other
things as evil--had made him famous.
Croisette pulled horrible faces behind his back. We looked hotly at him;
but could find nothing to say.
"You grow red!" he went on, pleasantly--the wretch!--playing with us
as a cat does with mice. "It offends your dignity, perhaps, that I bid
Mademoiselle set you spinning? I now would spin at Mademoiselle's
bidding, and think it happiness!"
"We are not girls!" I blurted out, with the flush and tremor of a boy's
passion. "You had not called my godfather, Anne de Montmorenci a
girl, M. le Vidame!" For though we counted it a joke among ourselves
that we all bore girls' names, we were young enough to be sensitive
about it.
He shrugged his shoulders. And how he dwarfed us all as he stood
there dominating our terrace! "M. de Montmorenci was a man," he said
scornfully. "M. Anne de Caylus is--"
And the villain deliberately turned his great back upon us, taking his
seat on the low wall near Catherine's chair. It was clear even to our
vanity that he did not think us worth another word--that we had passed
absolutely from his mind. Madame Claude came waddling out at the
same moment, Gil carrying a chair behind her. And we--well we slunk
away and sat on the other side of the terrace, whence we could still
glower at the offender.
Yet who were we to glower at him? To this day I shake at the thought
of him. It was not so much his height and bulk, though he was so big
that the clipped pointed fashion of his beard a fashion then new at
court--seemed on him incongruous and effeminate; nor so much the
sinister glance of his grey eyes--he had a slight cast in them; nor the
grim suavity of his manner, and the harsh threatening voice that
permitted of no disguise. It was the sum of these things, the great brutal
presence of the man--that was overpowering--that made the great falter
and the poor crouch. And then his reputation! Though we knew little of
the world's wickedness, all we did know had come to us linked with his
name. We had heard of him as a duellist, as a bully, an employer of
bravos. At Jarnac he had been the last to turn from the shambles. Men
called him cruel and vengeful even for those days--gone by now, thank
God!--and whispered his name when they spoke of assassinations;
saying commonly of him that he would not blench before a Guise, nor
blush before the Virgin.
Such was our visitor and neighbour, Raoul de Mar, Vidame de Bezers.
As he sat on the terrace, now eyeing us askance, and now paying
Catherine a compliment, I likened him to a great cat before which a
butterfly has all unwittingly flirted her prettiness. Poor Catherine! No
doubt she had her own reasons for uneasiness; more reasons I fancy
than I then guessed. For she seemed to have lost her voice. She
stammered and made but poor replies; and Madame Claude being deaf
and stupid, and we boys too timid after the rebuff we had experienced
to fill the gap, the conversation languished. The Vidame was not for his
part the man to put himself out on a hot day.
It was after one of these pauses--not the first but the longest-- that I
started on finding his eyes fixed on mine. More, I shivered. It is hard to
describe, but there was a look in the Vidame's eyes at that moment
which I had never seen before. A look of pain almost: of dumb savage
alarm at any rate. From me they passed slowly to Marie and mutely
interrogated him. Then the Vidame's glance travelled back to Catherine,
and settled on her.
Only a moment before she had been but too conscious of his presence.
Now, as it chanced by bad luck, or in the course of Providence,
something had drawn her attention elsewhere. She was unconscious of
his regard. Her own eyes were fixed in a far-away gaze. Her colour was
high, her lips were parted, her bosom heaved gently.
The shadow deepened on the Vidame's face. Slowly he took his eyes
from hers, and looked northwards also.
Caylus Castle stands on a rock in the middle of the narrow valley of
that name. The town clusters about the ledges of the rock so closely
that when I was a boy I could fling a stone clear of the houses. The hills
are scarcely five hundred yards distant on either side, rising in tamer
colours from the green fields about the brook. It is possible from the
terrace to see the whole valley, and the road which passes through it
lengthwise. Catherine's eyes were on the northern extremity of the
defile, where
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