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<h2> CHAPTER XXXI. AN INTERLUDE </h2>
<p>It was close on midnight now, and still they sat opposite one another, he
the friend and she the wife, talking over that brief half-hour that had
meant an eternity to her.</p>
<p>Marguerite had tried to tell Sir Andrew everything; bitter as it was to
put into actual words the pathos and misery which she had witnessed, yet
she would hide nothing from the devoted comrade whom she knew Percy would
trust absolutely. To him she repeated every word that Percy had uttered,
described every inflection of his voice, those enigmatical phrases which
she had not understood, and together they cheated one another into the
belief that hope lingered somewhere hidden in those words.</p>
<p>"I am not going to despair, Lady Blakeney," said Sir Andrew firmly; "and,
moreover, we are not going to disobey. I would stake my life that even now
Blakeney has some scheme in his mind which is embodied in the various
letters which he has given you, and which—Heaven help us in that
case!—we might thwart by disobedience. Tomorrow in the late
afternoon I will escort you to the Rue de Charonne. It is a house that we
all know well, and which Armand, of course, knows too. I had already
inquired there two days ago to ascertain whether by chance St. Just was
not in hiding there, but Lucas, the landlord and old-clothes dealer, knew
nothing about him."</p>
<p>Marguerite told him about her swift vision of Armand in the dark corridor
of the house of Justice.</p>
<p>"Can you understand it, Sir Andrew?" she asked, fixing her deep, luminous
eyes inquiringly upon him.</p>
<p>"No, I cannot," he said, after an almost imperceptible moment of
hesitancy; "but we shall see him to-morrow. I have no doubt that
Mademoiselle Lange will know where to find him; and now that we know where
she is, all our anxiety about him, at any rate, should soon be at an end."</p>
<p>He rose and made some allusion to the lateness of the hour. Somehow it
seemed to her that her devoted friend was trying to hide his innermost
thoughts from her. She watched him with an anxious, intent gaze.</p>
<p>"Can you understand it all, Sir Andrew?" she reiterated with a pathetic
note of appeal.</p>
<p>"No, no!" he said firmly. "On my soul, Lady Blakeney, I know no more of
Armand than you do yourself. But I am sure that Percy is right. The boy
frets because remorse must have assailed him by now. Had he but obeyed
implicitly that day, as we all did—"</p>
<p>But he could not frame the whole terrible proposition in words. Bitterly
as he himself felt on the subject of Armand, he would not add yet another
burden to this devoted woman's heavy load of misery.</p>
<p>"It was Fate, Lady Blakeney," he said after a while. "Fate! a damnable
fate which did it all. Great God! to think of Blakeney in the hands of
those brutes seems so horrible that at times I feel as if the whole thing
were a nightmare, and that the next moment we shall both wake hearing his
merry voice echoing through this room."</p>
<p>He tried to cheer her with words of hope that he knew were but chimeras. A
heavy weight of despondency lay on his heart. The letter from his chief
was hidden against his breast; he would study it anon in the privacy of
his own apartment so as to commit every word to memory that related to the
measures for the ultimate safety of the child-King. After that it would
have to be destroyed, lest it fell into inimical hands.</p>
<p>Soon he bade Marguerite good-night. She was tired out, body and soul, and
he—her faithful friend—vaguely wondered how long she would be
able to withstand the strain of so much sorrow, such unspeakable misery.</p>
<p>When at last she was alone Marguerite made brave efforts to compose her
nerves so as to obtain a certain modicum of sleep this night. But, strive
how she might, sleep would not come. How could it, when before her wearied
brain there rose constantly that awful vision of Percy in the long, narrow
cell, with weary head bent over his arm, and those friends shouting
persistently in his ear:</p>
<p>"Wake up, citizen! Tell us, where is Capet?"</p>
<p>The fear obsessed her that his mind might give way; for the mental agony
of such intense weariness must be well-nigh impossible to bear. In the
dark, as she sat hour after hour at the open window, looking out in the
direction where through the veil of snow the grey walls of the Chatelet
prison towered silent and grim, she seemed to see his pale, drawn face
with almost appalling reality; she could see every line of it, and could
study it with the intensity born of a terrible fear.</p>
<p>How long would the ghostly glimmer of merriment still linger in the eyes?
When would the hoarse, mirthless laugh rise to the lips, that awful laugh
that proclaims madness? Oh! she could have screamed now with the awfulness
of this haunting terror. Ghouls seemed to be mocking her out of the
darkness, every flake of snow that fell silently on the window-sill became
a grinning face that taunted and derided; every cry in the silence of the
night, every footstep on the quay below turned to hideous jeers hurled at
her by tormenting fiends.</p>
<p>She closed the window quickly, for she feared that she would go mad. For
an hour after that she walked up and down the room making violent efforts
to control her nerves, to find a glimmer of that courage which she
promised Percy that she would have.</p>
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