“So do I,” said Weber, “and I must hurry on my own errand. It may not be of great importance, but is vital to me that I do it.”
He slid away in the darkness and both John and Lannes spoke well of him as they returned to the house. Picard admitted them.
“May I ask, sir, if there is any news that favors France?” he said to Philip.
“Not yet, my good Antoine, but it is surely coming.”
John heard the giant Frenchman smother a sigh, but he made no comment, and walked softly with Lannes to the little room high up that had been assigned to him. Here when he was alone with his candle he looked around curiously.
The room was quite simple, not containing much furniture, in truth, nothing of any note save on the wall a fine picture of the great Marshal Lannes, Napoleon’s dauntless fighter, and stern republican, despite the ducal title that he took. It was a good portrait, painted perhaps by some great artist, and John holding up the candle, looked at it a long time.
He thought he could trace some likeness to Philip. Lannes’ face was always stern, in repose, far beyond his years, although when he became animated it had all the sunniness of youth. But he noticed now that he had the same tight lips of the Marshal, and the same unfaltering eyes.
“Duke of Montebello!” said John to himself. “Well, you won that title grandly, and while the younger Lannes may do as well, if the chance comes to him, the new heroes of France will be neither dukes nor princes.”
Then, after removing all the stiff pillows, inclines, foot pieces and head pieces that make European beds so uncomfortable, he slipped between the covers, and slid quickly into a long and soothing sleep, from which he was awakened apparently about a minute later by Lannes himself, who stood over him, dressed fully, tall and serious.
“Why, I just got into bed!” exclaimed John.
“You came in here a full seven hours ago. Open your window and you’ll see the dawn creeping over Paris.”
“Thank you, but you can open it yourself. I never fool with a European window. I haven’t time to master all the mechanism, inside, outside and between, to say nothing of the various layers of curtains, full length, half length and otherwise. Nothing that I can conceive of is better fitted than the European window to keep out light and air.”
Lannes smiled.
“I see that you’re in fine feather this morning,” he said, “I’ll open it for you.”
John jumped up and dressed quickly, while Lannes, with accustomed hand, laid back shutters and curtains.
“Now, shove up the window,” exclaimed John as he wielded towel and brush. “A little fresh air in a house won’t hurt you; it won’t hurt anybody. We’re a young people, we Americans, but we can teach you that. Why, in the German hotels they’d seal up the smoking-rooms and lounges in the evenings, and then boys would go around shooting clouds of perfume against the ceilings. Ugh! I can taste now that awful mixture of smoke, perfume and thrice-breathed air! Ah! that feels better! It’s like a breath from heaven!”