of those who made up the simulacrum of a court for the Regent of France were also housed at the Bear.
It was late afternoon when André-Louis drew rein in the crisp-edged slush that was beginning to freeze before the door of the inn.
Armstadt, the landlord, lounged forward, and, perceiving an unattended traveller on a jaded post-horse with an insignificant valise strapped to his saddle, did not account it necessary to put aside his porcelain pipe. But the brisk, peremptory tone in which the traveller asked for the Lord of Gavrillac, the look in his dark eyes, the sword he wore, and the holsters in the saddle aroused the landlord from his languor.
André-Louis's advent took them by surprise. Aline and Monsieur de Kercadiou were together when he entered the room on the gallery to which the landlord ushered him. They started up crying his name in amazement and then in gladness. Each seized him by a hand to demand an explanation.
His lips sped from his godfather's hand to the lips of Aline, which never had been more freely offered. Her eyes sparkled with delight, and yet, with fond concern in their depths, scanned every line of his countenance.
The reception warmed him like wine. He glowed in this atmosphere of affection. All was very well. He was glad that he had come.
He was treated like the prodigal. At supper, which out of consideration for him was served almost immediately, a goose filled the rôle of the fatted calf, and there was the ham of a boar from the Black Forest and a flagon of smooth perfumed golden Rupertsberger into which the essences of a whole Rhineland summer had been distilled.
For folk upon the brink of destitution it was none so bad, thought André-Louis.
Across the white napery where glassware sparkled in the candle-light, he silently, happily toasted Aline and found his toast returned by moist eyes agleam with a new tenderness.
After supper he told them precisely what had brought him. He was there to combat his godfather's reluctance to allow him to provide for them in the only way in which he was capable of doing it.
He invited his godfather to look the facts in the face, to give due weight to the events in France: the King beheaded, the monarchy abolished, the estates of the nobles confiscated, their land distributed among 'those who had no land,' as if to have had land in the past were now a crime to be punished, and not to have had it until now a virtue to be rewarded.
'Just as the Third Estate wrested power from the aristocracy, intending to distribute it equitably throughout the entire Nation, so now the rabble has wrested power from the Third, intending to monopolize it. Privilege is changing hands. Instead of privilege in the palace, in the hands of men who by birth and breeding are naturally fitted for government, however in the past they may have abused it, we have now privilege in the gutter. The land wrested from its owners for distribution, the moveables dispersed and sold for the benefit of the Nation, are the bribes with which a gang of greedy scoundrels incite the populace to place the power in their hands. This ignorant populace, deluded and flattered by them, sustains by weight of numbers the men who make this use of it. The ultimate result must be chaos and the ruin of France. Then, either by force of arms or otherwise, a new state may be built on these ruins; and order, equity, and security shall again prevail. Restitution may well be among its first activities. But the process must be slow as time is measured in the lives of men. What will you do while you wait? How will you live until then?'
'But my claim on you, André?' cried the Lord of Gavrillac in repudiation.
'Will be the claim of kinship once Aline and I are married. Think of us, my godfather. Are we to let our youth run to waste in waiting for events that may not happen in our lifetime?' He turned to Aline. 'Surely, my dear, you agree with me. You see no gain in this postponement?'
She smiled frankly and tenderly. Indeed, the tenderness she displayed to him that night was to be a lasting memory of the happiest hours he had ever known.
'My dear, in this I have no will that is not yours.'
Monsieur de Kercadiou got up. He sighed. Perhaps the very source of André-Louis's exaltation that night was to him a source of sadness. The utter surrender to André-Louis revealed by Aline's tone and manner brought him, perhaps, a sudden sense of loneliness. For years this niece, who was dear as a daughter, had been all his family. He grew conscious now that he had lost her.
He stood there a moment, a squat, brooding figure in his brown velvet coat, his great head, which always seemed too heavy for his body, sinking forward until his chin was on the laces at his neck. 'Well, well!' he said huskily. 'We'll sleep on it, and talk of it again tomorrow.'
But in the morning he postponed discussion until later. He could not stay for it then. He explained that he had duties to perform in the Regent's chancellery which kept him engaged daily until a little after noon.
'We are a very few to compose Monsieur's household,' he said sadly. 'Each of us must do what he can.'
At the door he paused. 'We will talk of it all at dinner. Meanwhile, I shall mention the matter to his Highness. Oh, and as I go, I shall send word to Madame de Plougastel that you are here.'
The sun was shining out of a clear, frosty day, and the snow under foot was crisp as salt. After Madame de Plougastel had paid them a short visit, in the course of which she gave encouragement to the plan of early marriage and the rest, Aline and André-Louis went forth to take the air. Light of heart as children, they walked down the main street to the bridge, and here they turned to follow a footpath by the glittering river about the edge of which films of ice were slowly dissolving in the sun.
Their talk now was of the future. He described a house with a fair garden on the outskirts of Dresden, which he had in view, which could be rented, and to the renting of which Ephraim would help him. 'But a little place, Aline; no greater than a cottage in truth, and not the setting in which I would desire to see you placed.'
Hanging on his arm, she drew closer to him. 'My dear, it will be ours,' she said in a crooning tone, and so closed the argument in rapture.
Never, not since the incredible hour of her surrender on that August morning following the day on which he had brought her out of the horrors of Paris, had he known Aline so yielding, so meekly loving, so entirely his own. Always had there been a measure of restraint, and her will, as we know, had clashed more than once against his own. Now such a thing seemed impossible ever again, so discarded by her was all reserve, so submissive was she, so eager to please.
It may have been his protracted absence that had rendered her aware of the true depth of her feelings for him, brought her to realize how necessary he had become to her happiness, to her existence.
They came to a fence that ran down to the murmuring water. Beyond it a little rivulet tumbled into the Lippe over a miniature cascade at the sides of which long icicles glittered iridescent in the morning sun. At her request he hoisted her to the fence, so that she might rest a moment before they retraced their steps. Having set her there, he stood before her, and her hands were on his shoulders, her blue eyes smiled softly into his.
'I am so glad, André, so glad, so glad that we are not to part again; that this time you have come to me to stay.'
He heard the words, and, intoxicated by the fond tone in which they were uttered, he missed the faint note of fear that beat in the heart of it, that may have been the very source of her utterance. He kissed her. Her face close to his, she looked deep into his eyes.
'It is for always, André?'
'For always, dear love. For always,' he answered in a solemn voice that made the phrase a vow.
CHAPTER X
DISPOSAL
The Count of Provence—Regent of France since the execution of his brother, Louis XVI—sat at a writing-table in the window of a large, low-ceilinged room that was at once study, audience-chamber, and salon d'honneur, in the wooden châlet at Hamm which