"I am your prisoner?"
"Precisely."
"And I must stay here--to be tortured?" Tignonville cried.
Count Hannibal's eyes sparkled. Sudden stormy changes, from indifference
to ferocity, from irony to invective, were characteristic of the man.
"Tortured!" he repeated grimly. "You talk of torture while Piles and
Pardaillan, Teligny and Rochefoucauld lie dead in the street! While your
cause sinks withered in a night, like a gourd! While your servants fall
butchered, and France rises round you in a tide of blood! Bah!"--with a
gesture of disdain--"you make me also talk, and I have no love for talk,
and small time. Mademoiselle, you at least act and do not talk. By your
leave I return in an hour, and I bring with me--shall it be my priest, or
your minister?"
She looked at him with the face of one who awakes slowly to the full
horror, the full dread, of her position. For a moment she did not
answer. Then-"A minister," she muttered, her voice scarcely audible.
He nodded. "A minister," he said lightly. "Very well, if I can find
one." And walking to the shattered, gaping casement--through which the
cool morning air blew into the room and gently stirred the hair of the
unhappy girl--he said some words to the man on guard outside. Then he
turned to the door, but on the threshold he paused, looked with a strange
expression at the pair, and signed to Carlat and the servants to go out
before him.
"Up, and lie close above!" he growled. "Open a window or look out, and
you will pay dearly for it! Do you hear? Up! Up! You, too, old crop-
ears. What! would you?"--with a sudden glare as Carlat hesitated--"that
is better! Mademoiselle, until my return."
He saw them all out, followed them, and closed the door on the two; who,
left together, alone with the gaping window and the disordered feast,
maintained a strange silence. The girl, gripping one hand in the other
as if to quell her rising horror, sat looking before her, and seemed
barely to breathe. The man, leaning against the wall at a little
distance, bent his eyes, not on her, but on the floor, his face gloomy
and distorted.
His first thought should have been of her and for her; his first impulse
to console, if he could not save her. His it should have been to soften,
were that possible, the fate before her; to prove to her by words of
farewell, the purest and most sacred, that the sacrifice she was making,
not to save her own life but the lives of others, was appreciated by him
who paid with her the price.
And all these things, and more, may have been in M. de Tignonville's
mind; they may even have been uppermost in it, but they found no
expression. The man remained sunk in a sombre reverie. He had the
appearance of thinking of himself, not of her; of his own position, not
of hers. Otherwise he must have looked at her, he must have turned to
her; he must have owned the subtle attraction of her unspoken appeal when
she drew a deep breath and slowly turned her eyes on him, mute, asking,
waiting what he should offer.