The Quest of Glory by Marjorie Bowen (book recommendations based on other books .txt) đź“•
The air was oppressive with the powerful perfume of strong incense, and yet even more bitterly cold than the outer night; the light was dim, flickering, rich, and luxurious, and came wholly from hanging lamps of yellow, blue, and red glass. In what appeared the extreme distance, the altar sparkled in the gleam of two huge candles of painted wax, and behind and about it showed green translucent, unsubstantial shapes of arches and pillars rising up and disappearing in the great darkness of the roof, which was as impenetrable as a starless heaven.
The church was bare of chair or pew or stool; the straight sweep of the nave was broken only by the dark outlines of princely tombs where lay the dust of former Bohemian kings and queens: their reclining figures so much above and beyond humanity, yet so startlingly like life, could be seen in
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glittered curiously on the thick snow and some rolls of straw-coloured
silk that the Marquis had once seen hanging on the walls of M. de
Belleisle’s room in the Hradcany castle.
He winced at the bitter irony of it; yet the rolls of silk, when shaken
out, were some covering for the young Lieutenant, and the wagon was some
protection from the wind.
Beyond this he could do nothing; he knelt and took d’Espagnac’s head on
his knee for greater warmth, and waited.
It was little over a week since he had looked at the beautiful inspired
face turned upwards in the chapel of St. Wenceslas; he gazed down now at
the poor head on his lap, and the tears rose under his lids.
Georges d’Espagnac was wasted till his blue uniform, tarnished and torn,
hung on him loosely; his face was so thin that even the hollows in the
temples showed clearly and of a bluish tinge, while the lips were
strained and distorted; all powder and dressing had left his hair, which
hung in a mass of damp locks of a startling brightness about his
shoulders; his right cheek was bruised by the fall from the saddle when
his horse died, and his gloveless right hand was cracked and bleeding.
The Marquis felt his heart, and it was beating reluctantly and wearily.
There was no hope, he knew; at any moment the snow might begin again,
and this lovely life must go out as the other lives were going out,
unnoticed, unsweetened by any care, regret, or tenderness.
But it never occurred to M. de Vauvenargues to leave him, though he knew
that his own best, perhaps his only, chance of life lay in movement, in
pressing on.
The darkness fell slowly and with a certain dreadful heaviness; the
added ugliness of the distant bark of wolves completed the speechless
horror of the Marquis’s mood.
Still the army was trailing past him, bent figures supporting each
other, a few Generals still on horseback, a few wounded and women in
sledges or carts.
From an officer of the Black Musqueteers he begged a little wine that
brought a tinge of colour into d’Espagnac’s cheeks and proved how
pitifully easy it would have been to save him by warmth and care.
“There is only rough nursing here, Monsieur,” said the musqueteer
kindly; “leave him and save your own life, for I think the snow will
begin again.”
“Monsieur,” replied the Marquis gently, “he is so very young. And maybe
he will be conscious before he dies, and find himself alone and hear the
wolves. And it is such a little thing I do.”
And still the army went past like a procession in a dream of hell, and
every moment it became darker, until the fir trees and the rocks were
being lost in blackness and the howls of the wolves sounded nearer.
Presently came a woman walking with more energy than most, yet stumbling
under some burden that she held in her arms. At that moment d’Espagnac
suddenly recovered consciousness, and cried in a clear voice—
“Let us get on our way, my dear Marquis—we ought to be at Eger
to-morrow night.”
The words made the woman pause and look round. The Marquis gazed at her;
he had last seen her on a white horse beneath a silver fir; and though
he had forgotten her since, he had now a passionate desire that she
should stop and speak to him.
As if in answer to this wish, she crossed directly to the wagon. The
young Count had fallen into a weak swoon again, and she looked down on
him calmly.
“Your friend is dying,” she said. “My God, how many more!”
She sat down on a round grey stone and put her hand to her head; then
the Marquis saw that she carried, wrapped to her breast, a small sick
child.
“You must go on,” he said, with energy. “You must not stop for us,
Mademoiselle.”
“I cannot walk any more,” she answered. “I am very strong, but I cannot
walk farther.”
“Where is your brother?” he asked.
“Dead,” she replied.
“Dead!”
“The word seems to mean nothing. I have a child here, dying too. I
thought it might be happier dying in some one’s arms.”
It was exactly his own thought about Georges; he smiled with his
courteous, sad sweetness, and putting the lieutenant’s head gently on
one of the still rolled-up curtains, rose.
“We are on the heights, are we not?” asked Carola “I seem to have been
climbing all day.”
He approached her. “I think we are very high up,” he said gently. “Will
you give me the child, Mademoiselle?”
She resigned the pitiful burden without a word; the Marquis shuddered as
he felt the frail weight in his arms.
“So cold,” he murmured. “How could they bring children on such a march
as this! How far have you carried him?” he added.
“Since morning,” answered Carola; “and it is a girl, Monsieur.”
The Marquis looked down into the tiny crumpled white face in the folds
of the fur mantle, and laid the little creature down beside d’Espagnac.
“What can we do?” asked the Countess, in a broken voice.
“Nothing,” he answered gravely; “but if you have any strength at all,
you should join the march. It is your only chance, Mademoiselle.”
She shook her delicate head. “Please permit me to stay with you. We
might help each other. This is very terrible—the wolves are the worst.”
She set her lips, and her pinched face had a look of decided strength.
“Will the army be passing all night?” she added.
“I do not think so—surely there cannot be many more.”
“I was thinking when they go—perhaps the wolves—”
She paused.
He was unused to these severe latitudes; there were wolves in France,
but they had never troubled him.
“They might attack us,” she finished, seeing he did not comprehend.
He took his pistols from his belt and laid them on the ground beside
him.
“I am armed,” he answered.
The Countess rose stiffly; her thick fur-lined cloak fell apart and
showed the bright colours of her dress beneath, the tags and braids of
gold, the vermilion sash and ruffled laces. “It is strange that I
should live and my brother die, is it not?” she said wearily. “He fell
from his horse and struck his head on a broken gun. Then he died very
quickly.” There was dried blood on her fur gloves and on the bosom of
her shirt. She went to the unconscious child and knelt beside her, moved
the wrappings from the pallid, dead-coloured face, and touched the
cheek. “I think she will never wake again—but your friend?” She
glanced at the Marquis, who was standing looking down at M. d’Espagnac.
“I can only watch him die,” he said.
The Countess drew from her bosom the flask she had offered to M. de
Vauvenargues four days before.
“This was filled this morning,” she explained, “and I cannot take it for
it makes me giddy.” She moved to the side of M. d’Espagnac and raised
his head tenderly and forced the spirits between his teeth.
“I think there is a lantern in the wagon,” said the Marquis, and went to
find it. The dark was now so thick that they could scarcely see each
other’s features, but he found the lantern and flint and tinder and lit
it, and the long yellow beams were some comfort in the overwhelming
sadness of the night.
The effect of the brandy on M. d’Espagnac was sudden and almost
terrible: he sat up amid the tumbled rolls of silk, and his cheeks were
red with fever and his eyes open in a forced fashion. He appeared
clear-headed and master of his senses; his glance rested on the Polish
lady and then on the Marquis. “You should not have waited for me,” he
muttered. “On—on to Eger. I shall soon be well.” He raised his wasted,
bleeding hands to his brilliant hair. “I am sick from seeing people
die,” he said. “It could never have been meant. O God, what have we
done?” He crossed himself.
“This is war, Georges,” answered the Marquis. “Remember the chapel of
St. Wenceslas and the words we spoke there.”
M. d’Espagnac shuddered and fell back on to the cloaks the Marquis had
piled under his head. Carola took his poor torn hand.
“Rest a little longer,” she said, “and then we can continue on our way.”
Save for a few stragglers, the army had passed now, The isolation seemed
to increase with the dark, and the greedy howls of the wolves came
nearer.
The lieutenant struggled up again and cried impetuously, “I am not going
to die! That would be folly, for I have done nothing yet.”
“No, you shall not die,” answered Carola, and grasped his hand tighter.
The Marquis was on the other side of him. Georges d’Espagnac laughed.
“You must not wait for me, Monsieur.” Then he closed his eyes, and
shiver after shiver shook his limbs.
The baby stirred and wailed dismally; in a moment Carola had it caught
up and pressed to her heart. The sick man whispered and moaned, then
suddenly sat up in violent delirium.
“I will not see any more die!” he cried. “No more, do you hear? These
people might have done something—what were they born for? How much
farther? No food—no rest. How much farther? How far to Provence?”
The Marquis started; he was himself Provençal, and had not known M.
d’Espagnac came from his country; the word stirred agony in the heart he
controlled with such difficulty.
“Provence!” repeated the lieutenant. “They will want news of me, you
know, Monsieur. I must tell them—the quest of glory—”
Again the words stabbed M. de Vauvenargues. “Georges,” he murmured,
bending over him, “perhaps you have attained the quest.”
M. d’Espagnac laughed again.
“What a jest if I should die!” he muttered wildly. “My heart is quite
cold, it is freezing my blood. Perhaps I am in my grave, and this is
some one else speaking. How far to Eger?—how long to the Judgment Day?”
“I am with you, Georges d’Espagnac,” said the Marquis. “We are alive.”
He seemed to hear that.
“Where?” he demanded.
“On the heights,” said M. de Vauvenargues.
It was now quite dark save for the light of the wagon lamp that fell
over the straw-coloured silk hangings of M. de Belleisle, the beautiful
anguished face framed in the gorgeous hair, the woman in her barbaric
splendour clasping the feeble child, and the slender figure of the
Marquis in his blue and silver uniform; it glimmered, too, on the pieces
of the Maréchal’s dessert service, and the sparkle of them caught
Carola’s eye.
“Do you travel with such things?” she asked. “Our nobles sleep on the
ground, and drink from horn—”
“M. de Belleisle must travel as a Maréchal de France,” answered the
Marquis. “But these things seem foolish now.”
A great giddy sickness was on him, and a distaste of life that could be
so wretched; the spirit within him was weary of the miserable flesh that
suffered so pitifully.
“Give me my sword,” said M. d’Espagnac. “I am starting out on a quest.
Do you hear? Jesu, have mercy upon me!”
Carola rose and walked up and down with the child. “You are Catholic?”
she asked.
“No,” answered the Marquis.
“An atheist?” she questioned.
“An ugly word, Mademoiselle “—he gave a little
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