<h2><SPAN name="Ch7" id="Ch7">Chapter 7</SPAN>: A Rescue.</h2>
<p>D'Arblay and his two companions had been engaged, for ten days,
in visiting the Huguenots within a circuit of four or five leagues
round Toulouse, when they learned that their movements had been
reported to the authorities there. They had one day halted as usual
in a wood, when the soldier on the lookout ran in and reported that
a body of horsemen, some forty or fifty strong, were approaching at
a gallop by the road from the city.</p>
<p>"They may not be after us," D'Arblay said, "but at any rate,
they shall not catch us napping."</p>
<p>Girths were hastily tightened, armour buckled on, and all took
their places in their saddles. It was too late to retreat, for the
wood was a small one, and the country around open. As the horsemen
approached the wood they slackened speed; and presently halted,
facing it.</p>
<p>"Some spy has tracked us here," D'Arblay said; "but it is one
thing to track the game, another to capture it. Let us see what
these gentlemen of Toulouse are going to do. I have no doubt that
they know our number accurately enough, and if they divide, as I
hope they will, we shall be able to give them a lesson."</p>
<p>This was evidently the intention of the Catholics. After a short
pause an officer trotted off with half the troop, making a circuit
to come down behind the wood and cut off all retreat. As they moved
off, the Huguenots could count that there were twenty-five men in
each section.</p>
<p>"The odds are only great enough to be agreeable," D'Arblay
laughed. "It is not as it was outside Paris, where they were ten to
one against us. Counting our servants we muster twenty-two, while
that party in front are only four stronger; for that gentleman with
the long robe is probably an official of their parliament, or a
city councillor, and need not be counted. We will wait a couple of
minutes longer, until the other party is fairly out of sight; and
then we will begin the dance."</p>
<p>A minute or two later he gave the word, and the little troop
moved through the trees until nearly at the edge of the wood.</p>
<p>"Now, gentlemen, forward," D'Arblay said, "and God aid the
right!"</p>
<p>As in a compact body, headed by the three gentlemen, they burst
suddenly from the wood, there was a shout of dismay; and then loud
orders from the officer of the troop, halted a hundred and fifty
yards away. The men were sitting carelessly on their horses. They
had confidently anticipated taking the Huguenots alive, and thought
of nothing less than that the latter should take the offensive.</p>
<p>Scarcely had they got their horses into motion before the
Huguenots were upon them. The conflict lasted but a minute. Half
the Catholics were cut down; the rest, turning their horses, rode
off at full speed. The Huguenots would have followed them, but
D'Arblay shouted to them to halt.</p>
<p>"You have only done half your work yet," he said. "We have the
other party to deal with."</p>
<p>Only one of his Huguenots had fallen, shot through the head by a
pistol discharged by the officer; who had himself been, a moment
later, run through by D'Arblay, at whom the shot had been aimed.
Gathering his men together, the Huguenot leader rode back and, when
halfway through the wood, they encountered the other party; whose
officer had at once ridden to join the party he had left, when he
heard the pistol shot that told him they were engaged with the
Huguenots. Although not expecting an attack from an enemy they
deemed overmatched by their comrades, the troop, encouraged by
their officer, met the Huguenots stoutly.</p>
<p>The fight was, for a short time, obstinate. Broken up by the
trees, it resolved itself into a series of single combats. The
Huguenot men-at-arms, however, were all tried soldiers; while their
opponents were, rather, accustomed to the slaughter of defenceless
men and women than to a combat with men-at-arms. Coolness and
discipline soon asserted themselves.</p>
<p>Francois and Philip both held their ground, abreast of their
leader; and Philip, by cutting down the lieutenant, brought the
combat to a close. His followers, on seeing their officer fall, at
once lost heart; and those who could do so turned their horses, and
rode off. They were hotly pursued, and six were overtaken and cut
down. Eight had fallen in the conflict in the wood.</p>
<p>"That has been a pretty sharp lesson," D'Arblay said as, leaving
the pursuit to his followers, he reined in his horse at the edge of
the wood. "You both did right gallantly, young sirs. It is no
slight advantage, in a melee of that kind, to be strong in
officers. The fellows fought stoutly, for a short time.</p>
<p>"Had it not been for your despatching their officer, Monsieur
Fletcher, we should not have finished with them so quickly. It was
a right down blow, and heartily given, and fell just at the joint
of the gorget."</p>
<p>"I am sorry that I killed him," Philip replied. "He seemed a
brave gentleman, and was not very many years older than I am,
myself."</p>
<p>"He drew it upon himself," D'Arblay said. "If he had not come
out to take us, he would be alive now.</p>
<p>"Well, as soon as our fellows return we will move round to
Merlincourt, on the other side of the town. There are several of
our friends there, and it is the last place we have to visit. After
this skirmish, we shall find the neighbourhood too hot for us. It
is sure to make a great noise and, at the first gleam of the sun on
helm or breast plate, some Catholic or other will hurry off to
Toulouse with the news. In future we had best take some of the
men-at-arms with us, when we pay our visits, or we may be caught
like rats in a trap."</p>
<p>Making a circuit of twenty miles, they approached Merlincourt
that evening and, establishing themselves as usual in a wood,
remained quiet there next day. After nightfall D'Arblay rode off,
taking with him Francois and five of his own men, and leaving
Philip in command of the rest. The gold and jewels they had
gathered had been divided into three portions, and the bags placed
in the holsters of the saddles of the three lackeys; as these were
less likely to be taken than their masters and, if one were
captured, a portion only of the contributions would be lost.
D'Arblay had arranged that he would not return that night, but
would sleep at the chateau of the gentleman he was going to
visit.</p>
<p>"I will get him to send around to our other friends, in the
morning. The men will return when they see that all is clear. Send
them back to meet us at the chateau, tomorrow night."</p>
<p>The five men returned an hour after they set out, and reported
that all was quiet at Merlincourt; and that the Sieur D'Arblay had
sent a message, to Philip, to move a few miles farther away before
morning, and to return to the wood soon after nightfall.</p>
<p>Philip gave the men six hours to rest themselves and their
horses. They then mounted and rode eight miles farther from
Toulouse, halting before daybreak in a thick copse standing on high
ground, commanding a view of a wide tract of country. Two of the
troopers were sent off to buy provisions in a village, half a mile
away. Two were placed on watch. Some of the others lay down for
another sleep, while Pierre redressed the wounds that five of the
men had received in the fight.</p>
<p>At twelve o'clock one of the lookouts reported that he could
see, away out on the plain, a body of horsemen. Philip at once went
to examine them for himself.</p>
<p>"There must be some two hundred of them, I should say, by the
size of the clump," he remarked to the soldier.</p>
<p>"About that, I should say, sir."</p>
<p>"I expect they are hunting for us," Philip said. "They must have
heard from some villager that we were seen to ride round this way,
the day before yesterday, or they would hardly be hunting in this
neighbourhood for us. It is well we moved in the night.</p>
<p>"I wish the Sieur D'Arblay and the Count de Laville were with
us. No doubt they were hidden away, as soon as the troop was seen,
but one is never secure against treachery."</p>
<p>Philip was restless and uncomfortable all day, and walked about
the wood, impatiently longing for night to come. As soon as it was
dark they mounted, and rode back to the wood near Merlincourt. The
five men were at once sent off to the chateau where they had left
their leaders.</p>
<p>"That is a pistol shot!" Pierre exclaimed, some twenty minutes
after they left.</p>
<p>"I did not hear it. Are you sure, Pierre?"</p>
<p>"Quite sure, sir. At least, I will not swear that it was a
pistol--it might have been an arquebus--but I will swear it was a
shot."</p>
<p>"To your saddle, men," Philip said. "A pistol shot has been
heard, and it may be that your comrades have fallen into an ambush.
Advance to the edge of the wood, and be ready to dash out to
support them, should they come."</p>
<p>But a quarter of an hour passed, and there was no sound to break
the stillness of the evening.</p>
<p>"Shall I go into the village and find out what has taken place,
Monsieur Fletcher? I will leave my iron cap and breast and back
pieces here. I shall not want to fight but to run, and a hare could
not run in these iron pots."</p>
<p>"Do, Pierre. We shall be ready to support you, if you are
chased."</p>
<p>"If I am chased by half a dozen men, I may run here, sir; if by
a strong force, I shall strike across the country. Trust me to
double and throw them off the scent. If I am not back here in an
hour, it will be that I am taken, or have had to trust to my heels;
and you will find me, in the last case, tomorrow morning at the
wood where we halted today. If I do not come soon after daybreak,
you will know that I am either captured or killed. Do not delay for
me longer, but act as seems best to you."</p>
<p>Pierre took off his armour and sped away in the darkness, going
at a trot that would speedily take him to the village.</p>
<p>"Dismount and stand by your horses," Philip ordered. "We may
want all their strength."</p>
<p>Half an hour later Pierre returned, panting.</p>
<p>"I have bad news, sir. I have prowled about the village, which
is full of soldiers, and listened to their talk through open
windows. The Sieur D'Arblay, Monsieur Francois, and the owner of
the chateau and his wife were seized, and carried off to Toulouse
this morning, soon after daybreak. By what I heard, one of the
servants of the chateau was a spy, set by the council of Toulouse
to watch the doings of its owner; and as soon as Monsieur D'Arblay
arrived there last night, he stole out and sent a messenger to
Toulouse. At daybreak the chateau was surrounded, and they were
seized before they had time to offer resistance. The troop of horse
we saw have all day been searching for us, and went back before
nightfall to Merlincourt; thinking that we should be sure to be
going there, sometime or other, to inquire after our captain. The
five men you sent were taken completely by surprise, and all were
killed, though not without a tough fight. A strong party are lying
in ambush with arquebuses, making sure that the rest of the troop
will follow the five they surprised."</p>
<p>"You were not noticed, Pierre, or pursued?"</p>
<p>"No, sir. There were so many men about in the village that one
more stranger attracted no attention."</p>
<p>"Then we can remain here safely for half an hour," Philip
said.</p>
<p>The conversation had taken place a few paces from the troop.
Philip now joined his men.</p>
<p>"The Sieur D'Arblay and Count Francois have been taken
prisoners. Your comrades fell into an ambush, and have, I fear, all
lost their lives. Dismount for half an hour, men, while I think
over what is best to be done. Keep close to your horses, so as to
be in readiness to mount instantly, if necessary. One of you take
my horse.</p>
<p>"Do you come with me, Pierre.</p>
<p>"This is a terrible business, lad," he went on, as they walked
away from the others. "We know what will be the fate of my cousin
and Monsieur D'Arblay. They will be burnt or hung, as heretics. The
first thing is, how are we to get them out; and also, if possible,
the gentleman and his wife who were taken with them?"</p>
<p>"We have but ten of the men-at-arms left, sir; and four of them
are so wounded that they would not count for much, in a fight.
There are the two other lackeys and myself, so we are but fourteen,
in all. If we had arrived in time we might have done something but,
now they are firmly lodged in the prison at Toulouse, I see not
that we can accomplish anything."</p>
<p>Philip fell into silence for some minutes, then he said:</p>
<p>"Many of the councillors and members of parliament live, I
think, in villas outside the walls. If we seize a dozen of them,
appear before the city, and threaten to hang or shoot the whole of
them, if the four captives are not released, we might succeed in
getting our friends into our hands, Pierre."</p>
<p>"That is so, sir. There really seems a hope for us, in that
way."</p>
<p>"Then we will lose no time. We will ride at once for Toulouse.
When we get near the suburbs we will seize some countryman, and
force him to point out to us the houses of the principal
councillors and the members of their parliament. These we will
pounce upon and carry off, and at daybreak will appear with them
before the walls. We will make one of them signify, to their
friends, that if any armed party sallies out through the gates, or
approaches us from behind, it will be the signal for the instant
death of all of our captives.</p>
<p>"Now let us be off, at once."</p>
<p>The party mounted without delay, and rode towards Toulouse. This
rich and powerful city was surrounded by handsome villas and
chateaux, the abode of wealthy citizens and persons of distinction.
At the first house at which they stopped, Philip, with Pierre and
two of the men-at-arms, dismounted and entered. It was the abode of
a small farmer, who cultivated vegetables for the use of the
townsfolk. He had retired to bed with his family, but upon being
summoned came downstairs trembling, fearing that his late visitors
were bandits.</p>
<p>"No harm will be done to you, if you obey our orders," Philip
said; "but if not, we shall make short work of you. I suppose you
know the houses of most of the principal persons who live outside
the walls?"</p>
<p>"Assuredly I do, my lord. There is the President of the
Parliament, and three or four of the principal councillors, and the
Judge of the High Court, and many others, all living within a short
mile of this spot."</p>
<p>"Well, I require you to guide us to their houses. There will be
no occasion for you to show yourself, nor will anyone know that you
have had aught to do with the matter. If you attempt to escape, or
to give the alarm, you will without scruple be shot. If, on the
other hand, we are satisfied with your work, you will have a couple
of crowns for your trouble."</p>
<p>The man, seeing that he had no choice, put a good face on
it.</p>
<p>"I am ready to do as your lordship commands," he said. "I have
no reason for goodwill towards any of these personages, who rule us
harshly, and regard us as if we were dirt under their feet. Shall
we go first to the nearest of them?"</p>
<p>"No, we will first call on the President of the Parliament, and
then the Judge of the High Court, then the councillors in the order
of their rank. We will visit ten in all, and see that you choose
the most important.</p>
<p>"Pierre, you will take charge of this man, and ride in front of
us. Keep your pistol in your hand, and shoot him through the head,
if he shows signs of trying to escape. You will remain with him
when we enter the houses.</p>
<p>"Have you any rope, my man?"</p>
<p>"Yes, my lord, I have several long ropes, with which I bind the
vegetables on my cart when I go to market."</p>
<p>"That will do. Bring them at once."</p>
<p>Pierre accompanied the man when he went to his shed. On his
return with the ropes, Philip told the men-at-arms to cut them into
lengths of eight feet, and to make a running noose at one end of
each. When this was done, they again mounted and moved on.</p>
<p>"When we enter the houses," he said to the two other lackeys,
"you will remain without with Pierre, and will take charge of the
first four prisoners we bring out. Put the nooses round their
necks, and draw them tight enough to let the men feel that they are
there. Fasten the other ends to your saddles, and warn them, if
they put up their hands to throw off the nooses, you will spur your
horses into a gallop. That threat will keep them quiet enough."</p>
<p>In a quarter of an hour they arrived at the gate of a large and
handsome villa. Philip ordered his men to dismount, and fasten up
their horses.</p>
<p>"You will remain here, in charge of the horses," he said to the
lackeys; and then, with the men-at-arms, he went up to the
house.</p>
<p>Two of them were posted at the back entrance, two at the front,
with orders to let no one issue out. Then with his dagger he opened
the shutters of one of the windows and, followed by the other six
men, entered. The door was soon found and, opening it, they found
themselves in a hall where a hanging light was burning.</p>
<p>Several servants were asleep on the floor. These started up,
with exclamations of alarm, at seeing seven men with drawn
swords.</p>
<p>"Silence!" Philip said sternly, "or this will be your last
moment.</p>
<p>"Roger and Jules, do you take each one of these lackeys by the
collar. That is right. Now, put your pistols to their heads.</p>
<p>"Now, my men, lead us at once to your master's chamber.</p>
<p>"Eustace, light one of these torches on the wall at the lamp,
and bring it along with you.</p>
<p>"Henri, do you also come with us.</p>
<p>"The rest of you stay here, and guard these lackeys. Make them
sit down. If any of them move, run him through without
hesitation."</p>
<p>At this moment an angry voice was heard shouting above.</p>
<p>"What is all this disturbance about! If I hear another sound, I
will discharge you all in the morning."</p>
<p>Philip gave a loud and derisive laugh, which had the effect he
had anticipated for, directly afterwards, a man in a loose dressing
gown ran into the hall.</p>
<p>"What does this mean, you rascals?" he shouted angrily, as he
entered.</p>
<p>Then he stopped, petrified with astonishment.</p>
<SPAN id="PicD" name="PicD"></SPAN>
<center><ANTIMG src="images/d.jpg" alt="If you move a step, you are a dead man." /></center>
<p>"It means this," Philip said, levelling a pistol at him, "that
if you move a step, you are a dead man."</p>
<p>"You must be mad," the president gasped. "Do you know who I
am?"</p>
<p>"Perfectly, sir. You are president of the infamous parliament of
Toulouse. I am a Huguenot officer, and you are my prisoner. You
need not look so indignant; better men than you have been dragged
from their homes, to prison and death, by your orders. Now it is
your turn to be a prisoner.</p>
<p>"I might, if I chose, set fire to this chateau, and cut the
throats of all in it; but we do not murder in the name of God. We
leave that to you.</p>
<p>"Take this man away with you, Eustace. I give him into your
charge. If he struggles, or offers the least resistance, stab him
to the heart."</p>
<p>"You will at least give me time to dress, sir?" the president
said.</p>
<p>"Not a moment," Philip replied. "The night is warm, and you will
do very well, as you are.</p>
<p>"As for you," he went on, turning to the servants, "you will
remain quiet until morning; and if any of you dare to leave the
house, you will be slain without mercy. You can assure your
mistress that she will not be long without the society of your
master; for in all probability he will be returned, safe and sound,
before midday tomorrow. One of you may fetch your master's cloak,
since he seems to fear the night air."</p>
<p>The doors were opened and they issued out, Philip bidding the
servants close and bar them behind them. When they reached the
horses, the prisoner was handed over to D'Arblay's lackey, who
placed the noose round his neck, and gave him warning as Philip had
instructed him. Then they set off, Pierre with the guide again
leading the way.</p>
<p>Before morning they had ten prisoners in their hands. In one or
two cases the servants had attempted opposition, but they were
speedily overpowered, and the captures were all effected without
loss of life. The party then moved away about a mile, and the
prisoners were allowed to sit down. Several of them were elderly
men, and Philip picked these out, by the light of two torches they
had brought from the last house, and ordered the ropes to be
removed from their necks.</p>
<p>"I should regret, gentlemen," he said, "the indignity that I
have been forced to place upon you, had you been other than you
are. It is well, however, that you should have felt, though in a
very slight degree, something of the treatment that you have all
been instrumental in inflicting upon blameless men and women, whose
only fault was that they chose to worship God in their own way. You
may thank your good fortune at having fallen into the hands of one
who has had no dear friends murdered in the prisons of Toulouse.
There are scores of men who would have strung you up without mercy,
thinking it a righteous retribution for the pitiless cruelties of
which the parliament of Toulouse has been guilty.</p>
<p>"Happily for you, though I regard you with loathing as pitiless
persecutors, I have no personal wrongs to avenge. Your conscience
will tell you that, fallen as you have into the hands of Huguenots,
you could only expect death; but it is not for the purpose of
punishment that you have been captured. You are taken as hostages.
My friends, the Count de Laville and the Sieur D'Arblay, were
yesterday carried prisoners into Toulouse; and with them Monsieur
de Merouville, whose only fault was that he had afforded them a
night's shelter. His innocent wife was also dragged away with
him.</p>
<p>"You, sir," he said to one of the prisoners, "appear to me to be
the oldest of the party. At daybreak you will be released; and will
bear, to your colleagues in the city, the news that these nine
persons are prisoners in my hands. You will state that, if any body
of men approaches this place from any quarter, these nine persons
will at once be hung up to the branches above us. You will say that
I hold them as hostages for the four prisoners, and that I demand
that these shall be sent out here, with their horses and the arms
of my two friends, and under the escort of two unarmed
troopers.</p>
<p>"These gentlemen here will, before you start, sign a document
ordering the said prisoners at once to be released; and will also
sign a solemn undertaking, which will be handed over to Monsieur de
Merouville, pledging themselves that, should he and his wife choose
to return to their chateau, no harm shall ever happen to them; and
no accusation, of any sort, in the future be brought against
them.</p>
<p>"I may add that, should at any time this guarantee be broken, I
shall consider it my duty, the moment I hear of the event, to
return to this neighbourhood; and assuredly I will hang the
signatories of the guarantee over their own door posts, and will
burn their villas to the ground. I know the value of oaths sworn to
Huguenots; but in this case, I think they will be kept, for I swear
to you--and I am in the habit of keeping my oaths--that if you
break your undertaking, I will not break mine."</p>
<p>As soon as it was daylight, Pierre produced from his saddlebag
an ink horn, paper, and pens; and the ten prisoners signed their
name to an order for the release of the four captives. They then
wrote another document, to be handed by their representative to the
governor, begging him to see that the order was executed, informing
him of the position they were in, and that their lives would
certainly be forfeited, unless the prisoners were released without
delay. They also earnestly begged him to send out orders, to the
armed forces who were searching for the Huguenots, bidding them
make no movement, whatever, until after midday.</p>
<p>The councillor was then mounted on a horse and escorted, by two
of the men-at-arms, to within a quarter of a mile of the nearest
gate of the city. The men were to return with his horse. The
councillor was informed that ten o'clock was the limit given for
the return of the prisoners; and that, unless they had by that hour
arrived, it would be supposed that the order for their release
would not be respected, and in that case the nine hostages would be
hung forthwith; and that, in the course of a night or two, another
batch would be carried off.</p>
<p>Philip had little fear, however, that there would be any
hesitation, upon the part of those in the town, in acting upon the
order signed by so many important persons; for the death of the
president, and several of the leading members of the parliament,
would create such an outcry against the governor, by their friends
and relatives, that he would not venture to refuse the release of
four prisoners, of minor importance, in order to save their
lives.</p>
<p>After the messenger had departed, Philip had the guarantee for
the safety of Monsieur de Merouville and his wife drawn up and
signed, in duplicate.</p>
<p>"One of these documents," he said, "I shall give to Monsieur de
Merouville. The other I shall keep myself, so that, if this solemn
guarantee is broken, I shall have this as a justification for the
execution of the perjured men who signed it."</p>
<p>The time passed slowly. Some of the prisoners walked anxiously
and impatiently to and fro, looking continually towards the town.
Others sat in gloomy silence, too humiliated at their present
position even to talk to one another.</p>
<p>The soldiers, on the contrary, were in high spirits. They
rejoiced at the prospect of the return of their two leaders, and
they felt proud of having taken part in such an exploit as the
capture of the chief men of the dreaded parliament of Toulouse.
Four of them kept a vigilant guard over the prisoners. The rest ate
their breakfast with great gusto, and laughed and joked at the
angry faces of some of their prisoners.</p>
<p>It was just nine o'clock when a small group of horsemen were
seen in the distance.</p>
<p>"I think there are six of them, sir," Eustace said.</p>
<p>"That is the right number, Eustace. The lady is doubtless riding
behind her husband. Two men are the escort, and the other is, no
doubt, the councillor we released, who is now acting as guide to
this spot.</p>
<p>"Bring my horse, Pierre," and, mounting, Philip rode off to meet
the party.</p>
<p>He was soon able to make out the figures of Francois and
D'Arblay and, putting his horse to a gallop, was speedily alongside
of them.</p>
<p>"What miracle is this?" Monsieur D'Arblay asked, after the first
greeting was over. "At present we are all in a maze. We were in
separate dungeons, and the prospect looked as hopeless as it could
well do; when the doors opened and an officer, followed by two
soldiers bearing our armour and arms, entered and told us to attire
ourselves. What was meant we could not imagine. We supposed we were
going to be led before some tribunal; but why they should arm us,
before taking us there, was more than we could imagine.</p>
<p>"We met in the courtyard of the prison, and were stupefied at
seeing our horses saddled and bridled there, and Monsieur De
Merouville and his wife already mounted. Two unarmed troopers were
also there, and this gentleman, who said sourly:</p>
<p>"'Mount, sirs, I am going to lead you to your friends.'</p>
<p>"We looked at each other, to see if we were dreaming, but you
may imagine we were not long in leaping into our saddles.</p>
<p>"This gentleman has not been communicative. In fact, by his
manner, I should say he is deeply disgusted at the singular mission
with which he was charged; and on the ride here Francois, Monsieur
de Merouville, and myself have exhausted ourselves in conjectures
as to how this miracle has come about."</p>
<p>"Wait two or three minutes longer," Philip said, with a smile.
"When you get to yonder trees, you will receive an
explanation."</p>
<p>Francois and Monsieur D'Arblay gazed in surprise at the figures
of nine men, all in scanty raiments, wrapped up in cloaks, and
evidently guarded by the men-at-arms, who set up a joyous shout as
they rode in. Monsieur de Merouville uttered an exclamation of
astonishment, as he recognized the dreaded personages collected
together in such a plight.</p>
<p>"Monsieur de Merouville," Philip said, "I believe you know these
gentlemen by sight.</p>
<p>"Monsieur D'Arblay and Francois, you are not so fortunate as to
be acquainted with them; and I have pleasure in introducing to you
the President of the Parliament of Toulouse, the Judge of the High
Court, and other councillors, all gentlemen of consideration. It
has been my misfortune to have had to treat these gentlemen with
scant courtesy, but the circumstances left me no choice.</p>
<p>"Monsieur de Merouville, here is a document, signed by these
nine gentlemen, giving a solemn undertaking that you and Madame
shall be, in future, permitted to reside in your chateau without
the slightest let or hindrance; and that you shall suffer no
molestation, whatever, either on account of this affair, or on the
question of religion. I have a duplicate of this document; and
have, on my part, given an undertaking that, if its terms are
broken I will, at whatever inconvenience to myself, return to this
neighbourhood, hang these ten gentlemen if I can catch them, and at
any rate burn their chateaux to the ground. Therefore I think, as
you have their undertaking and mine, you can without fear return
home; but this, of course, I leave to yourself to decide.</p>
<p>"Gentlemen, you are now free to return to your homes; and I
trust this lesson--that we, on our part, can strike, if
necessary--will have some effect in moderating your zeal for
persecution."</p>
<p>Without a word, the president and his companions walked away in
a body. The troopers began to jeer and laugh, but Philip held up
his hand for silence.</p>
<p>"There need be no extra scorn," he said. "These gentlemen have
been sufficiently humiliated."</p>
<p>"And you really fetched all these good gentlemen from their
beds," D'Arblay said, bursting into a fit of laughter. "Why, it was
worth being taken prisoner, were it only for the sake of seeing
them. They looked like a number of old owls, suddenly disturbed by
daylight--some of them round eyed with astonishment, some of them
hissing menacingly. By my faith, Philip, it will go hard with you,
if you ever fall into the hands of those worthies.</p>
<p>"But a truce to jokes. We owe you our lives, Philip; of that
there is not a shadow of doubt. Though I have no more fear than
another of death in battle, I own that I have a dread of being
tortured and burned. It was a bold stroke, thus to carry off the
men who have been the leaders of the persecution against us."</p>
<p>"There was nothing in the feat, if it can be called a feat,"
Philip said. "Of course, directly we heard that you had been seized
and carried into Toulouse, I cast about for the best means to save
you. To attempt it by force would have been simple madness; and any
other plan would have required time, powerful friends, and a
knowledge of the city, and even then we should probably have failed
to get you out of prison. This being so, it was evident that the
best plan was to seize some of the citizens of importance, who
might serve as hostages. There was no difficulty in finding out,
from a small cultivator, who were the principal men living outside
the walls; and their capture was as easy a business. Scarcely a
blow was struck, and no lives lost, in capturing the whole of
them."</p>
<p>"But some of the men are missing," D'Arblay said.</p>
<p>"Yes; five of your men, I am sorry to say. On getting back to
the wood after dark I sent them, as you ordered, to fetch you from
Monsieur de Merouville's; but of course you had been captured
before that, and they fell into an ambush that was laid for them,
and were all killed."</p>
<p>"That is a bad business, Philip.</p>
<p>"Well, Monsieur de Merouville, will you go with us, or will you
trust in this safeguard?"</p>
<p>"In the first place, you have not given me a moment's
opportunity of thanking this gentleman; not only for having saved
the lives of my wife and myself, but for the forethought and
consideration with which he has, in the midst of his anxiety for
you and Monsieur de Laville, shown for us who were entire strangers
to him.</p>
<p>"Be assured, Monsieur Fletcher, that we are deeply grateful. I
hope that some time in the future, should peace ever again be
restored to France, we may be able to meet you again, and express
more warmly the obligations we feel towards you."</p>
<p>Madame de Merouville added a few words of gratitude, and then
D'Arblay broke in with:</p>
<p>"De Merouville, you must settle at once whether to go with us,
or stay on the faith of this safeguard. We have no such protection
and, if we linger here, we shall be having half a dozen troops of
horse after us. You may be sure they will be sent off, as soon as
the president and his friends reach the city; and if we were caught
again, we should be in an even worse plight than before. Do you
talk it over with Madame and, while you are doing so, Francois and
I will drink a flask of wine, and eat anything we can find here;
for they forgot to give us breakfast before they sent us off, and
it is likely we shall not have another opportunity, for some
hours."</p>
<p>"What do you think, Monsieur Fletcher?" Monsieur de Merouville
said, after speaking for a few minutes with his wife; "will they
respect this pledge? If not we must go, but we are both past the
age when we can take up life anew. My property would, of course, be
confiscated, and we should be penniless among strangers."</p>
<p>"I think they will respect the pledge," Philip replied. "I
assured them, so solemnly, that any breach of their promises would
be followed by prompt vengeance upon themselves and their homes,
that I feel sure they will not run the risk. Two or three among
them might possibly do so, but the others would restrain them. I
believe that you can safely return; and that, for a long time, at
any rate, you will be unmolested.</p>
<p>"Still, if I might advise, I should say sell your property, as
soon as you can find a purchaser at any reasonable price; and then
remove, either to La Rochelle or cross the sea to England. You may
be sure that there will be a deep and bitter hatred against you, by
those whose humiliation you have witnessed."</p>
<p>"Thank you. I will follow your advice, Monsieur Fletcher; and I
hope that I may, ere long, have the pleasure of seeing you, and of
worthily expressing our deep sense of the debt of gratitude we owe
you."</p>
<p>Five minutes later the troop mounted and rode away, while
Monsieur de Merouville, with his wife behind him, started for
home.</p>
<p>"I hope, Francois," D'Arblay said, as they galloped off from the
wood, "that the next time I ride on an expedition your kinsman may
again be with me, for he has wit and resources that render him a
valuable companion, indeed."</p>
<p>"I had great hopes, even when I was in prison, and things looked
almost as bad as they could be," Francois said, "that Philip would
do something to help us. I had much faith in his long headedness;
and so has the countess, my mother. She said to me, when we
started:</p>
<p>"'You are older than Philip, Francois; but you will act wisely
if, in cases of difficulty, you defer your opinions to his. His
training has given him self reliance and judgment, and he has been
more in the habit of thinking for himself than you have,' and
certainly he has fully justified her opinion.</p>
<p>"Where do you propose to ride next, D'Arblay?"</p>
<p>"For La Rochelle. I shall not feel safe until I am within the
walls. Presidents of Parliament, judges of High Court, and
dignified functionaries are not to be dragged from their beds with
impunity. Happily it will take them an hour and a half to walk back
to the town; or longer, perhaps, for they will doubtless go first
to their own homes. They will never show themselves, in such sorry
plight, in the streets of the city where they are accustomed to
lord it; so we may count on at least two hours before they can take
any steps. After that, they will move heaven and earth to capture
us. They will send out troops of horse after us, and messengers to
every city in the province, calling upon the governors to take
every means to seize us.</p>
<p>"We have collected a good sum of money, and carried out the
greater portion of our mission. We shall only risk its loss, as
well as the loss of our own lives, by going forward. The horses are
fresh, and we will put as many miles between us and Toulouse as
they can carry us, before nightfall."</p>
<p>The return journey was accomplished without misadventure. They
made no more halts than were required to rest their horses and,
travelling principally at night, they reached La Rochelle without
having encountered any body of the enemy.</p>
<p>While they had been absent, the army of Conde and the Admiral
had marched into Lorraine and, eluding the forces that barred his
march, effected a junction with the German men-at-arms who had been
brought to their aid by the Duke Casimir, the second son of the
Elector Palatine. However, the Germans refused to march a step
farther, unless they received the pay that had been agreed upon
before they started.</p>
<p>Conde's treasury was empty, and he had no means, whatever, of
satisfying their demand. In vain Duke Casimir, himself, tried to
persuade his soldiers to defer their claims, and to trust their
French co-religionists to satisfy their demands, later on. They
were unanimous in their refusal to march a step, until they
obtained their money.</p>
<p>The Admiral then addressed himself to his officers and soldiers.
He pointed out to them that, at the present moment, everything
depended upon their obtaining the assistance of the Germans--who
were, indeed, only demanding their rights, according to the
agreement that had been made with them--and he implored them to
come to the assistance of the prince and himself at this crisis. So
great was his influence among his soldiers that his appeal was
promptly and generally acceded to, and officers and men alike
stripped themselves of their chains, jewels, money, and valuables
of all kinds, and so made up the sum required to satisfy the
Germans.</p>
<p>As soon as this important affair had been settled, the united
army turned its face again westward; with the intention of giving
battle, anew, under the walls of Paris. It was, however, terribly
deficient in artillery, powder, and stores of all kinds and, the
military chest being empty and the soldiers without pay, it was
necessary, on the march, to exact contributions from the small
Catholic towns and villages through which the army marched and, in
spite of the orders of the Admiral, a certain amount of pillage was
carried on by the soldiers.</p>
<p>Having recruited the strength of his troops, by a short stay at
Orleans, the Admiral moved towards Paris. Since the commencement of
the war, negotiations had been going on fitfully. When the court
thought that the Huguenots were formidable, they pushed on the
negotiations in earnest. Whenever, upon the contrary, they believed
that the royal forces would be able to crush those of the Admiral,
the negotiations at once came to a standstill.</p>
<p>During the Admiral's long march to the east, they would grant no
terms whatever that could possibly be accepted; but as soon as the
junction was effected with Duke Casimir and his Germans, and the
Huguenot army again turned its face to Paris, the court became
eager to conclude peace. When the Prince of Conde's army arrived
before Chartres the negotiators met, and the king professed a
readiness to grant so many concessions, that it seemed as if the
objects of the Huguenots could be attained without further
fighting, and the Cardinal of Chatillon and some Huguenot nobles
went forward to have a personal conference with the royal
commissioners, at Lonjumeau.</p>
<p>After much discussion, the points most insisted upon by the
Huguenots were conceded, and the articles of a treaty drawn up,
copies of which were sent to Paris and Chartres. The Admiral and
Conde both perceived that, in the absence of any guarantees for the
observance of the conditions to which the other side bound
themselves, the treaty would be of little avail; as it could be
broken, as soon as the army now menacing Paris was scattered. The
feeling among the great portion of the nobles and their followers
was, however, strongly in favour of the conditions being
accepted.</p>
<p>The nobles were becoming beggared by the continuance of the war,
the expenses of which had, for the most part, to be paid from their
private means. Their followers, indeed, received no pay; but they
had to be fed, and their estates were lying untilled for want of
hands. Their men were eager to return to their farms and families,
and so strong and general was the desire for peace that the Admiral
and Conde bowed to it.</p>
<p>They agreed to the terms and, pending their ratification, raised
the siege of Chartres. Already their force was dwindling rapidly.
Large numbers marched away to their homes, without even asking for
leave; and their leaders soon ceased to be in a position to make
any demands for guarantees, and the peace of Lonjumeau was
therefore signed.</p>
<p>Its provisions gave very little more to the Huguenots than that
of the preceding arrangement of the same kind, and the campaign
left the parties in much the same position as they had occupied
before the Huguenots took up arms.</p>
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