to look at, was unimportant, compared with the first
wound with the pistol-shot in the shoulder, with the
arm broken and further injured by having served to
suspend him round Osbert’s neck; but it was altogether
so appalling a sight, that it was no wonder that Sis
Marmaduke muttered low but deep curses on the cowardly
ruffians; while his wife wept in grief as violent,
though more silent, than her stepson’s, and
only Cecily gathered the faintest ray of hope.
The wounds had been well cared for, the arm had been
set, the hair cut away, and lint and bandages applied
with a skill that surprised her, till she remembered
that Landry Osbert had been bred up in preparation
to be Berenger’s valet, and thus to practise
those minor arts of surgery then required in a superior
body-servant. For his part, though his eyes looked
red, and his whole person exhausted by unceasing watching,
he seemed unable to relinquish the care of his master
for a moment, and her nunnery French would not have
perceived her tender touch and ready skill. These
were what made him consent to leave his post even
for a short meal, and so soon as he had eaten it he
was called to Lord Walwyn to supply the further account
which Humfley had been unable to give. He had
waited, he explained, with a lackey, a friend of his
in the palace, till he became alarmed by the influx
of armed men, wearing white crosses and shirt-sleeves
on their left arms, but his friend had assured him
that his master had been summoned to the royal bedchamber,
where he would be as safe as in church; and obtaining
from Landry Osbert himself a perfectly true assurance
of being a good Catholic, had supplied him with the
badges that were needful for security. It was
just then that Madame’s maid crept down to his
waiting-place with the intelligence that her mistress
had been bolted in, and after a short consultation
they agreed to go and see whether M. le Baron were
indeed waiting, and, if he were, to warn him of the
suspicious state of the lower regions of the palace.
They were just in time to see, but not to prevent
the attack upon their young master; and while Veronique
fled, screaming, Landry Osbert, who had been thrown
back on the stairs in her sudden flight, recovered
himself and hastened to his master. The murderers,
after their blows had been struck, had hurried along
the corridor to join the body of assassins, whose
work they had in effect somewhat anticipated.
Landry, full of rage and despair, was resolved at
least to save his foster-brother’s corpse from
further insult, and bore it down-stairs in his arms.
On the way, he perceived that life was not yet extinct,
and resolving to become doubly cautious, he sought
in the pocket for the purse that had been well filled
for the flight, and by the persuasive argument of
gold crowns, obtained egress from the door-keeper of
the postern, where Berenger hoped to have emerged
in a far different manner. It was a favourable
moment, for the main body of the murderers were at