贝壳电子书 > 英文原著电子书 > an historical mystery >

第11章

an historical mystery-第11章

小说: an historical mystery 字数: 每页4000字

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!



than at Cinq…Cygne; and Laurence's first act on coming to her majority
was to give them the use for life of the wing of the chateau which
they occupied。

The Hauteserres; as niggardly for their ward as they were for
themselves; laid up every year nearly the whole of their annuity for
the benefit of their sons; and kept the young heiress on miserable
fare。 The whole cost of the Cinq…Cygne household never exceeded five
thousand francs a year。 But Laurence; who condescended to no details;
was satisfied。 Her guardian and his wife; unconsciously ruled by the
imperceptible influence of her strong character; which was felt even
in little things; had ended by admiring her whom they had known and
treated as a child;a sufficiently rare feeling。 But in her manner;
her deep voice; her commanding eye; Laurence held that inexplicable
power which rules all men;even when its strength is mere appearance。
To vulgar minds real depth is incomprehensible; it is perhaps for that
reason that the populace is so prone to admire what it cannot
understand。 Monsieur and Madame d'Hauteserre; impressed by the
habitual silence and erratic habits of the young girl; were constantly
expecting some extraordinary thing of her。

Laurence; who did good intelligently and never allowed herself to be
deceived; was held in the utmost respect by the peasantry although she
was an aristocrat。 Her sex; name; and great misfortunes; also the
originality of her present life; contributed to give her authority
over the inhabitants of the valley of Cinq…Cygne。 She was sometimes
absent for two days; attended by Gothard; but neither Monsieur nor
Madame d'Hauteserre questioned her; on her return; as to the reasons
of her absence。 Please observe; however; that there was nothing odd or
eccentric about Laurence。 What she was and what she did was masked; as
it were; by a feminine and even fragile appearance。 Her heart was full
of extreme sensibility; though her head contained a stoical firmness
and the virile gift of resolution。 Her clear…seeing eyes knew not how
to weep; but no one would have imagined that the delicate white wrist
with its tracery of blue veins could defy that of the boldest
horseman。 Her hand; so noble; so flexible; could handle gun or pistol
with the ease of a practised marksman。 She always wore when out of
doors the coquettish little cap with visor and green veil which women
wear on horseback。 Her delicate fair face; thus protected; and her
white throat tied with a black cravat; were never injured by her long
rides in all weathers。

Under the Directory and at the beginning of the Consulate; Laurence
had been able to escape the observation of others; but since the
government had become a more settled thing; the new authorities; the
prefect of the Aube; Malin's friends; and Malin himself had endeavored
to undermine her in the community。 Her preoccupying thought was the
overthrow of Bonaparte; whose ambition and its triumphs excited the
anger of her soul;a cold; deliberate anger。 The obscure and hidden
enemy of a man at the pinnacle of glory; she kept her gaze upon him
from the depths of her valley and her forests; with relentless fixity;
there were times when she thought of killing him in the roads about
Malmaison or Saint…Cloud。 Plans for the execution of this idea may
have been the cause of many of her past actions; but having been
initiated; after the peace of Amiens; into the conspiracy of the men
who expected to make the 18th Brumaire recoil upon the First Consul;
she had thenceforth subordinated her faculties and her hatred to their
vast and well laid scheme; which was to strike at Bonaparte externally
by the vast coalition of Russia; Austria; and Prussia (vanquished at
Austerlitz) and internally by the coalition of men politically opposed
to each other; but united by their common hatred of a man whose death
some of them were meditating; like Laurence herself; without shrinking
from the word assassination。 This young girl; so fragile to the eye;
so powerful to those who knew her well; was at the present moment the
faithful guide and assistant of the exiled gentlemen who came from
England to take part in this deadly enterprise。

Fouche relied on the co…operation of the /emigres/ everywhere beyond
the Rhine to lure the Duc d'Enghien into the plot。 The presence of
that prince in the Baden territory; not far from Strasburg; gave much
weight later to the accusation。 The great question of whether the
prince really knew of the enterprise; and was waiting on the frontier
to enter France on its success; is one of those secrets about which;
as about several others; the house of Bourbon has maintained an
unbroken silence。 As the history of that period recedes into the past;
impartial historians will declare the imprudence; to say the least; of
the Duc d'Enghien in placing himself close to the frontier at a time
when a vast conspiracy was about to break forth; the secret of which
was undoubtedly known to every member of the Bourbon family。

The caution which Malin displayed in talking with Grevin in the open
air; Laurence applied to her every action。 She met the emissaries and
conferred with them either at various points in the Nodesme forest; or
beyond the valley of the Cinq…Cygne; between the villages of Sezanne
and Brienne。 Often she rode forty miles on a stretch with Gothard; and
returned to Cinq…Cygne without the least sign of weariness or
pre…occupation on her fair young face。

Some years earlier; Laurence had seen in the eyes of a little cow…boy;
then nine years old; the artless admiration which children feel for
everything that is out of the common way。 She made him her page; and
taught him to groom a horse with the nicety and care of an Englishman。
She saw in the lad a desire to do well; a bright intelligence; and a
total absence of sly motives; she tested his devotion and found he had
not only mind but nobility of character; he never dreamed of reward。
The young girl trained this soul that was still so young; she was good
to him; good with dignity; she attached him to her by attaching
herself to him; and by herself polishing a nature that was half wild;
without destroying its freshness or its simplicity。 When she had
sufficiently tested the almost canine fidelity she had nurtured;
Gothard became her intelligent and ingenuous accomplice。 The little
peasant; whom no one could suspect; went from Cinq…Cygne to Nancy; and
often returned before any one had missed him from the neighborhood。 He
knew how to practise all the tricks of a spy。 The extreme distrust and
caution his mistress had taught him did not change his natural self。
Gothard; who possessed all the craft of a woman; the candor of a
child; and the ceaseless observation of a conspirator; hid every one
of these admirable qualities beneath the torpor and dull ignorance of
a country lad。 The little fellow had a silly; weak; and clumsy
appearance; but once at work he was active as a fish; he escaped like
an eel; he understood; as the dogs do; the merest glance; he nosed a
thought。 His good fat face; both round and red; his sleepy brown eyes;
his hair; cut in the peasant fashion; his clothes; and his slow growth
gave him the appearance of a child of ten。

The two young d'Hauteserres and the twin brothers Simeuse; under the
guidance of their cousin Laurence; who had been watching over their
safety and that of the other /emigres/ who accompanied them from
Strasburg to Bar…sur…Aube; had just passed through Alsace and
Lorraine; and were now in Champagne while other conspirators; not less
bold; were entering France by the cliffs of Normandy。 Dressed as
workmen the d'Hauteserres and the Simeuse twins had walked from forest
to forest; guided on their way by relays of persons; chosen by
Laurence during the last three months from among the least suspected
of the Bourbon adherents living in each neighborhood。 The /emigres/
slept by day and travelled by night。 Each brought with him two
faithful soldiers; one of whom went before to warn of danger; the
other behind to protect a retreat。 Thanks to these military
precautions; this valuable detachment had at last reached; without
accident; the forest of Nodesm

返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 0

你可能喜欢的