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"I have sought for you everywhere," he said when Jean entered and the man who had brought him had gone.
"You were unfortunate in not finding me," said the dwarf, with a grotesque bow. "I am always at the Duke's service."
"Tell me, Jean, why do you call me Duke? You are in advance of time.
The crown has not yet touched this head of mine."
"We speak of to-morrow ere the sun has risen upon it," the dwarf answered.
"True; but it might never dawn."
"Ah, my lord, one cannot stop to consider possibilities if life is to be lived."
"The other day you spoke of visions, visions in St. Etienne in the night. Is it true that you have been dreaming again?" asked Felix.
"I always dream; so do other men, only with the light they forget. I remember. Half our life is a dream, visions of things we long for, yet never attain to. Love, hope, ambition, they are all dreams, sometimes turned to realities, yet seldom fulfilling expectation."
"Have I entered into your visions?" asked Felix, and eagerness was in the question in spite of his efforts to conceal it.
"Often," answered the dwarf, quick to catch the trend of the Count's question. "Often, as lover, as a man of hope, as a slave of ambition."
"How say you? Slave!"
"Truly we are all slaves in varying degree; slaves to love, slaves----"
"Since when have I been slave to love?" asked Felix.
"Since the day a woman first said you nay," was the quick answer. It was a general answer enough, applicable to any man, yet the Count, remembering Elisabeth and Christine, found it easy to apply it forcibly to himself.
"And for the others, hope and ambition, what of them?" he asked.
"They stand with one foot on the steps of a throne," said Jean.
"And shall I mount it? Have your visions told you that?"
"Who can stop you?" asked the dwarf. "Is not the pale scholar of Pa.s.sey dead? You did not know that when last we talked together, nor did I. Did I not leave you to go and welcome him at the gate of Vayenne? Yet I called you Duke then. I am but the dwarf of St.
Etienne, a fool; yet maybe I sometimes utter prophecies."
There were steps outside the room, and then a soldier entered.
"Stand you here, Jean," said Felix. "You shall see how I deal with traitors."
"Have a care that you mistake not friends for traitors and traitors for friends," said the dwarf. "They have a habit of looking and speaking much alike." And, doubling his legs under him, Jean sank into a sitting posture by the Count's chair.
With chains upon his wrists, Gaspard Lemasle was marched into the room. He glanced at the dwarf, who did not meet his look, and then he fixed his eyes upon Felix.
"We looked upon you as an honest man, Lemasle," said Felix.
"Duke Robert ever found me so," was the answer.
"He is dead," said Felix, "and his son, who should have been Duke, was placed in your keeping. Where is he?"
"I do not know."
"He, too, is dead," said Felix. "His mangled corpse has been found in the forest yonder. How dare you come to Vayenne, Duke Maurice being dead?"
Lemasle was silent. He had no intention of being tricked into answering questions which might give the Count information.
"I will tell you," said Felix slowly. "You deserted him in his hour of need, not from actual cowardice it may be, that I will not accuse you of, but because you trusted in another man, and devoted yourself to Mademoiselle de Liancourt."
"I acted for the best," said Lemasle. "Should I have been welcome in Vayenne if Mademoiselle's body had been found mangled in the forest?"
"A loyal soldier obeys orders," the Count answered. "Your orders were to bring my cousin safe to Vayenne. There are plots in the city. I suggest that you never meant the young Duke to enter the city alive."
"You suggest--you----"
The dwarf raised his eyes for a moment, and Lemasle stopped.
"Well?" said Felix. "Have you an answer?"
"I was privy to no such plot."
"This priest in whom you trusted, where is he?" Felix asked sharply.
"I do not know, Count."
"Who was he?"
"An honest man, for he fought side by side with me," Lemasle answered.
"I do him this justice, for the troopers can bear me witness that I complained loudly that he was of our company."
"You mean that his being there was Mademoiselle de Liancourt's wish?"
said Felix. "Where is Mademoiselle?"
"She did not return with me to Vayenne," Lemasle said.
"Yet you know where she is?"
"I have said, sir, that we parted before I returned to the city."
"Answer me," said Felix, bringing his hand down heavily upon the table beside him.
Lemasle remained silent.
"You will not speak? Then I will see to it that you cannot. We have spies and traitors enough in Vayenne. They shall have warning of the fate in store for them. You shall hang at noon."
The Count, the prisoner, and the soldiers suddenly started, for at that instant the dwarf broke out into a howl of laughter, rocking himself from side to side until it seemed as though he must lose his balance and roll over.
"Peace! fool, peace!" Felix said angrily.