Josette had picked up her cape and
slung it round her shoulders; she pulled the hood over her fair
curls and ran swiftly down the stairs and out into the street.
Thoughts of the Scarlet Pimpernel had a way of whipping up her
blood. When she spoke of him she at once wanted to be up and doing.
She wanted to be up and doing something that would emulate the
marvellous deeds of that mysterious hero of romance - deeds which
she had heard recounted with bated breath by her fellow-workers
in the Government workshops where breeches were stitched and stockings
knitted by the hundred for the "Soldiers of Liberty,"
marching against the foreign foe.
Josette on this late afternoon had to put in a couple of hours
at the workshop. At six o'clock when the light gave out she would
be free; and at six o'clock Maurice Reversac would of a certainty
be outside the gates of the workshop waiting to escort her first
for a walk along the Quai or the Cour la Reine and then home to
cook the family supper.
She came out of the workshop on this late afternoon with glowing
eyes and flaming cheeks, and nearly ran past Maurice without seeing
him as her mind was so full of other things. She was humming a
tune as she ran. Maurice was waiting for her at the gate, and
he called to her. He felt very happy all of a sudden because Josette
seemed so pleased to see him.
"Maurice!" she cried, "I am so glad you have come."
Maurice, being young and up to his eyes in love, did not think
of asking her why she should be so glad. She was glad to see him
and that was enough for any lover. He took hold of her by the
elbow and led her through the narrow streets as far as the Quai
and then over to Cour la Reine, where there were seats under the
chestnut trees from which the big prickly burrs were falling fast,
and split as they fell, revealing the lovely smooth surface of
the chestnuts, in colour like Josette's hair; and as the last
glimmer of daylight faded into evening the sparrows in the trees
kicked up a great shindy, which was like a paean of joy in complete
accord with Maurice's mood.
Nor did Maurice notice that Josette was absorbed; her eyes shone
more brightly than usual, and her lips, which were so like ripe
fruit, were slightly parted, and Maurice was just aching for a
kiss.
He persuaded her to sit down: the air was so soft and balmy -
lovely autumn evening with the scent of ripe fruit about; and
those sparrows up in the chestnut trees did kick up such a shindy
before tucking their little heads under their wings for the night.
There were a few passers-by - not many - and this corner of old
Paris appeared singularly peaceful, with a whole world of dreams
and hope between it and the horrors of the Revolution. Yet this
was the hour when the crowds that assembled daily on the Place
de la Barrière du Trône to watch the guillotine
at its dread work wandered, tired and silent, back to their homes,
and when rattling carts bore their gruesome burdens to the public
burying-place.
But what are social upheavals, revolutions or cataclysms to a
lover absorbed in the contemplation of his beloved? Maurice Reversac
sat beside Josette and could see her adorable profile with the
small tip-tilted nose and the outline of her cheek so like a ripe
peach. Josette sat silent and motionless at first, so Maurice
felt emboldened to put out a timid hand and take hold of hers.
She made no resistance and he thought of a surety that he would
swoon with joy because she allowed that exquisite little hand
to rest contented in his great rough palm. It felt just like a
bird, soft and warm and fluttering, like those sparrows in up
the trees.
"Josette," Maurice ventured to murmur after a little
while, "you are glad to see me... you said so... didn't you,
Josette?"
She was not looking at him, but he didn't mind that, for though
the twilight was fast drawing in he could still see her adorable
profile - that delicious tip-tilted nose and the lashes that curled
like a fringe of gold over her eyes. The hood had fallen back
from her head and the soft evening breeze stirred the tendrils
of her chestnut-coloured hair.
"You are so beautiful, Josette," Maurice sighed, "and
I am such a clumsy lout, but I would know how to make you happy.
Happy! My God! I would make you as happy as the birds - without
a care in the world. And all day you would just go about singing
- singing - because you would have forgotten by then what sorrow
was like."
Encouraged by her silence he ventured to draw a little nearer
to her.
"I have seen," he murmured quite close to her ear, "an
apartment that would be just the right setting for you, Josette
darling: only three rooms and a little kitchen, but the morning
sun comes pouring in through the big windows and there is a clump
of chestnut trees in front in which the birds will sing in the
spring from early dawn while you still lie in bed. I shall have
got up by then and will be in the kitchen getting some hot milk
for you; then I will bring you the warm milk, and while you drink
it I shall sit and watch the sunshine play about in your hair."
Never before had Maurice plucked up sufficient courage to talk
at such length. usually when Josette was beside him he was so
absorbed in looking at her and longing for her that his tongue
refused him service; for these were days when true lovers were
timid and la jeune fille was an almost sacred being, whose
limpid soul no profane word dared disturb, and Maurice had been
brought up by an adoring mother in these rigid principles. This
cruel and godless Revolution had, indeed, shattered many ideals
and toughened the fibres of men's hearts and women's sensibilities,
else Maurice would never have dared thus to approach the object
of his dreams - her whom he hoped one day to have for wife.
Josette's silence had emboldened him, and the fact that she had
allowed her hand to rest in his all this while. Now he actually
dared to put out his arm and encircle her shoulders; he was, in
fact, drawing her to him, feeling that he was on the point of
stepping across the threshold of Paradise, when slowly she turned
her face to him and looked him straight between the eyes. Her
own appeared puzzled and there was a frown as of great perplexity
between her brows.
"Maurice," she asked, and there was no doubt that she
was both puzzled and astonished, "are you, perchance, trying
to make love to me?"
Then, as he remained silent and looked, in his turn, both bewildered
and hurt, she gave a light laugh, gently disengaged her hand and
patted him on the cheek.
"My poor Maurice!" she said, "I wish I had listened
sooner, but I was thinking of other things...."
When a man had had the feeling that he has actually reached the
gates of Paradise and that a kindly Saint Peter was already rattling
his keys so as to let him in - when he has felt this for over
half an hour and then, in a few seconds, is hurtled down into
an abyss of disappointment, his first sensation is as if he had
been stunned by a terrific blow on the head, and he becomes entirely
tongue-tied.
Bewildered and dumb, all Maurice could do was to stare at the
adorable vision of a golden-haired girl whom he worshipped and
who, with a light heart and a gay laugh, had just dealt him the
most cruel blow that any man had ever been called upon to endure.
The worst of it was that this adorable golden-haired girl had
apparently no notion of how cruel had been the blow, for she prattled
on about the other things of which she had been thinking quite
oblivious of the subject-matter of poor Maurice's impassioned
pleading.
"Maurice dear," she said, "listen to me and do
not talk nonsense."
Nonsense!! Ye gods!
"You have got to help me, Maurice, to find the Scarlet Pimpernel."
Her beautiful eyes, which she turned full upon him, were aglow
with enthusiasm - enthusiasm for something in which he had no
share. Nor did he understand what she was talking about. All he
knew was that she had dismissed his pleading as nonsense, and
that with a curious smile on her lips she was just turning a knife
round and round in his heart.
And, oh, how that hurt!
But she also said that she wanted his help, so he tried very hard
to get at her meaning, though she seemed to be prattling on rather
inconsequently.
"Charles-Léon," she said, "is very ill,
you know, Maurice dear - that is, not so very ill, but the doctor
says he must have change of air or he will perish in a decline."
"A doctor can always get a permit for a patient in extremis..."
Maurice put in, assuming a judicial manner.
"Don't be stupid, Maurice!" she retorted impatiently.
"We all know that the doctor can get a permit for Charles-Léon,
but he can't get one for Louise or for me, and where is Charles-Léon
to go with neither of us to look after him?"
"Then what's to be done?"
"Try and listen more attentively, Maurice," she retorted.
"You are not really listening."
"I am," he protested, "I swear I am!"
"Really - really?"
"Really, Josette - with both ears and all the intelligence
I've got."
"Very well, then. You have heard of the Scarlet Pimpernel,
haven't you?"
"We all have - in a way."
"What do you mean by 'in a way'?"
"Well, no one is quite sure if he really exists, and..."
"Maurice, don't, in Heaven's name, be stupid! You must have
brains or Maître de Croissy could not do with you as his
confidential clerk. So do use your brains, Maurice, and tell me
if the Scarlet Pimpernel does not exist, then how did the Maillys
get away - and the Frontenacs - and the Tournays - and - and...?
Oh, Maurice, I hate your being so stupid!"
"You have only got to tell me, Josette, what you wish me
to do," poor Maurice put in very humbly, "and I will
do it, of course."
"I want you to help me find the Scarlet Pimpernel."
"Gladly will I help you, Josette; but won't it be like looking
for a needle in a haystack?"
"Not at all," this intrepid little Joan of Arc asserted.
"Listen, Maurice! In our workshop there is a girl, Agnes
Minet, who was at one time in service with a Madame Carré,
whose son Antoine was in hiding because he was threatened with
arrest. His mother didn't dare write to him lest her letters be
intercepted. Well, there was a public letter-writer who plied
his trade at the corner of the Pont-Neuf - a funny old scarecrow
he was - and Agnes, who cannot write, used sometimes to employ
him to write to her fiancé who was away with the army.
She says she doesn't know exactly how it all happened -s he thinks
the old letter-writer must have questioned her very cleverly,
or else have followed her home one day - but, anyway, she caught
herself telling him all about Antione Carré and took him
and his mother safely out of France."
She paused a moment to draw breath, for she had spoken excitedly
and all the time scarcely above a whisper, for the subject-matter
was not one she would have liked some evil-wisher to hear. There
were so many spies about these days eager for blood-money - the
forty sous which could be earned for denouncing a "suspect."
Maurice, fully alive to this, made no immediate comment, but after
a few seconds he suggested: "Shall we walk?" and took
Josette by the elbow. It was getting dark now: the Cour la Reine
was only poorly-lighted by a very few street lanterns placed at
long intervals. They walked together in silence for a time, looking
like young lovers intent on amorous effusions. The few passers-by,
furtive and noiseless, took no notice of them.
"Antoine Carré's case is not the only one, Maurice,"
Josette resumed presently. "I could tell you dozens of others.
The girls in the workshop talk about it all the time when the
superintendent is out of the room."
Again she paused, and then went on firmly, stressing her command:
"You have got to help me, you know, Maurice."
"Of course I will, Josette," Maurice murmured. "But
how?"
"You must find the public letter-writer who used to have
his pitch at the corner of the Pont-Neuf."
"There isn't one there now. I went past..."
"I know that. He has changed his pitch, that's all."
"How shall I know which is the right man? There are a number
of public letter-writers in Paris."
"I shall be with you, Maurice, and I shall know, I am sure
I shall know. There is something inside my heart which will make
it beat faster as soon as the Scarlet Pimpernel is somewhere nigh.
Besides..."
She checked herself, for involuntarily she had raised her voice,
and at once Maurice tightened his hold on her arm. In the fast-gathering
gloom a shuffling step had slided furtively past them. They could
not clearly see the form of this passer-by, only the vague outline
of a man stooping under a weight which he carried over his shoulders.
"We must be careful, Josette..." Maurice whispered softly.
"I know - I was carried away. But, Maurice, you will help
me?"
"Of course," he said.
And though he did not feel very hopeful he said it fervently,
for the prospect of roaming through the streets of Paris in the
company of Josette in search of a person who might be mythical
and who certainly would take a lot of finding, was of the rosiest.
Indeed, Maruice hoped that the same mythical personage would so
hide himself that it would be many days before he was ultimately
found.
"And when we have found him," Josette continued glibly,
once more speaking under her breath, "you shall tell him
about Louise and Charles-Léon, and that Louise must have
a permit to take the poor sick baby into the country and to remain
with him until he is well."
"And you think...?"
"I don't think, Maurice," she said emphatically, "I
know that the Scarlet Pimpernel will do the rest."
She was like a young devotee proclaiming the miracles of her patron
saint. It was getting very dark now and at home Louise and Charles-Léon
would be waiting for Josette, the angel in the house. Mechanically
and a little sadly Maurice led the girl's footsteps in the direction
of home. They spoke very little together after this: it seemed
as if, having made her profession of faith, Josette took her loyal
friend's co-operation for granted. She did not even now realise
the cruelty of the blow which she had dealt to his fondest hopes.
With the image of this heroic Scarlet Pimpernel so firmly fixed
in her mind, Josette was not likely to listen to a declaration
of love from a humble lawyer's clerk, who had neither deeds of
valour nor a handsome presence wherewith to fascinate a young
girl so romantically inclined.
Thus they wandered homewards in silence - she indulging in her
dreams, and he nursing a sorrow that he felt would be eternal.
Up above in the chestnut trees the sparrows had gone to roost.
Their paean of joy had ceased, only the many sounds of a great
city not yet abed broke in silence of the night. Furtive footsteps
still glided well-nigh soundlessly by; now and then there came
a twitter, a fluttering of wings from above, or from far away
the barking of a dog, the banging of a door, or the rattling of
cart-wheels on the cobble-stones. And sometimes the evening breeze
would give a great sigh that rose up into the evening air as if
coming from hundreds of thousands of prisoners groaning under
the tyranny of bloodthirsty oppressors, of a government that proclaimed
Liberty and Fraternity from the steps of the guillotine.
And at home in the small apartment of the Rue Picpus, Josette
and Maurice found that Louise had cried her eyes out until she
had worked herself into a state of hysteria, while Maître
de Croissy, silent and thoughtful, sat in dejection by the bedside
of his sick child.
