release."</p>
<p>"Conditions?" she repeated vaguely and stupidly, looking in bewilderment
from one to the other.</p>
<p>"You are tired, m'dear," said Sir Percy quietly, "will you not sit down?"</p>
<p>He held the chair gallantly for her. She tried to read his face, but could
not catch even a flash from beneath the heavy lids which obstinately
veiled his eyes.</p>
<p>"Oh! it is a mere matter of exchanging signatures," continued Chauvelin in
response to her inquiring glance and toying with the papers which were
scattered on the table. "Here you see is the order to allow Sir Percy
Blakeney and his wife, nee Marguerite St. Just, to quit the town of
Boulogne unmolested."</p>
<p>He held a paper out towards Marguerite, inviting her to look at it. She
caught sight of an official-looking document, bearing the motto and seal
of the Republic of France, and of her own name and Percy's written thereon
in full.</p>
<p>"It is perfectly en regle, I assure you," continued Chauvelin, "and only
awaits my signature."</p>
<p>He now took up another paper which looked like a long closely-written
letter. Marguerite watched his every movement, for instinct told her that
the supreme moment had come. There was a look of almost superhuman cruelty
and malice in the little Frenchman's eyes as he fixed them on the
impassive figure of Sir Percy, the while with slightly trembling hands he
fingered that piece of paper and smoothed out its creases with loving
care.</p>
<p>"I am quite prepared to sign the order for your release, Lady Blakeney,"
he said, keeping his gaze still keenly fixed upon Sir Percy. "When it is
signed you will understand that our measures against the citizens of
Boulogne will no longer hold good, and that on the contrary, the general
amnesty and free pardon will come into force."</p>
<p>"Yes, I understand that," she replied.</p>
<p>"And all that will come to pass, Lady Blakeney, the moment Sir Percy will
write me in his own hand a letter, in accordance with the draft which I
have prepared, and sign it with his name.</p>
<p>"Shall I read it to you?" he asked.</p>
<p>"If you please."</p>
<p>"You will see how simple it all is.... A mere matter of form.... I pray
you do not look upon it with terror, but only as the prelude to that
general amnesty and free pardon, which I feel sure will satisfy the
philanthropic heart of the noble Scarlet Pimpernel, since three score at
least of the inhabitants of Boulogne will owe their life and freedom to
him."</p>
<p>"I am listening, Monsieur," she said calmly.</p>
<p>"As I have already had the honour of explaining, this little document is
in the form of a letter addressed personally to me and of course in
French," he said finally, and then he looked down on the paper and began
to read:</p>
<p>Citizen Chauvelin—</p>
<p>In consideration of a further sum of one million francs and on the
understanding that this ridiculous charge brought against me of conspiring
against the Republic of France is immediately withdrawn, and I am allowed
to return to England unmolested, I am quite prepared to acquaint you with
the names and whereabouts of certain persons who under the guise of the
League of the Scarlet Pimpernel are even now conspiring to free the woman
Marie Antoinette and her son from prison and to place the latter upon the
throne of France. You are quite well aware that under the pretence of
being the leader of a gang of English adventurers, who never did the
Republic of France and her people any real harm, I have actually been the
means of unmasking many a royalist plot before you, and of bringing many
persistent conspirators to the guillotine. I am surprised that you should
cavil at the price I am asking this time for the very important
information with which I am able to furnish you, whilst you have often
paid me similar sums for work which was a great deal less difficult to do.
In order to serve your government effectually, both in England and in
France, I must have a sufficiency of money, to enable me to live in a
costly style befitting a gentleman of my rank. Were I to alter my mode of
life I could not continue to mix in that same social milieu to which all
my friends belong and wherein, as you are well aware, most of the royalist
plots are hatched.</p>
<p>Trusting therefore to receive a favourable reply to my just demands within
the next twenty-four hours, whereupon the names in question shall be
furnished you forthwith,</p>
<p>I have the honour to remain, Citizen,</p>
<p>Your humble and obedient servant,</p>
<p>When he had finished reading, Chauvelin quietly folded the paper up again,
and then only did he look at the man and the woman before him.</p>
<p>Marguerite sat very erect, her head thrown back, her face very pale and
her hands tightly clutched in her lap. She had not stirred whilst
Chauvelin read out the infamous document, with which he desired to brand a
brave man with the ineradicable stigma of dishonour and of shame. After
she heard the first words, she looked up swiftly and questioningly at her
husband, but he stood at some little distance from her, right out of the
flickering circle of yellowish light made by the burning tallow-candle. He
was as rigid as a statue, standing in his usual attitude with legs apart
and hands buried in his breeches pockets.</p>
<p>She could not see his face.</p>
<p>Whatever she may have felt with regard to the letter, as the meaning of it
gradually penetrated into her brain, she was, of course, convinced of one
thing, and that was that never for a moment would Percy dream of
purchasing his life or even hers at such a price. But she would have liked
some sign from him, some look by which she could be guided as to her
immediate conduct: as, however, he gave neither look nor sign, she
preferred to assume an attitude of silent contempt.</p>
<p>But even before Chauvelin had had time to look from one face to the other,
a prolonged and merry laugh echoed across the squalid room.</p>
<p>Sir Percy, with head thrown back, was laughing whole-heartedly.</p>
<p>"A magnificent epistle, sir," he said gaily, "Lud love you, where did you
wield the pen so gracefully?... I vow that if I signed this interesting
document no one will believe I could have expressed myself with perfect
ease.. and in French too..."</p>
<p>"Nay, Sir Percy," rejoined Chauvelin drily, "I have thought of all that,
and lest in the future there should be any doubt as to whether your own
hand had or had not penned the whole of this letter, I also make it a
condition that you write out every word of it yourself, and sign it here
in this very room, in the presence of Lady Blakeney, of myself, of my
colleagues and of at least half a dozen other persons whom I will select."</p>
<p>"It is indeed admirably thought out, Monsieur," rejoined Sir Percy, "and
what is to become of the charming epistle, may I ask, after I have written
and signed it?... Pardon my curiosity.... I take a natural interest in the
matter... and truly your ingenuity passes belief..."</p>
<p>"Oh! the fate of this letter will be as simple as was the writing
thereof.... A copy of it will be published in our 'Gazette de Paris' as a
bait for enterprising English journalists.... They will not be backward in
getting hold of so much interesting matter.... Can you not see the
attractive headlines in 'The London Gazette,' Sir Percy? 'The League of
the Scarlet Pimpernel unmasked! A gigantic hoax! The origin of the
Blakeney millions!'... I believe that journalism in England has reached a
high standard of excellence... and even the 'Gazette de Paris' is greatly
read in certain towns of your charming country.... His Royal Highness the
Prince of Wales, and various other influential gentlemen in London, will,
on the other hand, be granted a private view of the original through the
kind offices of certain devoted friends whom we possess in England.... I
don't think that you need have any fear, Sir Percy, that your caligraphy
will sink into oblivion. It will be our business to see that it obtains
the full measure of publicity which it deserves..."</p>
<p>He paused a moment, then his manner suddenly changed: the sarcastic tone
died out of his voice, and there came back into his face that look of
hatred and cruelty which Blakeney's persiflage had always the power to
evoke.</p>
<p>"You may rest assured of one thing, Sir Percy," he said with a harsh
laugh, "that enough mud will be thrown at that erstwhile glorious Scarlet
Pimpernel... some of it will be bound to stick..."</p>
<p>"Nay, Monsieur... er... Chaubertin," quoth Blakeney lightly, "I have no
doubt that you and your colleagues are past masters in the graceful art of
mud-throwing.... But pardon me... er.... I was interrupting you....
Continue, Monsieur... continue, I pray. 'Pon my honour, the matter is
vastly diverting."</p>
<p>"Nay, sir, after the publication of this diverting epistle, meseems your
honour will ceased to be a marketable commodity."</p>
<p>"Undoubtedly, sir," rejoined Sir Percy, apparently quite unruffled,
"pardon a slip of the tongue... we are so much the creatures of habit....
As you were saying...?"</p>
<p>"I have but little more to say, sir.... But lest there should even now be
lurking in your mind a vague hope that, having written this letter, you
could easily in the future deny its authorship, let me tell you this: my
measures are well taken, there will be witnesses to your writing of it....
You will sit here in this room, unfettered, uncoerced in any way, and the
money spoken of in the letter will be handed over to you by my colleague,
after a few suitable words spoken by him, and you will take the money from
him, Sir Percy... and the witnesses will see you take it after having seen
you write the letter... they will understand that you are being PAID by
the French government for giving information anent royalist plots in this
country and in England... they will understand that your identity as the
leader of that so-called band is not only known to me and to my colleague,
but that it also covers your real character and profession as the paid spy
of France."</p>
<p>"Marvellous, I call it... demmed marvellous," quoth Sir Percy blandly.</p>
<p>Chauvelin had paused, half-choked by his own emotion, his hatred and
prospective revenge. He passed his handkerchief over his forehead, which
was streaming with perspiration.</p>
<p>"Warm work, this sort of thing... eh... Monsieur... er... Chaubertin?..."
queried his imperturbable enemy.</p>
<p>Marguerite said nothing; the whole thing was too horrible for words, but
she kept her large eyes fixed upon her husband's face... waiting for that
look, that sign from him which would have eased the agonizing anxiety in
her heart, and which never came.</p>
<p>With a great effort now, Chauvelin pulled himself together and, though his
voice still trembled, he managed to speak with a certain amount of calm:</p>
<p>"Probably, Sir Percy, you know," he said, "that throughout the whole of
France we are inaugurating a series of national fetes, in honour of the
new religion which the people are about to adopt.... Demoiselle Desiree
Candeille, whom you know, will at these festivals impersonate the Goddess
of Reason, the only deity whom we admit now in France.... She has been
specially chosen for this honour, owing to the services which she has
rendered us recently... and as Boulogne happens to be the lucky city in
which we have succeeded in bringing the Scarlet Pimpernel to justice, the
national fete will begin within these city walls, with Demoiselle
Candeille as the thrice-honoured goddess."</p>
<p>"And you will be very merry here in Boulogne, I dare swear..."</p>
<p>"Aye, merry, sir," said Chauvelin with an involuntary and savage snarl, as
he placed a long claw-like finger upon the momentous paper before him,
"merry, for we here in Boulogne will see that which will fill the heart of
every patriot in France with gladness.... Nay! 'twas not the death of the
Scarlet Pimpernel we wanted... not the noble martyrdom of England's chosen
hero... but his humiliation and defeat... derision and scorn... contumely
and contempt. You asked me airily just now, Sir Percy, how I proposed to
accomplish this object... Well! you know it now—by forcing you...
aye, forcing—to write and sign a letter and to take money from my
hands which will brand you forever as a liar and informer, and cover you
with the thick and slimy mud of irreclaimable infamy..."</p>
<p>"Lud! sir," said Sir Percy pleasantly, "what a wonderful command you have
of our language.... I wish I could speak French half as well..."</p>
<p>Marguerite had risen like an automaton from her chair. She felt that she
could no longer sit still, she wanted to scream out at the top of her
voice, all the horror she felt for this dastardly plot, which surely must
have had its origin in the brain of devils. She could not understand
Percy. This was one of those awful moments, which she had been destined to
experience once or twice before, when the whole personality of her husband
seemed to become shadowy before her, to slip, as it were, past her
comprehension, leaving her indescribably lonely and wretched, trusting yet
terrified.</p>
<p>She thought that long ere this he would have flung back every insult in
his opponent's teeth; she did not know what inducements Chauvelin had held
out in exchange for the infamous letter, what threats he had used. That
her own life and freedom were at stake, was, of course, evident, but she
cared nothing for life, and he should know that certainly she would care
still less if such a price had to be paid for it.</p>
<p>She longed to tell him all that was in her heart, longed to tell him how
little she valued her life, how highly she prized his honour! but how
could she, before this fiend who snarled and sneered in his anticipated
triumph, and surely, surely Percy knew!</p>
<p>And knowing all that, why did he not speak? Why did he not tear that
infamous paper from out that devil's hands and fling it in his face? Yet,
though her loving ear caught every intonation of her husband's voice, she
could not detect the slightest harshness in his airy laugh; his tone was
perfectly natural and he seemed to be, indeed, just as he appeared—vastly
amused.</p>
<p>Then she thought that perhaps he would wish her to go now, that he felt
desire to be alone with this man, who had outraged him in everything that
he held most holy and most dear, his honour and his wife... that perhaps,
knowing that his own temper was no longer under control, he did not wish
her to witness the rough and ready chastisement which he was intending to
mete out to this dastardly intriguer.</p>
<p>Yes! that was it no doubt! Herein she could not be mistaken; she knew his
fastidious notions of what was due and proper in the presence of a woman,
and that even at a moment like this, he would wish the manners of London
drawing-rooms to govern his every action.</p>
<p>Therefore she rose to go, and as she did so, once more tried to read the
expression in his face... to guess what was passing in his mind.</p>
<p>"Nay, Madam," he said, whilst he bowed gracefully before her, "I fear me
this lengthy conversation hath somewhat fatigued you.... This merry jest
'twixt my engaging friend and myself should not have been prolonged so far
into the night.... Monsieur, I pray you, will you not give orders that her
ladyship be escorted back to her room?"</p>
<p>He was still standing outside the circle of light, and Marguerite
instinctively went up to him. For this one second she was oblivious of
Chauvelin's presence, she forgot her well-schooled pride, her firm
determination to be silent and to be brave: she could no longer restrain
the wild beatings of her heart, the agony of her soul, and with sudden
impulse she murmured in a voice broken with intense love and subdued,
passionate appeal:</p>
<p>"Percy!"</p>
<p>He drew back a step further into the gloom: this made her realize the
mistake she had made in allowing her husband's most bitter enemy to get
this brief glimpse into her soul. Chauvelin's thin lips curled with
satisfaction, the brief glimpse had been sufficient for him, the rapidly
whispered name, the broken accent had told him what he had not known
hitherto: namely, that between this man and woman there was a bond far
more powerful that that which usually existed between husband and wife,
and merely made up of chivalry on the one side and trustful reliance on
the other.</p>
<p>Marguerite having realized her mistake, ashamed of having betrayed her
feelings even for a moment, threw back her proud head and gave her
exultant foe a look of defiance and of scorn. He responded with one of
pity, not altogether unmixed with deference. There was something almost
unearthly and sublime in this beautiful woman's agonizing despair.</p>
<p>He lowered his head and made her a deep obeisance, lest she should see the
satisfaction and triumph which shone through his pity.</p>
<p>As usual Sir Percy remained quite imperturbable, and now it was he, who,
with characteristic impudence, touched the hand-bell on the table:</p>
<p>"Excuse this intrusion, Monsieur," he said lightly, "her ladyship is
overfatigued and would be best in her room."</p>
<p>Marguerite threw him a grateful look. After all she was only a woman and
was afraid of breaking down. In her mind there was no issue to the present
deadlock save in death. For this she was prepared and had but one great
hope that she could lie in her husband's arms just once again before she
died. Now, since she could not speak to him, scarcely dared to look into
the loved face, she was quite ready to go.</p>
<p>In answer to the bell, the soldier had entered.</p>
<p>"If Lady Blakeney desires to go..." said Chauvelin.</p>
<p>She nodded and Chauvelin gave the necessary orders: two soldiers stood at
attention ready to escort Marguerite back to her prison cell. As she went
towards the door she came to within a couple of steps from where her
husband was standing, bowing to her as she passed. She stretched out an
icy cold hand towards him, and he, in the most approved London fashion,
with the courtly grace of a perfect English gentleman, took the little
hand in his and stooping very low kissed the delicate finger-tips.</p>
<p>Then only did she notice that the strong, nervy hand which held hers
trembled perceptibly, and that his lips—which for an instant rested
on her fingers—were burning hot.</p>
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