Read The Chevalier De Maison Rouge Online
Authors: Alexandre Dumas
flinch.
" Oh ! you feel that ? " said one of the men. " There are eight more similar to this with which you will claim
acquaintance/'
" Kill me, then," said Maurice, with resignation; "it will, at least, be finished at once."
" Who are you ? " said the mild but firm voice.
"Do you wish to know my name ? "
" Yes, your name."
"I am Maurice Lindey."
" What ! " cried a voice, " Maurice Lindey, the revolu the patriot ; Maurice Lindey, the secretary of the
section Lepelletier ? "
These words were pronounced with so much warmth
that Maurice felt they were decisive. This reply was cal-
culated to decide his fate. Maurice was incapable of
fear ; he drew himself up like a true Spartan, and *e-
plied, in a firm voice :
" Yes, Maurice Liudey ; yes, Maurice Lindey, secre-
tary to the section Lepelletier ; yes, Maurice Lindey, the
patriot, the revolutionist, the Jacobin ; Maurice Lindey,
in short, whose happiest day will be that on which he
dies for liberty."
This reply was received with the silence of death.
Maurice presented his breast, expecting every moment
the sword, of which lie had only felt the point, would be
plunged into his heart.
56 THE CHEVALIER DE MAISON ROUGE.
"Is this true ?" said a voice full of emotion ; "let us see, young man, that you lie not."
"Feel in my pocket," said Maurice, "and you will there find my commission. Look upon my breast, and if
not effaced by my blood, you will see my initials, an M
and L, embroidered on my shirt."
Maurice felt himself immediately raised by strong arms,
and carried to some distance. He first heard one door
open, then a second, which he knew was narrower than
the first, from the trouble the men found in carrying him
through. The murmuring and whispering continued.
" I am lost ! " said Maurice to himself ; " they will fasten a stone round my neck, and cast me into the
Briere."
In an instant he felt the men who bore him were mount-
ing some steps. A warmer air fanned his face, and he
was placed upon a seat. He heard a door double-locked
and the sound of departing steps. He fancied he was left
alone. He listened with as much attention as was pos-
sible in a man whose life hung upon a word, and thought
he again heard the voice which had already struck upon
his ear say, with a mixture of decision and mildness :
" We will deliberate."
CHAPTER VIII.
GEXEYIEVE.
A QUARTER of an hour passed away ; it appeared an
age to Maurice. And what more natural ? Young, hand-
some and vigorous, highly beloved and esteemed by a
hundred devoted friends, with whom lie sometimes
dreamed of accomplishing great things, he felt himself
suddenly, without preparation, liable to lose his life the
victim of a base ambuscade. He knew no one was shut
in the chamber ; but was he watched ? He again exerted
all his strength to break his bonds, till his iron muscles
swelled, and the cords entered his flesh ; but this, like
all his former efforts, was useless.
THE CHEVALIER DE MAISON ROUGE. 57
It was the more terrible his hands being tied behind ;
he was unable to draw up his bandage. If he were only
able to see, he might perhaps be able to escape. However,
as these various attempts were made without opposition,
and hearing no one stirring, he concluded he was quite
alone.
His feet pressed upon something soft and heavy, it
might be gravel or perhaps soft clay. An acrid, pungent
smell announced the presence of vegetable matter.
Maurice fancied he was in a greenhouse, or some place
very like it. He took a step or two, hit the wall, turned,
and, groping with his hands, felt some garden tools. He
uttered an exclamation of joy. With unparalleled exer-
tion he began to examine these tools, one after another.
His flight now became a question of time. If chance or
Providence granted him five minutes, and if among these
tools he found a sharp instrument, he was saved. He
found a spade. From the way in which Maurice was
bound, it required a great struggle to raise the spade a
sufficient height for his purpose. He at length succeeded
and, upon the iron of the spade, which he supported
against the wall with his back, he at last cut, or, rather, wore away, the cord which confined his wrists. The
operation was tedious ; the iron cut slowly. The perspira-
tion streamed from his face ; he heard a noise as of some
one approaching ; with a tremendous effort, the cord,
rather worn, broke. This time it was a cry of joy he
gave utterance to ; now, at least, he was sure to die in
defending himself. Maurice tore the bandage from his
eyes. He was not deceived, but found himself in a kind
of, not greenhouse, but pavilion, used as a receptacle for
the more delicate plants unable to outlive the winter in
the open air. In a corner the gardening implements were
stowed away, which had been the means of rendering him
so important a service. Facing him was a window ; he
glanced toward it, and saw it was grated, and a man armed
with a carbine placed sentinel before it.
On the other side of the garden, about thirty paces
distant, perhaps rather less, rose a small turret, fellow
58 THE CHEVALIER DE MAISON ROUGE.
to the one where Maurice remained prisoner. The blind
was down, but through the blind a light was visible.
He approached the door and listened ; another sentinel
was placed before this door. These were the footsteps he
had heard. But from the end of the corridor a confusion
of voices resounded. The deliberation had evidently de-
generated into disputation.
Maurice could not hear distinctly what was said ; some
words, however, reached him, and amid these words as if
for them only the distance was short he distinguished
plainly, " Spy ! Poniard! Death!" Maurice redoubled his attention; a door opened, and he heard more distinctly.
" Yes," said one voice, " it is assuredly a spy ; he has discovered something, and is certainly sent to take us and
our secret unawares. In freeing him we run the risk of
his denouncing us."
" But his word," said a voice.
" His word he will give it only to betray it. Is he a
gentleman, that we should trust his word ?"
Maurice ground his teeth at the idea which some folks
still retained, that only a gentleman could keep his
oath.
" But he does not know us ; how can he denounce us ? "
" Xo, he does not know us, certainly, nor our occupa-
tions ; but he knows the address, and will return ; this
time he will be well accompanied."
This argument appeared conclusive.
" Then," said a voice, which several times already had struck Maurice as belonging to the chief, " it is then quite decided."
" Yes, a hundred times, yes ; I do not comprehend you
with your magnanimity. Mon clicr, if the Committee for
the Public Safety caught us, you would see if they acted
after this fashion."
"You persist, then, in your decision, gentlemen ?"
" Without doubt ; and you are not, we hope, going to
oppose it ? "
" I have only one voice, gentlemen , it has been in
THE CHEVALIER DE MAISON ROUGE. 59
favor of his liberation ; you possess six, and they all vote for his death. Let it then be death."
Maurice felt the "blood freeze in his veins.
" Of course he will howl and cry ! " said the voice ;
" but have you removed Madame Dixmer ? "
" Madame Dixmer ! " murmured Maurice ; " I begin now to comprehend I am in the house of the master tanner, who spoke to me in the Old Rue St. Jacques, and
who went away laughing because I was unable to tell him
the name of my friend. "But how the devil can it be to his interest to assassinate me ?"
Looking round about him, Maurice perceived an iron
stake with a handle of ash-tree wood.
" In any case/' said he, " before they assassinate me, I will kill more than one of them."
And he sprang to secure this harmless instrument,
which, in his hand, was to become a formidable weapon.
He then retired behind the door, and so placed himself
that he could see without being seen. His heart beat so
tumultuously that in the deep silence its palpitations
might be heard. Suddenly Maurice shuddered from head
to foot. A voice had said :
" If you act according to my advice, you will break a
window, and through the bars kill him with a shot from
a carbine."
' Oh, no, no ! not an explosion," said another voice ; that might betray us. Besides, Dixmer, there is your
wife."
' I have just looked at her through the blind ; she sus-
pects nothing she is reading."
' Dixmer, you shall decide for us. Do you advocate a
shot from the carbine, or a stroke from the poniard ? "
' Avoid firearms as far as it is possible the poniard."
" Then let it be the poniard. Allans ! "
" Allans!" repeated five or six voices together.
Maurice was a child of the Revolution with a heart of
flint, and in mind, like many others at that epoch, an
atheist. But at the word " Allans ! " pronounced behind the door, which alone separated him from death, he re-60 THE CHEVALIER DE MAISON ROUGE.
membered the sign of the cross, which his mother had
taught him when an infant he repeated his prayers at
her knee.
Steps approached, stopped ; then the key turned in the
lock, and the door slowly opened.
During this fleeting moment, Maurice had said to him-
self :
"If I lose this opportunity to strike the first blow I am a dead man. If I throw myself upon the assassins, I
take them unawares gain first the garden, then the
street, and am saved ! "
Immediately, with the spring of a lion, and uttering a
savage cry, which savored more of menace than terror, he
threw down the first two men, who, believing him bound
and blindfolded, were quite unprepared for such an as-
sault, scattered the others, took a tremendous leap over
over them, thanks to his iron muscles, saw at the end
of the corridor a door leading into the garden wide open,
rushed toward it, cleared at a bound six steps, and found
himself in the garden, debating if it were best to en-
deavor to run and gain the gate. This gate was secured
by a lock arid a couple of bolts. Maurice drew back the
bolts, tried to open the lock, but it had no key.
In the meantime, his pursuers, who had reached the
steps, perceived him.
" There he is ! " cried they ; " fire upon him, Dixmer, fire! Kill him kill him!"
Maurice tittered a groan ; he was enclosed in the gar-
den ; he measured the walls with his eye they were ten
feet in height.
All this passed in a moment. The assassins rushed for-
ward in pursuit of him.
Maurice was about thirty feet in advance, or nearly so ;
he looked round about him with the air of a condemned
man who seeks concealment as the means of saving him-
self from the reality. He perceived the turret the
blind and behind the blind the light burning.
He made but one bound a bound of six feet seized
the blind, tore it down, passed through the window,
THE CHEVALIER DE MAISON ROUGE. (ft
smashing it, and alighted in a chamber where a female
sat reading.
The female rose, terrified, calling for assistance.
" Stand aside, Genevieve stand aside ! " cried the voice of Dixmer ; " stand aside,that I may kill him I"
And Maurice saw the carbine leveled at him. But
scarcely had the woman looked at him, than she uttered
a frightful cry, and instead of standing aside, as desired
by her husband, rushed between him and the barrel of
the gun.
This movement concentrated all Maurice's attention to
the generous woman, whose first impulse was to protect
him from danger and death. In his turn he uttered aery
of astonishment.
It was the long sought-for unknown.
"You !" cried he ; ''you "
"Silence ! " cried she.
Then, turning toward the assassins, who, variously
armed, approached the window :
" Ah ! you will not kill him ! " cried she.
" He is a spy," said Dixmer, whose usually placid coiintenance had assumed an expression of stern resolution ; "he is a spy, and, therefore, must die."
"A spy he? "said Genevieve ; "he a spy! Come here, Dixmer. I need only say one word to prove that
you are strangely deceived."
Dixmer and Genevieve approached the window, and in
a low voice she uttered a few words. The master tanuer
raised his head quickly.
" He ! " said he.
" He himself," said Genevieve.
" You are certain quite certain ?"
This time the young woman did not reply, but smiling,
held out her hand to Maurice.
The features of Dixmer now assumed a singular ex-
pression of gentleness and indifference. He placed the
butt-end of his musket on the ground.
" This is quite another thing," said he.
Then making a sign to his companions to follow, he
62 THE CHEVALIER DE MAISON ROUGE.
stepped aside with them, and after saying a few words,