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<h2> CHAPTER XIII — A LAWYER'S GOOD LADY </h2>
<p>The remainder of the night passed without further alarm, but Count Victor
lay only on the frontiers of forgetfulness till morning, his senses all on
sentry, and the salt, wind-blown dawn found him abroad before the rest of
Doom was well awake. He met the calesh of the Lords going back the way it
had come with an outrider in a red jacket from the stable of Argyll: it
passed him on the highway so close that he saw Elchies and Kilkerran half
sleeping within as they drove away from the scene of their dreadful
duties. In a cloak of rough watchet blue he had borrowed from his host and
a hat less conspicuous than that he had come in from Stirling, he passed,
to such strangers in the locality, for some tacksman of the countryside,
or a traveller like themselves. To have ventured into the town, however,
where every one would see he was a stranger and speedily inquire into his
business there, was, as he had been carefully apprised by Doom the night
before, a risk too great to be run without good reason. Stewart's trial
had created in the country a state of mind that made a stranger's presence
there somewhat hazardous for himself, and all the more so in the case of a
foreigner, for, rightly or wrongly, there was associated with the name of
the condemned man as art and part in the murder that of a Highland officer
in the service of the French. There had been rumours, too, of an attempted
rescue on the part of the Stewarts of Ardshiel, Achnacoin, and Fasnacloich—all
that lusty breed of the ancient train: the very numbers of them said to be
on the drove-roads with weapons from the thatch were given in the town,
and so fervently believed in that the appearance of a stranger without any
plausible account to give of himself would have stirred up tumult.</p>
<p>Count Victor eluded the more obvious danger of the town, but in his
forenoon ramble stumbled into one almost as great as that he had been
instructed to avoid. He had gone through the wood of Strongara and come
suddenly upon the cavalcade that bore the doomed man to the scene of his
execution thirty or forty miles away.</p>
<p>The wretch had been bound upon a horse—a tall, middle-aged man in
coarse home-spun clothing, his eye defiant, but his countenance white with
the anxieties of his situation. He was surrounded by a troop of sabres;
the horses' hoofs made a great clatter upon the hard road, and Count
Victor, walking abstractedly along the river-bank, came on them before he
was aware of their proximity. As he stood to let them pass he was touched
inexpressibly by the glance the convict gave him, so charged was it with
question, hope, dread, and the appetite for some human sympathy. He had
seen that look before in men condemned—once in front of his own
rapier,—and with the utmost feeling for the unhappy wretch he stood,
when the cavalcade had gone, looking after it and conjuring in his fancy
the last terrible scene whereof that creature would be the central figure.
Thus was he standing when another horseman came upon him suddenly,
following wide in the rear of the troops—a civilian who shared the
surprise of the unexpected meeting. He had no sooner gazed upon Count
Victor than he drew up his horse confusedly and seemed to hesitate between
proceeding or retreat. Count Victor passed with a courteous salute no less
formally returned. He was struck singularly by some sense of familiarity.
He did not know the horseman who so strangely scrutinised him as he
passed, but yet the face was one not altogether new to him. It was a face
scarce friendly, too, and for his life the Frenchman could not think of
any reason for aversion.</p>
<p>He could no more readily have accounted for the action of the horseman had
he known that he had ridden behind the soldiers but a few hundred yards
after meeting with Count Victor when he turned off at one of the
hunting-roads with which the ducal grounds abounded, and galloped
furiously back towards the castle of Argyll. Nothing checked him till he
reached the entrance, where he flung the reins to a servant and dashed
into the turret-room where the Duke sat writing.</p>
<p>"Ah, Sim!" said his Grace, airily, yet with an accent of apprehension,
"you have come back sooner than I looked for: nothing wrong with the
little excursion, I hope?"</p>
<p>MacTaggart leaned with both hands upon the table where his master wrote.
"They're all right, so far as I went with them," said he; "but if your
Grace in my position came upon a foreigner in the wood of Strongara—a
gentleman by the looks of him and a Frenchman by his moustachio, all alone
and looking after Sergeant Donald's company, what would your Grace's
inference be?"</p>
<p>Argyll, obviously, did not share much of his Chamberlain's excitement.
"There was no more than one there?" he asked, sprinkling sand upon his
finished letter. "No! Then there seems no great excuse for your extreme
perturbation, my good Sim. I'm lord of Argyll, but I'm not lord of the
king's highway, and if an honest stranger cares to take a freeman's
privilege and stand between the wind and Simon MacTaggart's dignity—Simon
MacTaggart's very touchy dignity, it would appear—who am I that I
should blame the liberty? You did not ride <i>ventre � terre</i> from
Strongara (I see a foam-fleck on your breeches) to tell me we had a
traveller come to admire our scenery? Come, come, Sim! I'll begin to think
these late eccentricities of yours, these glooms, abstractions, errors,
and anxieties and indispositions, and above all that pallid face of yours,
are due to some affair of the heart." As he spoke Argyll pinched his
kinsman playfully on the ear, quite the good companion, with none of the
condescension that a duke might naturally display in so doing.</p>
<p>MacTaggart reddened and Argyll laughed, "Ah!" he cried. "Can I have hit
it?" he went on, quizzing the Chamberlain. "See that you give me fair
warning, and I'll practise the accustomed and essential reel. Upon my
soul, I haven't danced since Lady Mary left, unless you call it so that
foolish minuet. You should have seen her Grace at St. James's last month.
Gad! she footed it like an angel; there's not a better dancer in London
town. See that your wife's a dancer, whoever she may be, Sim; let her
dance and sing and play the harpsichord or the clarsach—they are
charms that will last longer than her good looks, and will not weary you
so soon as that intellect that's so much in fashion nowadays, when every
woman listens to every clever thing you say, that she may say something
cleverer, or perhaps retail it later as her own."</p>
<p>MacTaggart turned about impatiently, poked with his riding crop at the
fire, and plainly indicated that he was not in the mood for badinage.</p>
<p>"All that has nothing to do with my Frenchman, your Grace," said he
bluntly.</p>
<p>"Oh, confound your Frenchman!" retorted the Duke, coming over, turning up
the skirts of his coat, and warming himself at the fire. "Don't say
Frenchman to me, and don't suggest any more abominable crime and intrigue
till the memory of that miserable Appin affair is off my mind. I know what
they'll say about that: I have a good notion what they're saying already—as
if I personally had a scrap of animosity to this poor creature sent to the
gibbet on Leven-side."</p>
<p>"I think you should have this Frenchman arrested for inquiry: I do not
like the look of him."</p>
<p>Argyll laughed. "Heavens!" he cried, "is the man gane wud? Have you any
charge against this unfortunate foreigner who has dared to shelter himself
in my woods? And if you have, do you fancy it is the old feudal times with
us still, and that I can clap him in my dungeon—if I had such a
thing—without any consultation with the common law-officers of the
land? Wake up, Sim! wake up! this is '55, and there are sundry written
laws of the State that unfortunately prevent even the Mac-Cailen Mor
snatching a man from the footpath and hanging him because he has not the
Gaelic accent and wears his hair in a different fashion from the rest of
us. Don't be a fool, cousin, don't be a fool!"</p>
<p>"It's as your Grace likes," said MacTaggart. "But if this man's not in any
way concerned in the Appin affair, he may very well be one of the French
agents who are bargaining for men for the French service, and the one
thing's as unlawful as the other by the act of 'thirty-six."</p>
<p>"H'm!" said Argyll, turning more grave, and shrewdly eyeing his
Chamberlain—"H'm! have you any particularly good reason to think
that?" He waited for no answer, but went on. "I give it up, MacTaggart,"
said he, with a gesture of impatience. "Gad! I cannot pretend to know half
the plots you are either in yourself or listening on the outside of,
though I get credit, I know, for planning them. All I want to know is,
have you any reason to think this part of Scotland—and incidentally
the government of this and every well-governed realm, as the libels say—would
be bettered by the examination of this man? Eh?"</p>
<p>MacTaggart protested the need was clamant. "On the look of the man I would
give him the jougs," said he. "It's spy—"</p>
<p>"H'm!" said Argyll, then coughed discreetly over a pinch of snuff.</p>
<p>"Spy or agent," said the Chamberlain, little abashed at the interjection.</p>
<p>"And yet a gentleman by the look of him, said Sim MacTaggart, five minutes
syne."</p>
<p>"And what's to prevent that?" asked the Chamberlain almost sharply. "Your
Grace will admit it's nothing to the point," said he, boldly, and
smilingly, standing up, a fine figure of a man, with his head high and his
chest out. "It was the toss of a bawbee whether or not I should apprehend
him myself when I saw him, and if I had him here your Grace would be the
first to admit my discretion."</p>
<p>"My Grace is a little more judicious than to treat the casual pedestrian
like a notour thief," said Argyll; "and yet, after all, I dare say the
matter may be left to your good judgment—that is, after you have had
a word or two on the matter with Petullo, who will better be able to
advise upon the rights to the persons of suspicious characters in our
neighbourhood."</p>
<p>With never a word more said MacTaggart clapped on his hat, withdrew in an
elation studiously concealed from his master, and fared at a canter to
Petullo's office in the town. He fastened the reins to the ring at the
door and entered.</p>
<p>The lawyer sat in a den that smelt most wickedly of mildewed vellum,
sealing-wax, tape, and all that trash that smothers the soul of man—the
appurtenances of his craft. He sat like a sallow mummy among them, like a
half-man made of tailor's patches, flanked by piles of docketed letters
and Records closed, bastioned by deed-boxes blazoned with the indication
of their offices—MacGibbon's Mortification, Dunderave Estate, Coil's
Trust, and so on; he sat with a shrieking quill among these things, and
MacTaggart entering to him felt like thanking God that he had never been
compelled to a life like this in a stinking mortuary, with the sun outside
on the windows and the clean sea and the singing wood calling in vain.
Perhaps some sense of contrast seized the writer, too, as he looked up to
see the Chamberlain entering with a pleasant, lively air of wind behind
him, and health and vigour in his step, despite the unwonted wanness of
his face. At least, in the glance Petullo gave below his shaggy eyebrows,
there was a little envy as well as much cunning. He made a ludicrous
attempt at smiling.</p>
<p>"Ha!" he cried, "Mr. MacTaggart! Glad to see you, Mr. MacTaggart. Sit ye
down, Mr. MacTaggart. I was just thinking about you."</p>
<p>"No ill, I hope," said the Chamberlain, refusing a seat proffered; for
anything of the law to him seemed gritty in the touch, and a three-legged
stool would, he always felt, be as unpleasant to sit upon as a red-hot
griddle.</p>
<p>"Te-he!" squeaked Petullo with an irritating falsetto. "You must have your
bit joke, Mr. MacTaggart. Did his Grace—did his Grace—I was
just wondering if his Grace said anything to-day about my unfortunate
accident with the compote yestreen." He looked more cunningly than ever at
the Chamberlain.</p>
<p>"In his Grace's class, Mr. Petullo, and incidentally in my own, nothing's
said of a guest's gawkiness, though you might hardly believe it for a
reason that I never could make plain to you, though I know it by
instinct."</p>
<p>"Oh! as to gawkiness, an accident of the like might happen to any one,"
said Petullo, irritably.</p>
<p>"And that's true," confessed the Chamberlain. "But, tut! tut! Mr. Petullo,
a compote's neither here nor there to the Duke. If you had spilt two of
them it would have made no difference; there was plenty left. Never mind
the dinner, Mr. Petullo, just now, I'm in a haste. There's a Frenchman—"</p>
<p>"There's a wheen of Frenchmen, seemingly," said the writer, oracularly,
taking to the trimming of his nails with a piece of pumice-stone he kept
for the purpose, and used so constantly that they looked like talons.</p>
<p>"Now, what the devil do you mean?" cried Mac-Taggart.</p>
<p>"Go on, go on with your business," squeaked Petullo, with an eye upon an
inner door that led to his household.</p>
<p>"I have his Grace's instructions to ask you about the advisability of
arresting a stranger, seemingly a Frenchman, who is at this moment
suspiciously prowling about the policies."</p>
<p>"On whatna charge, Mr. MacTaggart, on whatna charge?" asked the writer,
taking a confident, even an insolent, tone, now that he was on his own
familiar ground. "Rape, arson, forgery, robbery, thigging, sorning,
pickery, murder, or high treason?"</p>
<p>"Clap them all together, Mr. Petullo, and just call it local
inconduciveness," cried MacTaggart. "Simply the Duke may not care for his
society. That should be enough for the Fiscal and Long Davie the dempster,
shouldn't it?"</p>
<p>"H'm!" said Petullo. "It's a bit vague, Mr. MacTaggart, and I don't think
it's mentioned in Forbes's 'Institutes.' Fifteen Campbell assessors and
the baron bailie might have sent a man to the Plantations on that dittay
ten years ago, but we live in different times, Mr. MacTaggart—different
times, Mr. MacTaggart," repeated the writer, tee-heeing till his bent
shoulders heaved under his seedy, ink-stained surtout coat.</p>
<p>"Do we?" cried the Chamberlain, with a laugh. "I'm thinking ye forget a
small case we had no further gone than yesterday, when a man with the
unlucky name of Stewart—" He stopped, meaningly smiled, and made a
gesture with his fingers across his neck, at the same time giving an odd
sound with his throat.</p>
<p>"Oh! You're an awfu' man," cried Petullo, with the accent of a lout. "I
wonder if you're on the same track as myself, for I'm like the Hielan'
soldier—I have a Frenchman of my own. There's one, I mean, up by
there in Doom, and coming down here to-morrow or the day after, or as soon
as I can order a lodging for him in the town."</p>
<p>"Oh, hell!" cried the secretary, amazingly dumfoundered.</p>
<p>"There's nothing underhand about him, so far as I know, to give even his
Grace an excuse for confining him, for it seems he's a wine merchant out
of Bordeaux, one Montaiglon, come here on business, and stopped at Doom
through an attack on his horse by the same Macfarlanes who are of interest
to us for another reason, as was spoken of at his Grace's table last
night."</p>
<p>"And he's coming here?" asked MacTaggart, incredulous.</p>
<p>"I had a call from the Baron himself to-day to tell me that."</p>
<p>"Ah, well, there's no more to be said of our suspicions," said MacTaggart.
"Not in this form, at least." And he was preparing to go.</p>
<p>A skirt rustled within the inner door, and Mrs. Petullo, flushed a little
to her great becoming in spite of a curl-paper or two, and clad in a
lilac-coloured negligee of the charmingest, came into the office with a
well-acted start of surprise to find a client there.</p>
<p>"Oh, good morning! Mr. MacTaggart," she exclaimed, radiantly, while her
husband scowled to himself, as he relapsed into the chair at his desk and
fumbled with his papers. "Good morning; I hope I have not interrupted
business?"</p>
<p>"Mr. MacTaggart was just going, my dear," said Mr. Petullo.</p>
<p>A cracked bell rang within, and the Chamberlain perceived an odour of
cooking celery. Inwardly he cursed his forgetfulness, because it was plain
that the hour for his call upon the writer was ill-chosen.</p>
<p>"My twelve-hours is unusual sharp to-day," said Petullo, consulting a
dumpy horologe out of his fob. "Would ye—would ye do me the honour
of joining me?" with a tone that left, but not too rudely, immediate
departure as the Chamberlain's only alternative.</p>
<p>"Thank you, thank you," said MacTaggart. "I rose late to-day, and my
breakfast's little more than done with." He made for the door, Mrs.
Petullo close in his cry and holding his eye, defying so hurried a
departure, while she kept up a chattering about the last night's party.
Her husband hesitated, but his hunger (he had the voracious appetite of
such shrivelled atomies) and a wholesome fear of being accused of jealousy
made him withdraw, leaving the office to the pair.</p>
<p>All MacTaggart's anger rose against madame for her machination. "You saw
me from the window," said he; "it's a half-cooked dinner for the goodman
to-day, I'll warrant!"</p>
<p>She laughed a most intoxicating laugh, all charged with some sweet velvety
charm, put out her hands, and caught his. "Oh, Lord! I wish it would choke
him, Sim," said she, fervently, then lifted up her mouth and dropped a
swooning eyelash over her passionate orbs.</p>
<p>"Adorable creature," he thought: "she'll have rat-bane in his broth some
day." He kissed her with no more fervour than if she had been a wooden
figurehead, but she was not thus to be accepted: she put an arm quickly
round his neck and pressed her passionate lips to his. Back he drew
wincing. "Oh, damnation!" he cried.</p>
<p>"What's the matter?" she exclaimed in wonder, and turned to assure herself
that it was not that some one spied from the inner door, for Mac-Taggart's
face had become exceeding pale.</p>
<p>"Nothing, nothing," he replied; "you are—you are so ferocious."</p>
<p>"Am I, Sim?" said she. "Who taught me? Oh, Sim," she went on, pleadingly,
"be good to me. I'm sick, I'm <i>sick</i> of life, and you don't show you
care for me a little bit. Do you love me, Sim?"</p>
<p>"Heavens!" he cried, "you would ask the question fifty times a-day if you
had the opportunity."</p>
<p>"It would need a hundred times a-day to keep up with your changing moods.
Do you love me, Sim?" She was smiling, with the most pathetic appeal in
her face.</p>
<p>"You look beautiful in that gown, Kate," said he, irrelevantly, not
looking at it at all, but out at the window, where showed the gabbarts
tossing in the bay, and the sides of the hill of Dunchuach all splashed
with gold and crimson leafage.</p>
<p>"Never mind my gown, Sim," said she, stamping her foot, and pulling at the
buttons of his coat. "Once—oh, Sim, do you love me? Tell me, tell
me, tell me! Whether you do or not, say it, you used to be such a splendid
liar."</p>
<p>"It was no lie," said he curtly; then to himself: "Oh, Lord, give me
patience with this! and I have brought it on myself."</p>
<p>"It <i>was</i> no lie. Oh, Sim!" (And still she was turning wary eyes upon
the door that led to her husband's retirement.) "It <i>was</i> no lie;
you're left neither love nor courtesy. Oh, never mind! say you love me,
Sim, whether it's true or not: that's what it's come to with me."</p>
<p>"Of course I do," said he.</p>
<p>"Of course what?"</p>
<p>"Of course I love you." He smiled, but at heart he grimaced.</p>
<p>"I don't believe you," said she, from custom waiting his protestation. But
the Duke's Chamberlain was in no mood for protestations. He looked at her
high temples, made bald by the twisted papilottes, and wondered how he
could have thought that bold shoulder beautiful.</p>
<p>"I'm in a great hurry, Kate," said he. "Sorry to go, but there's my horse
at the ring to prove the hurry I'm in!"</p>
<p>"I know, I know; you're always in a hurry now with me: it wasn't always
so. Do you hear the brute?" Her husband's squeaky voice querulously
shouting on a servant came to them from behind.</p>
<p>The servant immediately after came to the door with an intimation that Mr.
Petullo desired to know where the spirit-bottle was.</p>
<p>"He knows very well," said Mrs. Petullo. "Here is the key—no, I'll
take it to him myself."</p>
<p>"It's not the drink he wants, but me, the pig," said she as the servant
withdrew. "Kiss me good afternoon, Sim."</p>
<p>"I wish to God it was good-bye!" thought he, as he smacked her vulgarly,
like a clown at a country fair.</p>
<p>She drew her hand across her mouth, and her eyes flashed indignation.</p>
<p>"There's something between us, Simon," said she, in an altered tone; "it
used not to be like that."</p>
<p>"Indeed it did not," he thought bitterly, and not for the first time he
missed something in her—some spirit of simplicity, freshness,
flower-bloom, and purity that he had sought for, seen in many women, and
found elusive, as the frost finds the bloom of flowers he would begem.</p>
<p>Her husband shrieked again, and with mute gestures they parted.</p>
<p>The Chamberlain threw himself upon his horse as 'twere a mortal enemy, dug
rowel-deep in the shuddering flesh, and the hoof-beats thundered on the
causey-stones. The beast whinnied in its pain, reared, and backed to the
breast wall of the bay. He lashed it wildly over the eyes with his whip,
and they galloped up the roadway. A storm of fury possessed him; he saw
nothing, heard nothing.</p>
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