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<h2> Chapter II: A Retrospect </h2>
<p>The room was close and dark, filled with the smoke from a defective
chimney.</p>
<p>A tiny boudoir, once the dainty sanctum of imperious Marie Antoinette; a
faint and ghostly odour, like unto the perfume of spectres, seemed still
to cling to the stained walls, and to the torn Gobelin tapestries.</p>
<p>Everywhere lay the impress of a heavy and destroying hand: that of the
great and glorious Revolution.</p>
<p>In the mud-soiled corners of the room a few chairs, with brocaded cushions
rudely torn, leant broken and desolate against the walls. A small
footstool, once gilt-legged and satin-covered, had been overturned and
roughly kicked to one side, and there it lay on its back, like some little
animal that had been hurt, stretching its broken limbs upwards, pathetic
to behold.</p>
<p>From the delicately wrought Buhl table the silver inlay had been harshly
stripped out of its bed of shell.</p>
<p>Across the Lunette, painted by Boucher and representing a chaste Diana
surrounded by a bevy of nymphs, an uncouth hand had scribbled in charcoal
the device of the Revolution: Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite ou la Mort;
whilst, as if to give a crowning point to the work of destruction and to
emphasise its motto, someone had decorated the portrait of Marie
Antoinette with a scarlet cap, and drawn a red and ominous line across her
neck.</p>
<p>And at the table two men were sitting in close and eager conclave.</p>
<p>Between them a solitary tallow candle, unsnuffed and weirdly flickering,
threw fantastic shadows upon the walls, and illumined with fitful and
uncertain light the faces of the two men.</p>
<p>How different were these in character!</p>
<p>One, high cheek-boned, with coarse, sensuous lips, and hair elaborately
and carefully powdered; the other pale and thin-lipped, with the keen eyes
of a ferret and a high intellectual forehead, from which the sleek brown
hair was smoothly brushed away.</p>
<p>The first of these men was Robespierre, the ruthless and incorruptible
demagogue; the other was Citizen Chauvelin, ex-ambassador of the
Revolutionary Government at the English Court.</p>
<p>The hour was late, and the noises from the great, seething city preparing
for sleep came to this remote little apartment in the now deserted Palace
of the Tuileries, merely as a faint and distant echo.</p>
<p>It was two days after the Fructidor Riots. Paul Deroulede and the woman
Juliette Marny, both condemned to death, had been literally spirited away
out of the cart which was conveying them from the Hall of Justice to the
Luxembourg Prison, and news had just been received by the Committee of
Public Safety that at Lyons, the Abbe du Mesnil, with the ci-devant
Chevalier d'Egremont and the latter's wife and family, had effected a
miraculous and wholly incomprehensible escape from the Northern Prison.</p>
<p>But this was not all. When Arras fell into the hands of the Revolutionary
army, and a regular cordon was formed round the town, so that not a single
royalist traitor might escape, some three score women and children, twelve
priests, the old aristocrats Chermeuil, Delleville and Galipaux and many
others, managed to pass the barriers and were never recaptured.</p>
<p>Raids were made on the suspected houses: in Paris chiefly where the
escaped prisoners might have found refuge, or better still where their
helpers and rescuers might still be lurking. Foucquier Tinville, Public
Prosecutor, led and conducted these raids, assisted by that bloodthirsty
vampire, Merlin. They heard of a house in the Rue de l'Ancienne Comedie
where an Englishmen was said to have lodged for two days.</p>
<p>They demanded admittance, and were taken to the rooms where the Englishman
had stayed. These were bare and squalid, like hundreds of other rooms in
the poorer quarters of Paris. The landlady, toothless and grimy, had not
yet tidied up the one where the Englishman had slept: in fact she did not
know he had left for good.</p>
<p>He had paid for his room, a week in advance, and came and went as he
liked, she explained to Citizen Tinville. She never bothered about him, as
he never took a meal in the house, and he was only there two days. She did
not know her lodger was English until the day he left. She thought he was
a Frenchman from the South, as he certainly had a peculiar accent when he
spoke.</p>
<p>"It was the day of the riots," she continued; "he would go out, and I told
him I did not think that the streets would be safe for a foreigner like
him: for he always wore such very fine clothes, and I made sure that the
starving men and women of Paris would strip them off his back when their
tempers were roused. But he only laughed. He gave me a bit of paper and
told me that if he did not return I might conclude that he had been
killed, and if the Committee of Public Safety asked me questions about me,
I was just to show the bit of paper and there would be no further
trouble."</p>
<p>She had talked volubly, more than a little terrified at Merlin's scowls,
and the attitude of Citizen Tinville, who was known to be very severe if
anyone committed any blunders.</p>
<p>But the Citizeness—her name was Brogard and her husband's brother
kept an inn in the neighbourhood of Calais—the Citizeness Brogard
had a clear conscience. She held a license from the Committee of Public
Safety for letting apartments, and she had always given due notice to the
Committee of the arrival and departure of her lodgers. The only thing was
that if any lodger paid her more than ordinarily well for the
accommodation and he so desired it, she would send in the notice
conveniently late, and conveniently vaguely worded as to the description,
status and nationality of her more liberal patrons.</p>
<p>This had occurred in the case of her recent English visitor.</p>
<p>But she did not explain it quite like that to Citizen Foucquier Tinville
or to Citizen Merlin.</p>
<p>However, she was rather frightened, and produced the scrap of paper which
the Englishman had left with her, together with the assurance that when
she showed it there would be no further trouble.</p>
<p>Tinville took it roughly out of her hand, but would not glance at it. He
crushed it into a ball and then Merlin snatched it from him with a coarse
laugh, smoothed out the creases on his knee and studied it for a moment.</p>
<p>There were two lines of what looked like poetry, written in a language
which Merlin did not understand. English, no doubt.</p>
<p>But what was perfectly clear, and easily comprehended by any one, was the
little drawing in the corner, done in red ink and representing a small
star-shaped flower.</p>
<p>Then Tinville and Merlin both cursed loudly and volubly, and bidding their
men follow them, turned away from the house in the Rue de l'Ancienne
Comedie and left its toothless landlady on her own doorstep still volubly
protesting her patriotism and her desire to serve the government of the
Republic.</p>
<p>Tinville and Merlin, however, took the scrap of paper to Citizen
Robespierre, who smiled grimly as he in his turn crushed the offensive
little document in the palm of his well-washed hands.</p>
<p>Robespierre did not swear. He never wasted either words or oaths, but he
slipped the bit of paper inside the double lid of his silver snuff box and
then he sent a special messenger to Citizen Chauvelin in the Rue
Corneille, bidding him come that same evening after ten o'clock to room
No. 16 in the ci-devant Palace of the Tuileries.</p>
<p>It was now half-past ten, and Chauvelin and Robespierre sat opposite one
another in the ex-boudoir of Queen Marie Antoinette, and between them on
the table, just below the tallow-candle, was a much creased, exceedingly
grimy bit of paper.</p>
<p>It had passed through several unclean hands before Citizen Robespierre's
immaculately white fingers had smoothed it out and placed it before the
eyes of ex-Ambassador Chauvelin.</p>
<p>The latter, however, was not looking at the paper, he was not even looking
at the pale, cruel face before him. He had closed his eyes and for a
moment had lost sight of the small dark room, of Robespierre's ruthless
gaze, of the mud-stained walls and greasy floor. He was seeing, as in a
bright and sudden vision, the brilliantly-lighted salons of the Foreign
Office in London, with beautiful Marguerite Blakeney gliding queenlike on
the arm of the Prince of Wales.</p>
<p>He heard the flutter of many fans, the frou-frou of silk dresses, and
above all the din and sound of dance music, he heard an inane laugh and an
affected voice repeating the doggerel rhyme that was even now written on
that dirty piece of paper which Robespierre had placed before him:</p>
<table>
<tr>
<td>
"We seek him here, and we seek him there,<br/> Those Frenchies seek
him everywhere!<br/> Is he in heaven, is he in hell,<br/> That demmed
elusive Pimpernel?"
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>It was a mere flash! One of memory's swiftly effaced pictures, when she
shows us for the fraction of a second, indelible pictures from out our
past. Chauvelin, in that same second, while his own eyes were closed and
Robespierre's fixed upon him, also saw the lonely cliffs of Calais, heard
the same voice singing: "God save the King!" the volley of musketry, the
despairing cries of Marguerite Blakeney; and once again he felt the keen
and bitter pang of complete humiliation and defeat.</p>
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