The Red Mask by Rafael Sabatini (feel good novels .TXT) ๐
I followed them at a distance of some eight yards, as I had been ordered, marvelling as I went what could be the Cardinal's plan of action.
We elbowed our way through a noisy dirty rabble, whom a dozen of the King's Guards could scarcely keep from obstructing the side entrance--used only by privileged individuals--in their curiosity to see the fanciful costumes of the maskers.
It was close upon midnight when we entered the ball-room. His Majesty, I learnt, had already withdrawn, feeling slightly indisposed; therefore I concluded that if there was any serious conspiracy afoot, the blow--which otherwise might have been restrained by the King's presence--could not be long in falling.
Scarcely had we advanced a dozen paces, when my attention was drawn to a tall, thin man, of good bearing, dressed after the
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But rage, despair, and shame had choked the Countโs utterance, and were fighting a mighty battle in his soul. So violent, that as the Cardinal paused to wait for his reply, his lips twitched convulsively for a moment, then, staggering forward he fell prone upon the ground, in a swoon.
โCall the guard, Monsieur de Cavaignac,โ said Mazarin to me. โThat man has committed his last crime. A week in a dungeon of the Bastille and the companionship of a holy father, may fit him for a better life beyond the scaffold.โ
โYou see,โ said his Eminence, an hour later, as we stood alone in his study. โif I had allowed the world to know for whom St. Augรฉreโs blow was intended, the world would have sympathised, as it always does, with a luckless conspirator; would, mayhap, have loved me less. Again, there are always fanatics ready to copy such acts as these, and had they known that what has ended in the death of an obscure valet was an attempt against the life of MazarinโI am afraid that some murdererโs knife would have cut short my existence before the appointed time.โ
โAs it is,โ he went on, with a wave of the hand, โSt. Augรฉre meets the doom of a cowardly traitor; he dies, regretted by none, for a deed of surpassing loathsomeness. As for Andrรฉ, his death has been too easy.โ
โHow comes it, Monseigneur,โ I asked, โthat he gave no warning to his confederate, made no attempt to defend himself.โ
โCan you not guess?โ he said, smiling, โWhen I had forced the confession of his treason from him I bound his arms to his side and pressed a gag into his mouth, which I removed together with his mask.โ
โBut the mask?โ I cried.
Again he smiled.
โHow dull you are; I changed it whilst you were seeing to the coach.โ
โWhy did you conceal the fact from me, Monseigneur?โ I cried. โDid you mistrust me?โ
โNo, no, not that,โ he said, โI thought it wiser; you might have betrayed my identity by a show of respect. But go, leave me, Cavaignac, it grows late.โ
I made my bow, and, as I retired, I heard him muttering to himself the words of St. Augรฉre: โThus perish all traitors to the welfare of France.โ And with a chuckle he added: โHow little he guessed the truth of what he said.โ
This story appears in The Life and Work of Rafael Sabatini web site http://www.rafaelsabatini.com/ .
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