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"They are looking for us," Seth whispered. "It may be the lady cannot come and has sent them to tell us so."
"Four of them!" Barrington said.
He did not move. These men were not lackeys, they were gentlemen.
Barrington wondered whether they had chosen this secluded spot to settle some private quarrel of last night's making.
"Scented danger and gone," said one.
Another shook his head and stared into the depths of the wood before him with such a keen pair of eyes that Barrington believed he must be seen.
"Not a man to run from danger," he said, "unless mademoiselle were strangely deceived."
The remark decided Barrington's course of action. He stepped forward followed by Seth, who tied up the horses again and then took up a position behind his master.
"Are you seeking me, gentlemen?"
"If your name be Monsieur Barrington," the man with the keen eyes answered.
"It is."
The four men bowed low and Barrington did the same.
"My companion thought we were too late," said the spokesman, "but I had a different opinion. We are four gentlemen devoted to Mademoiselle St.
Clair, and she has charged us with a commission."
"You are very welcome unless you bring bad news," said Barrington.
"For you it may be," was the answer with a smile. "Mademoiselle will not need you to escort her to Paris."
Barrington had not sought such an honor. Until the moment he had fastened her mask, touching her hair and touched by her personality, he would rather have been without the honor; now he was disappointed, angry. She had found another escort and despised him. She was as other women, unreliable, changeable, inconstant.
"You bring some proof that mademoiselle has entrusted you with this message."
"This," was the answer, and the man held up the little iron star.
"I am not greatly grieved to be relieved of such a responsibility, gentlemen," said Barrington, with a short laugh. "Perhaps you will tell mademoiselle so."
"Pardon, but monsieur hardly understands. For some purpose monsieur came to Beauvais with an attempt to deceive mademoiselle with this little iron trinket. It is not possible to let such a thing pa.s.s, and it is most undesirable that monsieur should be allowed to have the opportunity of again practicing such deceit. Mademoiselle listened to him, feigned to be satisfied with his explanation, in fact, met deceit with deceit.
My opinion was that half a dozen lackeys should be sent to chastise monsieur, but mademoiselle decided otherwise. You were too good to die by a lackey's hand, she declared, therefore, monsieur, we are here."
"Four gentlemen for six lackeys!" laughed Barrington. "It is a strange computation of values."
"The methods are different," was the answer. "I think we do you too much honor, but mademoiselle has willed it. We have already arranged our order of precedence, and monsieur has the pleasure of first crossing swords with me. If his skill is greater than mine, then he will have the pleasure of meeting these other gentlemen. You have my word for honorable treatment, but it is necessary that the fight is to the death."
"And my servant here?"
The man shrugged his shoulders. Seth was beneath his consideration.
"There would have been fewer words with the lackeys' method, I presume,"
said Barrington. "I am not inclined to fight a duel."
"Monsieur is a little afraid."
"As you will."
"Afraid as well as being a liar and deceiver of women?"
"As much one as the other," Barrington answered carelessly.
"Then, monsieur, I am afraid we shall have to employ lackeys' methods."
"Now we come to level ground and understand each other," said Barrington. "There is no quarrel between us which a duel may settle. You are four men bound together to take my life if you can, but you shall not have the chance of taking it with a semblance of honesty by calling it a duel. You attack two travellers; if you can, rob them of what you will."
"That's better, Master Richard, I'm a poor hand at understanding jargon of this kind, but I have an idea of how to deal with thieves and murderers."
"Be careful, Seth," Barrington whispered.
The attack was immediate and sharp, without ceremony, and determined.
Misunderstanding Barrington's att.i.tude they were perhaps a little careless, believing him a coward at heart. Their methods, too, were rather those of the duelist than the fighter, and this gave Barrington and Seth some advantage. The keen-eyed man was as ready with his sword as with his tongue. He had been confident of saving his companions from soiling their blades had Richard consented to cross swords with him, and he advanced upon his enemy to bring the battle to a speedy conclusion.
He even waved his companions aside, and it was with him Barrington had first to deal. Their blades were the first to speak, and in a moment the Frenchman knew that he had no mean swordsman to do with.
"This would have been keen pleasure had you been a gentleman," he said.
Barrington did not answer. He was armed for real warfare, his weapon was heavier than his opponent's and he took advantage of the fact. This was fighting, not dueling; and he beat the weapon down, snapping the blade near the hilt. The next moment the other Frenchman had engaged him fiercely.
With Seth there was even greater advantage. He was a servant and a lackey, and the punctilious gentlemen opposed to him were not inclined to cross swords with him. They looked to see him show fear, the very last thing in the world he was likely to do. Seth's arm was long and his method of fighting more or less his own, the most unceremonious, possibly, that these gentlemen had ever had to do with. Deeply cut in the wrist one man dropped his sword. In a moment Seth's foot was upon it, and as he turned to meet his other adversary he had taken a pistol from his pocket.
The Frenchman uttered an exclamation of surprise, and Seth laughed.
"If not the sword point, a bullet; either will serve," he said.
Then Seth was conscious of two things, one a certainty, the other imagination perhaps. Across his enemy's shoulder he caught sight of the road which led up to Beauvais, and down it came two men running towards the wood. After all, their opponents were to be six instead of four.
This was certain. His master was separated from him by a few paces, and it seemed to Seth that he was being hard pressed. At any rate, if it were not so, the two men running towards them must turn the scale.
Feigning a vigorous onslaught upon his opponent, who was already somewhat disconcerted, Seth deliberately fired at the man fighting his master, who fell backwards with a cry.
"Seth!" Richard exclaimed.
"Look! there are two more running to the attack. This is a time to waive ceremony and be gone. To horse, Master Richard!"
The keen-eyed man, who had been powerless being without a sword, now caught up the weapon which the fallen man had dropped.
"There's another pistol shot if you move," cried Seth, with one foot in the stirrup.
It is doubtful whether the threat would have stopped him, but the two men suddenly running towards him through the trees did. He knew them and they were not expected.
Barrington and Seth seized the opportunity, and putting spurs to their horses were riding towards the head of the valley which led down to the frontier. They broke into a gallop as soon as they reached the road, and for some time neither of them spoke.
"Had we waited the whole of Beauvais would have been upon us. All's fair in war."