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"Was she, too, an orphan?" Gonzague asked.
"Yes," said Flora; "but she had a guardian who loved her like a father."
The gypsy girl could not guess what raging pa.s.sions were masked by the changeless serenity of Gonzague's face. "Who was that?" he asked, as he might have asked the name of some dog or some cat.
And he got the answer he expected from the girl: "A young French soldier."
Perhaps, again, Gonzague's voice was keener with his next question: "Whose name was--"
In this case Flora, suddenly recalling her conversation with Gabrielle on the previous day, became as suddenly cautious. "I have forgotten his name," she said, and looked as if nothing could rekindle her memory.
Gonzague affected to be busy with some of the papers that lay before him, and then, at a venture, and as if with no particular purpose in his thoughts, he said: "I wish I could get this Gabrielle to be your companion, child."
Flora clapped her hands, and forgot her caution in her joy at the prospect. "Well, that might be done. I will tell you a secret. Gabrielle and her guardian are in Paris."
Underneath the table, and hidden from the girl's sight, Gonzague's hands clinched tightly, as if they were clinching upon the throat of an enemy; but his face was still quite tranquil as he said, carelessly: "Where are they?"
Flora's voice was full of regret. "Ah! I do not know; but they were at the fair where we were playing, and I know that they are coming to Paris."
Gonzague rose to his feet and took both the girl's hands affectionately in his. His eyes looked affectionately into hers, and his voice was full of kindness. "If your friend can be found, be sure that I will find her for you. And now go. I will send for you when the time comes for the meeting with your mother."
Flora clasped her hands nervously. "My mother! Oh, what shall I say to her?" she cried.
Gonzague's smile soothed her fears. "Hide nothing from her, for I am sure you have nothing to hide. Speak the loving words that a mother would like to hear."
With a grateful look at her newly found protector, Flora darted from the room, and Gonzague was left alone.
XX
A CONFIDENTIAL AGENT
Gonzague was left alone, indeed, only in a sense, for on a sudden the great hall with its famous pictures had become the theatre of fierce emotions and menacing presences. Just at the moment when Gonzague believed his schemes to be at their best and his fortunes to be nearing their top, he was suddenly threatened with the renewal of the old terror that had been kept at bay through all the years that had pa.s.sed since the night of Caylus. Through all these years Lagardere had been kept from Paris, at the cost, indeed, as he believed, of many lives, but that was a price Louis de Gonzague was always prepared to pay when the protection of his own life was in question. Now it would seem as if Lagardere had broken his exile, had forced his way through the thicket of swords, and was again in Paris. Nor was this the worst. Just when Gonzague, after all his failures to trace the missing child of his victim, just when he had so ingeniously found a subst.i.tute for that missing child, it would really seem as if the child herself, now a woman, had come to Paris to defy him and to destroy his plans. He sat huddled with black thoughts for a time which seemed to him an age, but was in reality not more than a few moments; then, extending his hand, he struck a bell and a servant entered.
"Tell Peyrolles I want him," the prince commanded, and was again alone with his dreads and his dangers until Peyrolles appeared. Gonzague turned to his factotum. "I have reason to suspect that Lagardere is in Paris. If it be true, he will come too late. The princess will have accepted the gypsy as her child, the mother's voice will have spoken. If Lagardere is in Paris, he and the girl must be found, and once found--"
The ivory-like face of Peyrolles was quickened with a cunning look. "I have a man who will find him if any one can."
Gonzague turned upon him sharply. "Who is it?"
"Monseigneur," said Peyrolles, "I have at my disposal, and at the disposal of your highness, a very remarkable man, the hunchback aesop. He was in the moat of Caylus that night. He, with those two you saw yesterday, are the only ones left, except--"
Peyrolles paused for a moment, and his pale face worked uncomfortably.
Gonzague interpreted his thought. "Except you and me, you were going to say."
Peyrolles nodded gloomily. "As aesop," he said, "has been in Spain all these years hunting Lagardere--"
"Yes," Gonzague interrupted, "and never finding him."
Peyrolles bowed. "True, your highness, but at least up to now he has kept Lagardere on the Spanish side of the frontier, kept Lagardere in peril of his life. aesop hates Lagardere, always has hated him. When the last of our men met with"--he paused for a moment as if to find a fitting phrase, and then continued--"the usual misfortune, I thought it useless to leave aesop in Spain, and sent for him. He came to me to-day. May I present him to your highness?"
Gonzague nodded thoughtfully. Any ally was welcome in such a crisis.
"Yes," he said.
Peyrolles went to the door that communicated with the prince's private apartments, and, opening it, beckoned into the corridor. Then he drew back into the room, and a moment later was followed by a hunchbacked man in black, who wore a large sword. The man bowed profoundly to the Prince de Gonzague.
Peyrolles introduced him. "This is the man, monseigneur."
Gonzague looked fixedly at the man. He could see little of his face, for the head was thrust forward from the stooping, misshapen shoulders, and his long, dark hair hung about his cheeks and shaded his countenance. The face seemed pale and intelligent. It was naturally quite unfamiliar to Gonzague, who knew nothing of aesop except as one of the men who had played a sinister part in the murder at Caylus.
Gonzague addressed him. "You know much, they tell me?"
The man bowed again, and spoke, slowly: "I know that Lagardere is in Paris, and with the child of Nevers."
"Do you know where he is?" Gonzague questioned.
The man answered, with laconic confidence: "I will find out."
"How?" asked Gonzague.
The hunchback laughed dryly. "That is my secret. Paris cannot hold any mystery from me."
Gonzague questioned again: "Is it to your interest that Lagardere should die?"
"Indeed, yes," the hunchback answered. "Has he not sworn to kill every man who attacked Nevers that night? Has he not kept his word well? I am the last that is left--I and Monsieur Peyrolles, for, of course, I except your Excellence. I promise you I will find him, but I shall need help."
"Help?" Gonzague echoed.
The hunchback nodded. "He is a dangerous fellow, this Lagardere, as six of us have found to our cost. Are there not two of our number newly in your highness's service?"
"Cocarda.s.se and Pa.s.sepoil," Peyrolles explained.
The hunchback rubbed his hands. "The very men. Will your highness place them under my orders?"
"By all means," Gonzague answered, and, turning to Peyrolles, he said: "They are in the antechamber; bring them in."
Peyrolles turned to obey, when the hunchback delayed him with a gesture.
"Your pardon, highness," he said; "but I think there is another service I can render you to-day."
"Another service?" Gonzague repeated, looking at the hunchback with some surprise.
The hunchback explained: "Your highness, as I understand, has summoned for this afternoon a small family council, ostensibly for the purpose of considering the position of affairs between madame the princess and yourself."
The hunchback paused. Gonzague nodded, but said nothing, and the hunchback resumed: "Your real purpose, however, as I understand, is to present to that council the young lady, the daughter of Nevers, whom I have been fortunate enough to discover in Spain. You wish this discovery to come as a surprise to madame the princess."
Still Gonzague nodded, still Gonzague kept silence.