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CHAPTER SIXTY TWO.
THE HACKNEY-CARRIAGE.
For a while I lingered in the hall, irresolute and almost without purpose. She whom I loved, and who loved me in return, was wrested from me by an infamous law, ruthlessly torn from me. She would be borne away before my eyes, and I might, perhaps, never behold her again. Probable enough was this thought--I might never behold her again! Lost to me, more hopelessly lost, than if she had become the _bride_ of another.
Far more hopelessly lost. Then, at least, she would have been free to think, to act, to go abroad, to --. Then I might have hoped to meet her again, to see her, to gaze upon her, even if only at a distance, to worship her in the secret silence of my heart, to console myself with the belief that she still loved me. Yes; the bride, the wife of another! Even that I could have borne with calmness. But now, not the bride of another, but the _slave_, the forced, unwilling _leman_, and that other--. Oh! how my heart writhed under its horrible imaginings!
What next? How was I to act? Resign myself to the situation? Make no further effort to recover, to save her?
No! It had not come to that. Discouraging as the prospect was, a ray of hope was visible; one ray yet illumed the dark future, sustaining and bracing my mind for further action.
The plan was still undefined; but the purpose had been formed, and that purpose was to free Aurore, to make her mine _at every hazard_! I thought no longer of buying her. I knew that Gayarre had become her owner. I felt satisfied that to purchase her was no longer possible.
He who had paid such an enormous sum would not be likely to part with her at any price. My whole fortune would not suffice. I gave not a thought to it. I felt certain it would be impossible.
Far different was the resolve that was already forming itself in my mind, and cheering me with new hopes. Forming itself, do I say? It had already taken a definite shape, even before the echoes of the salesman's voice had died upon my ears! With the clink of his hammer my mind was made up. The purpose was formed; it was only the _plan_ that remained indefinite.
I had resolved to outrage the laws--to become thief or robber, whichever it might please circ.u.mstances to make me. I had resolved to _steal my betrothed_!
Disgrace there might be--danger I knew there was, not only to my liberty, but my life. I cared but little about the disgrace; I recked not of the danger. My purpose was fixed--my determination taken.
Brief had been the mental process that conducted me to this determination--the more brief that the thought had pa.s.sed through my mind before--the more brief that I believed there was positively no other means I could adopt. It was the only course of action left me-- either that, or yield up all that I loved without a struggle--and, pa.s.sion-led as I was, I was not going to yield. Certain disgrace,--even death itself, appeared more welcome than this alternative.
I had formed not yet the shadow of a plan. That, must be thought of afterwards; but even at that moment was action required. My poor heart was on the rack; I could not bear the thought that a single night should pa.s.s and she under the same roof with that hideous man!
Wherever she should pa.s.s the night, I was determined that I should not be far-distant from her. Walls might separate us, but she should know I was near. Just that much of a plan _had_ I thought of.
Stepping to a retired spot, I took out my note-book, and wrote upon one of its leaves:
"_Ce soir viendrai_!--Edouard."
I had no time to be more particular, for I feared every moment she would be hurried out of my sight. I tore out the leaf; and, hastily folding it, returned to the entrance of the Rotundo.
Just as I got back to the door a hackney-carriage drove up, and halted in front. I conjectured its use, and lost no time in providing another from a stand close by. This done, I returned within the hall. I was yet in time. As I entered, I saw Aurore being led away from the rostrum.
I pressed into the crowd, and stood in such a position that she would have to pa.s.s near me. And she did so, our hands met, and the note parted from my fingers. There was no time for a further recognition-- not even a love-pressure--for the moment after she was hurried on through the crowd, and the carriage-door closed after her.
The mulatto girl accompanied her, and another of the female slaves. All were put into the carriage. The negro-dealer climbed to the box alongside the coachman, and the vehicle rattled off over the stony pavement.
A word to my driver was enough, who, giving the whip to his horses, followed at like speed.
CHAPTER SIXTY THREE.
TO BRINGIERS.
Coachmen of New Orleans possess their full share of _intelligence_; and the ring of a piece of silver, extra of their fare, is a music well understood by them. They are the witnesses of many a romantic adventure--the necessary confidants of many a love-secret. A hundred yards in front rolled the carriage that had taken Aurore; now turning round corners, now pa.s.sing among drays laden with huge cotton-bales or hogsheads of sugar--but my driver had fixed his knowing eye upon it, and I had no need to be uneasy.
It pa.s.sed up the Rue Chartres but a short distance, and then turned into one of the short streets that ran from this at right angles towards the Levee. I fancied for a moment, it was making for the steamboat wharves; but on reaching the corner, I saw that it had stopped about half way down the street. My driver, according to the instructions I had given him, pulled up at the corner, and awaited my further orders. The carriage I had followed was now standing in front of a house; and just as I rounded the corner, I caught a glimpse of several figures crossing the banquette and entering the door. No doubt, all that had ridden in the carriage--Aurore with the rest--had gone inside the house.
Presently a man came out, and handing his fare to the hackney-coachman, turned and went back into the house. The latter, gathering up his reins, gave the whip to his horses, and, wheeling round, came back by the Rue Chartres. As he pa.s.sed me, I glanced through the open windows of his vehicle. It was empty. She had gone into the house, then.
I had no longer any doubt as to where she had been taken. I read on the corner, "Rue Bienville." The house where the carriage had stopped was the town residence of Monsieur Dominique Gayarre.
I remained for some minutes in the cab, considering what I had best do.
Was this to be her future home? or was she only brought here temporarily, to be afterwards taken up to the plantation?
Some thought, or instinct perhaps, whispered me that she was not to remain in the Rue Bienville; but would be carried to the gloomy old mansion at Bringiers. I cannot tell why I thought so. Perhaps it was because I wished it so.
I saw the necessity of watching the house--so that she might not be taken away without my knowing it. Wherever she went I was determined to follow.
Fortunately I was prepared for any journey. The three thousand dollars lent me by D'Hauteville remained intact. With that I could travel to the ends of the earth.
I wished that the young Creole had been with me. I wanted his counsel-- his company. How should I find him? he had not said where we should meet--only that he would join me when the sale should be over. I saw nothing of him on leaving the Rotundo. Perhaps he meant to meet me there or at my hotel; but how was I to get back to either of these places without leaving my post?
I was perplexed as to how I should communicate with D'Hauteville. It occurred to me that the hackney-coachman--I had not yet dismissed him-- might remain and watch the house, while I went in search of the Creole.
I had only to pay the Jehu; he would obey me, of course, and right willingly.
I was about arranging with the man, and had already given him some instructions, when I heard wheels rumbling along the street; and a somewhat old-fashioned coach, drawn by a pair of mules, turned into the Rue Bienville. A negro driver was upon the box.
There was nothing odd in all this. Such a carriage and such a coachman were to be seen every hour in New Orleans, and drawn by mules as often as horses. But this pair of mules, and the negro who drove them, I recognised.
Yes! I recognised the equipage. I had often met it upon the Levee Road near Bringiers. It was the carriage of Monsieur Dominique!
I was further a.s.sured upon this point by seeing the vehicle draw up in front of the avocat's house.
I at once gave up my design of going back for D'Hauteville. Climbing back into the hack, I ensconced myself in such a position, that I could command a view of what pa.s.sed in the Rue Bienville.
Some one was evidently about to become the occupant of the carriage.
The door of the house stood open, and a servant was speaking to the coachman. I could tell by the actions of the latter, that he expected soon to drive off.
The servant now appeared outside with several parcels, which he placed upon the coach; then a man came out--the negro-trader--who mounted the box. Another man shot across the banquette, but in such a hurried gait that I could not recognise him. I guessed, however, who _he_ was. Two others now came from the house--a mulatto woman and a young girl. In spite of the cloak in which she was enveloped I recognised Aurore. The mulatto woman conducted the girl to the carriage, and then stepped in after. At this moment a man on horseback appeared in the street, and riding up, halted by the carriage. After speaking to some one inside, he again put his horse in motion and rode off. This horseman was Larkin the overseer.
The clash of the closing door was immediately followed by the crack of the coachman's whip; and the mules, trotting off down the street, turned to the right, and headed up the Levee.
My driver, who had already been instructed, gave the whip to his hack, and followed, keeping a short distance in the rear.
It was not till we had traversed the long street of Tehoupitoulas, through the Faubourg Marigny, and were some distance upon the road to the suburban village of Lafayette, that I thought of where I was going.
My sole idea had been to keep in sight the carriage of Gayarre.
I now bethought me for what purpose I was driving after him. Did I intend to follow him to his house, some thirty miles distant, in a hackney-coach?
Even had I been so determined, it was questionable whether the driver of the vehicle could have been tempted to humour my caprice, or whether his wretched hack could have accomplished such a feat.
For what purpose, then, was I galloping after? To overtake these men upon the road, and deliver Aurore from their keeping? No, there were three of them--well armed, no doubt--and I alone.
But it was not until I had gone several miles that I began to reflect on the absurdity of my conduct. I then ordered my coachman to pull up.