Just at this moment the National Guard of Haramont came from the village, headed by Pitou, a drum, and a fife. Pitou was on a great white horse, which Maniquet had lent him. Pitou grasped his sword and bestrode the huge horse. If he did not represent the aristocracy, he at least represented the bone and sinew of the land. The entrance of Pitou, and of those who had conferred so much honour on the province, was saluted by loud acclamations. All had hats alike, with the national cockade, and
CATHERINE BECOMES A DIPLOMATIST 437
marched in two ranks in the most perfect order. When it reached the parade all approved of it. Pitou caught a glance of Catherine and grew pale. She trembled.
He put his men through the manual, and every command excited much attention and applause. The other villagers appeared excited and irregular. Some were half armed, others half instructed, and were completely demoralised by the comparison. From the manual, they passed to the drill. Here the sergeant expected to rival Pitou. In consideration of age, the sergeant had received the command, and marched his men to and fro by files. He could do nothing more. Pitou, with his sword under his arm, and his helmet on his brow, looked on with infinite superiority. When the sergeant saw his heads of column become lost amid the trees, while the rear took the back track to Haramont; when he saw his squares disperse, and squads and platoons lose their commandants, he was greeted by a disapproving sound from his own soldiers.
A cry was heard, ‘Pitou 1 Pitou 1 Pitou 1’
Pitou, on his white horse, placed himself at the head of his men, to whom he gave the right, and gave the command in such a tone that the very oaks trembled. As if by miracle, the broken files united, the manoeuvres were well executed, Pitou made such good use of his books and of Father Clovis’s instructions. Pitou dismounted, and, covered with sweat, received the salutations of the crowd.
He did not, however, see Catherine. All at once Pitou heard her voice. It was not necessary for him to seek her. She had sought him. His triumph was immense.
‘What !’ said she, with an air in strange contrast with her pale face. ‘Have you become proud because you are a great general?’
‘Oh, no 1’ said Pitou. ‘ Good-morning, mademoiselle.’
Then to Madame Billot, ‘I am happy to salute you, Madame Billot.’
Turning to Catherine, he said, ‘Mademoiselle, you are wrong. I am not a great general, but only a young man anxious to serve my country.’
What he had said was borne through the crowd, and treated as a sublime sentiment.
‘Ange,’ said Catherine, ‘I must speak to you.’
‘When you please.’
‘Return to the farm with us.’
‘Very well. 1
438 TAKING THE BASTILLE
CATHERINE contrived to be alone with Pitou, in spite of her mother’s presence. Old Mother Billot had some gossips, who walked by her and maintained conversation. Catherine, who had left her horse, returned on foot with Pitou. On that day all enjoyed the silence and thickness of the woods. All glory and happiness seems to reside amid the primeval grandeur of the forests.
‘Here I am, Mademoiselle Catherine,’ said Pitou, when they were alone.
‘Why have you for so long a time not visited our farm ? That is wrong, Pitou.’
‘But, mademoiselle, you know the reason I’
‘I do not. You are wrong.’
Pitou bit his lips. It annoyed him to hear Catherine tell a falsehood. She saw and understood his expression.
‘But, Pitou, I have something to tell you.’
‘Ah I’ said he.
‘The other day yon saw me in the hut.’
‘Yes, I did.’ ‘
She blushed.
‘What ware you doing there?’
‘You knew me?’
‘At first I did not. I did afterwards.’
Both were silent, for each had too much to think of. Catherine said at last : ‘Then it was you? What were you doing there? Why did you hide yourself?’
‘Curiosity might have made me.’
‘I have no curiosity.’
She stamped the ground most impatiently with her little foot.
‘You were,’ said she, ‘in a place you do not visit often.’
‘You saw I was reading.’
‘I do not know.’
‘If you saw me, you do.’
‘I did see you distinctly … but what were yon reading I’
‘My tactict. To study, madame, one must be alone.’
‘True in the forest nothing disturbs you.’
HONEY AND ABSINTHE 439
They were again silent, the rest of the party rode before them.
‘When you study thus,’ said Catherine, ‘do you study long?’
Whole days sometimes.’
‘Then you had been long thero?*
‘Very long.’
‘It is surprising that I did not see you when I came.’
Here she told an untruth, but was so bold that Pitou was convinced. He was sorry for her. All her wants were due only to the want of circumspection.
‘I may have slept. I sometimes do when I study too much.’
‘Well, while you slept, I must have passed you. I went to the old pavilion.’
‘Ah P said Pitou, ‘what pavilion?’
Catherine blushed again. This time her manner was so aftected that he could not believe her.
‘Charny’s pavilion. There ii the best balm in the country. I had hurt myself, and needed some leaves. I hurt my hand.’
As if he wished to believe her, Ange looked at her hands.
‘Ah P said she, ‘not my hands, but my feet.’
‘Did you get what you wanted?’
‘Ah 1 yes. My feet, you see, are well.’
Catherine fancied that she had succeeded : she fancied Pitou had seen and knew nothing. She said, and it was a great mistake : ‘Then, Monsieur Pitou would have cut us. He is proud of his position, and diad^in* peasants since he has become an officer.’
Pitou was wounded. So great a sacrifice, even though feigned, demands another recompense; and as Catherine seemed to seek to mystify Pitou, and as she doubtless laughed at him when she was with Isidore de Charny, all Pitou’s good humour passed away. Self-love is a viper asleep, on which it is never prudent to tread unless you crush it at once.
‘Mademoiselle,’ said he, ‘it seems you cut me.’
‘How so?’
‘First you refused me work, and drove me from the farm. I said nothing to Monsieur Billot, for, thank God, I yet have a heart and hands.’
‘I assure you, Monsieur Pitou ‘
‘It matters not; of course you can manage your own
440 TAKING THE BASTILLE
affairs. If then you saw me at the pavilion, you should have spoken to me, instead of running away, as if you were robbing an orchard. Mademoiselle, I had not the time to shut my book before you sprang on the pony and rode away. He had been tied long enough, though, to eat up all the* bark of an oak.’
‘Then a tree was destroyed; but why, Monsieur Pitou, do you tell me this?’
Catherine felt that all presence of mind was leaving her.
‘Ah, you were gathering balm,’ said Pitou. ‘A horse does much in an hour.’
‘Catherine said, ‘In an hour?’
‘No horse, mademoiselle, could strip a tree of that size in less time. You must have been collecting more balm than would suffice to cure all the wounds received at the Bastille.’
Catherine could not say a word. Pitou was silent; he knew he had said enough. Mother Billot paused at the cross-road to bid adieu to her friends. Pitou was in agony, for he felt the pain of the wounds he had inflicted, and was like a bird just ready to fly away.
‘Well I what says the officer,’ said Madame Billot.
‘That he wishes you good-day.’
‘Then good-day. Come, Catherine.’
‘Ah I tell me the truth,’ murmured Catherine.
‘What?’
‘Are you not yet my friend?’
‘Alas I’ said the poor fellow, who, as yet without experience, began to make love, through confessions which only the skilful know how to manage.
Pitou felt that his secret was rushing to his lips; he felt that the first word Catherine said would place him in her power. He was aware, though, if he spoke he would die when Catherine confessed to him what as yet he only suspected. He was silent as an old Roman, and bowed to Catherine with a respect which touched the young girl’s heart; bowed to Madame Billot, and disappeared.
Catherine made a bound as if she would follow him.
Madame Billot said to her daughter, ‘He is a good lad, and has much feeling.’
The poor lad did not know that in love there is both honey and absinthe, and that Charny had all the honey. From this hour, during which she had suffered horribly.
AN UNEXPECTED DENOUEMENT 441
Catherine conceived a kind of respectful fear for Pitou, which a few days before she was far from feeling toward him. When one cannot inspire love, it is not bad to inspire fear; and Pitou, who had great ideas of personal dignity, would not have been a little flattered had he discovered the existence even of such a sentiment.
Pitou at last reached his own room, where he found his chivalric guard had placed a sentinel. The man, dead drunk, lay on a bench with his gun across his legs. Pitou awoke him. He then learned that his thirty men, good and true, had ordered an entertainment at old Father Tellier’s, and that twelve ladies were to crown the Turenne who had overcome the Cond of the next canton. Pitou was too much fatigued for his stomach not to have suffered. Pitou, being led by his sentinel to the banquet-hall, was received with acclamations which nearly blew the roof off. He bowed, sat down in silence, and even attacked the veal and salad. This state of feeling lasted until his stomach was filled, and his heart relieved,
FEASTING after sorrow is either an increase of grief or an absolute consolation. Pitou saw that his grief was increased. He arose when his companions could not. He made even an oration on Spartan sobriety to them, when they were all dead drunk. He bade them go away when they were asleep under the table. We must say that the ladies disappeared during the dessert. Pitou thought : amid ail his glory and honour, the prominent subject was his last interview with Catherine. Amid the half tints of his memory, he recalled the fact that her hand had often touched his, and that sometimes her shoulder had pressed his own, and that he on certain occasions had known all her beauties. He then looked around him like a man awaking from a drunken dream. He asked the shadows why so much severity towards a young woman, perfect in grace, could have been in his heart. Pitou wished to reinstate himself with Catherine. But how? Pitou, like a good fellow, though heated with wine and love, said to himself, ‘ Some time I will make Catherine ashamed that the did not love me,’
44* TAKING THE BASTILLE
Pitou’s chaste ideas would not permit him to fancy that Catherine did aught but coquet with M. de Charny, and that she laughed at his laced boots and golden spurs. How delighted Pitou was to think that Catherine was not in love with either a boot or a spur. Some day M. Isidore would go to the city and marry a countess. Catherine then would seem to him an old romance. All these ideas occupied the mind of the commander of the National Guard of Haramont. To prove to Catherine that he was a good fellow, he began to recall all the bad things he had heard during the day. But Catherine had said some of them. He thought he would tell them to her. A drunken man without a watch has no idea of time. Pitou had no watch, and had not gone ten paces before he was as drunk as Bacchus or his son Thespis. He did not remember that he had left Catherine three hours before, and that, half an hour later, she must have reached Pisseaux. To that place he hurried. Let us leave him among the trees, bushes, and briars, threshing with his stick the great forest of Orleans, which returned blows with usury. Let us return to Catherine, who went home with her mother. There was a swamp behind the farm, and when there they had to ride in single file. The old lady went first. Catherine was about to go when she heard a whistle. She turned, and saw in the distance the cap of Isidore’s valet. She let her mother ride on, and the latter being but a few paces from home was not wary. The servant came,
‘Mademoiselle,’ said he, ‘my master wishes to see you to-night, and begs you to meet him somewhere at eleven, if you please,’
Has he met with any accident?’ inquired Catherine, with much alarm.
‘I do not know. He received to-night a letter with a black seal, from Paris. I have already been here an hour.’
The clock of Villers-Cotterets struck ten, Catherine looked around.
‘Well, the place is dark; tell your master I will wait for him here.
The man rode away. Catherine followed her mother home. What could Isidore have to tell her at such an hour? Love meetings assume more smiling forms. That was not the question. Isidore wished to see her, and the hour was of no importance. She would have met him in
AM UNEXPECTED DENOUEMENT 443
the graveyard of Villers-Cotterftts at midnight. She would not then even think, but kissed her mother, and went to her room. Her mother went to bed. She suspected nothing, and if she had. it mattered not, for Catherine was a being of a superior order. Catherine neither undressed nor went to bed. She heard the chime of half after ten. At a quarter before eleven she put out the lamp and went into the dining-room. The windows opened into the yard. She sprang out. She hurried to the appointed place with a beating heart, placing one hand on her bosom and the other on her head. She was not forced to wait long. She heard the feet of a horse. She stepped forward. Isidore was before her.
Without dismounting, he took her hand, lifted her into the saddle, and said : ‘Catherine, yesterday my brother George was killed at Versailles. My brother Olivier has sent for me; I most go.’
Catherine uttered an exclamation of grief, and clasped Charny in her arms.
‘If,’ said she, ‘they killed one brother, they will kill another.’
‘Be that as it may; my eldest brother has sent for me; Catherine, you know I love you.’
‘Stay, stay I’ said the poor girl, who was only aware of the fact that Isidore was going.
‘Honour and vengeance appeal to me.’ ‘Alas I alas! 1