<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX.</SPAN><br/> <small>I MEET THE AVENGER.</small></h2>
<p class="cap">My wound was open again. I had learned that
the carpenter Challeux had seen Mademoiselle
alive after the massacre at Fort Caroline, and
the tide of ebbing hope, ever restless as the moving
sea, flooded up again upon my heart and engulfed
me with tender memories. There was a chance—the
merest thread of doubt—which held and led
me willing captive amid the maze of uncertainties
which seemed to compass me about. Even as Challeux
had told, the story of Emola’s brave might still
be true. They had perhaps captured her and she
had died on the way to San Augustin! But the
ring might have been lost! She who was killed
might have been another! My lady may have remained
hidden secure in the great tree trunk where
Challeux had concealed her! She had followed my
advice to be on her guard; why might she not have
waited and fled by night to Satouriona? His camp
at that time, as she knew, was to the north, nearer<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</SPAN></span>
the Fort than that of Emola, where we had been.
If she had reached it, she would be safe as though
in England. For had not the great Satouriona,
marveling at her beauty, given her a necklace of
beads, saying that she was fair as the moon and
calling her the “Moon-Princess”? These strange
people would take her into their village and serve
her as they would one of their own blood, high in
the councils of their nation.</p>
<p>Ah! ’Twas sweet and holy thinking for me.
But alive or dead, my wish to cease this idle play
at service to the King and be up and doing something
to find her, or to avenge her death, came upon
me again strong as upon the sand-spit when my
heart beat high with hope. I must go back in search
of Mademoiselle. I could not wait with this fever
of hope burning into my heart. I wished now that I
had never left the country—that I had thrown in
my lot with the Indians and thus lost no opportunity
to hang upon the trail of the Spaniards and so have
learned the truth beyond any doubt. De Brésac
would say nothing. He merely shook his head, or,
sighing deeply, shrugged his shoulders. M. de
Teligny advised that I give up all hope of ever seeing
Mademoiselle again. So I had no encouragement,
save only that hope which came like an instinct
from my own breast.</p>
<p>The days dragged slowly by. Another messenger<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</SPAN></span>
had been sent to Forquevaulx and another answer had
arrived from the Court of Spain. The whole affair
was now the property of the people, and in every inn
could be heard expressions of horror and consternation
from Catholic and Protestant alike. Charles
had written Forquevaulx in this fashion:</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>“It is my will that you renew your complaint, that
reparation be made for the wrong done me and the
cruelties committed on my subjects, to which I cannot
submit without too great a loss of reputation.
The Seigneur de Forquevaulx will not fail to insist,
be the answer what it may, in order that the King
of Spain shall understand that His Majesty of
France has no less spirit than his predecessors to
repel an insult.”</p>
</div>
<p>Brave words enough. Words indeed! Words were
made to hide the thoughts of courtiers!</p>
<p>Forquevaulx fulfilled his commission. Philip’s
only reply was to refer him to the Duke of Alava.</p>
<p>“I have no hope,” wrote Forquevaulx after this,
“that the Duke d’Alava will give any satisfaction
as to the massacre, for it was he who advised it from
the first.”</p>
<p>That was the news we heard, and that was like to
be the end of the matter. The King of France had
been three times insulted and now refused to raise
further voice in reply. Charles and the Queen-mother<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</SPAN></span>
would not quarrel with Spain, and all France
rang with the indignity. They had resigned themselves
to the affront. We saw the King almost daily
going to the hunt, a faint color stealing into his sallow
cheeks as he cantered down the crooked streets
with his brave following. Smiles wreathed the lips
where sternness should have been; and eyes that
should have wept his own heart’s blood danced and
sparkled with the joy and passion of the chase. It
was a grievous thing to see a man of his good
presence falling deeper and deeper under the blight
of his weakness. For all Charles cared, outraged
humanity might forever cry aloud, the blood of hundreds
of murdered Frenchmen might stain his very
hearthstone, and the proud standards of France be
lowered and trampled in the dust by the soldiers or
assassins of any nation of the earth. Was he not
the King? Was the stag-hunting not good? And
had he not written a sonnet to the eyes of Marie
Touchet and an ode to “Justice,” both of which
M. Ronsard had pronounced incomparable?</p>
<p>But there were still gallant men in France. Our
petitions and those of the relatives of the martyrs
were not to be made in vain. Upon the morning
of a certain day, while we were yet within
doors, came a gentleman asking for M. de Brésac.
He was a soldier of ancient birth and high renown,
named Dominique de Gourgues of Mont-de-Marsan.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</SPAN></span>
De Brésac had served with him, and had told me something
of his vigorous fiery nature and life; how as a
boy he had been taken by the Spaniards near Sienna;
how with brutal insult they had chained him to the
oar as a galley-slave; how the Turks had captured
this vessel and carried her to Constantinople; how
they had put to sea again and were captured by a
galley of the Knights of Malta who had set the prisoners
free. De Gourgues had served in all parts of
the world and his reputation as a naval commander
in France was high—second only to that of the
martyred Ribault. He hated the Spaniards with a
mortal hatred and the tidings which we had brought
from Florida had set his hot Gascon blood a
boiling.</p>
<p>But I was ill-prepared for the figure he presented.
I had pictured him a great swarthy man built somewhat
upon the scale of Diego de Baçan, with a deep
roaring voice and the manner of a bravo. The person
I saw was none of this; for he was not large in
stature, having a figure tight-knit even to slenderness.
Yet it was plain to see he was built upon the
model of a hound, and that the muscles upon him
were as steel springs fastened upon a frame of iron.
His head was ugly beyond expression, somewhat in
the shape of a pear, with a wide bulging forehead, the
flesh falling away at the temples and cheeks almost
to emaciation. I looked in vain to his mouth and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</SPAN></span>
chin for the force I could not find in his brows; and
then back to his eyes, where my gaze at last rested
enthralled. All else might have been as nothing and
those mysterious eyes would have revealed how deep
lay the soul of the man. I saw them not often in
repose upon this morning, for they were flashing
forth the fire that was raging in his heart; but
when he paused a moment they opened wide under
the broad brows,—melancholy, penetrating, but
frank, sincere and true; eyes to watch, to grieve, to
weep even, but not to deceive those he held in
esteem. His voice was not strident or harsh, even
as he spoke loudly, but soft as that of a woman.
But in it there was that note of command which no
man who has served with a great officer can ever
forget.</p>
<p>He bounded up the stone stairs, two steps at a
time, and came into the chamber with an unmistakable
vigor and firmness, as one accustomed and sure
of his welcome.</p>
<p>“Ah, seigneur,” he cried, espying De Brésac.
“Welcome to France!” And rushing to the Chevalier
he embraced him as a brother.</p>
<p>“Mon ami, you are new-come from Mont-de-Marsan?”</p>
<p>“This very hour, mon brave, and I have ridden
directly to you.”</p>
<p>Whereupon the Chevalier presented me to him,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</SPAN></span>
explaining that I was the Killigrew who had been
at San Augustin.</p>
<p>“Good!” he said abruptly. “Monsieur, I am
indeed fortunate. It is upon this very business that
I am come to you.” With an abrupt gesture he
threw his cloak aside and seated himself. Then
without ado, he began to speak.</p>
<p>“The King of France is a sluggard and a coward,”
he said fiercely. “He has bowed the head of every
honorable man in France upon the breast in shame.
I, who have been upon the soil of many countries,
have ever held my head aloft in pride; for I am a
Frenchman. That heritage holds enough honor
to place me among the ranks of the chosen of
the earth. Our nation is a brave nation and in our
land a man of honor dies rather than suffer a stain
to fall upon his name. The glory of our deeds has
resounded from one end of the world to the other,
and the lustre of our achievements has been like the
gleam of a shining blade in the fore of battle.”</p>
<p>He paused and then continued slowly, “M. le
Chevalier, that pride is gone; that heritage of a
good name,—an empty sound; that lustrous escutcheon,—beaten
to the earth, and dimmed and blotted
by the blood of our own kindred which has
flowed upon it.”</p>
<p>“God knows it is so,” said De Brésac.</p>
<p>“You of England,” he continued, appealing to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</SPAN></span>
me, “know well that no insult such as this could
rest against the fair fame of your Queen, monsieur,”
and he rose from his seat. “Unless something is
done we are a people dishonored upon the face of
the earth.”</p>
<p>“The King has promised the degradation of this
Menendez,” said the Chevalier.</p>
<p>“His promises, like his verses, come ready made,”
sneered De Gourgues. “Pah! he is without candor,
this King;—without strength, without honor,—without
anything that men hold most high.” M.
de Gourgues was walking furiously up and down as
one possessed.</p>
<p>“Sh——” said De Brésac.</p>
<p>“I care not,” said the wild Gascon. “’Tis better
far to die, or to have no country. Spain insults the
King and the King is dumb. The nobles about him
are Italians in the Spanish interest. God save poor
France from her rulers now and ever, say I.”</p>
<p>Then he sat down and unburthened himself of
the object for which he had come to Paris.</p>
<p>“I am come,” he continued less wildly, “to ask
you to help me avenge this wrong—to raise again
the Standard of France from where it has been trailing
in the mud by Spanish feet.”</p>
<p>So rapid and fiery had been his speech that I could
not get the exact purport of his words. How he, a
simple country gentleman, could hope to embark<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</SPAN></span>
upon so large a venture without King’s aid or commission
was more than I could readily comprehend.
Nor was De Brésac in any better understanding.
“But, monsieur,” he began, “if there were any——”</p>
<p>“Ah, Brésac,” he cut in, “you do not trust me.
You think I will not do as I say. As you will—I
tell you, I will destroy this Fort San Mateo if it
takes every crown and acre in Mont-de-Marsan!”</p>
<p>“Forgive me, Chevalier, I am but a slow thinker.
I am with you if you will but give me half an earful
of your plans.”</p>
<p>“You will go?”</p>
<p>“With all my heart.”</p>
<p>“And you?”—to me.</p>
<p>“If not with you, then with some other,” I replied.</p>
<p>“Ah! Then that is done,” he exclaimed joyfully.
“Now to the plans. I believe in my company
first and my plans next. For plans are of no
use if there is no one to put them to practise. Here
is what I shall do. If during the week to come the
King of France does not obtain reparation from
Spain and the degradation of this monster, Menendez,
I will provide ships and men, and myself sail
for Florida.”</p>
<p>“But how?” we both asked in the same breath.</p>
<p>“My inheritance is for sale,” said this wonderful
man with a cunning smile, as though he were bartering<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</SPAN></span>
a horse. “I shall obtain money from my
brother and any others who may still find a virtue in
honor. I shall have three small vessels with a hundred
arquebusiers and eighty sailors. Blaise de
Montluc, lieutenant for the King in Guienne, where
my brother has a high post, will give me a commission
to make war upon the negroes of Benin—to
bring them out as slaves, an adventure now held
most honorable—and then—then, voyez-vous, we
will go not to Benin, but elsewhere—where, we cannot
at this time precisely tell and so cannot inform
our valiant company—but to some place where
there is easy service and much profit. Is not the
plan a good one?”</p>
<p>De Brésac had listened, his eye kindling with enthusiasm.
He now cried out, “It is more than good,
it is wonderful! And upon my life, it succeeds!
You shall have—not two hundred men, but two
thousand—for by now there is not one Indian
friendly to the Spanish among all the tribes of Satouriona.
They will not live in subjection. I have
lived among them and I know.”</p>
<p>“Think you so? Then pardieu, ’tis simple as
plain sailing, and not one stone of this fort will we
leave upon another. There’s my hand on it. And
now adieu and for the present—silence!” So saying
he threw his cloak about him and went away as
quickly as he had come.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>So rapidly had the whole business been accomplished,
that when he had disappeared I began
wondering whether it were all true, or whether this
strange person were but a whirlwind creature of the
fancy. But there was De Brésac holding his hand
and looking at his fingers, which De Gourgues had
clasped.</p>
<p>“Ugh! Shall I ever straighten them?” he cried.
“He has the grasp of the Scavenger’s Daughter.<SPAN name="FNanchor_C_3" id="FNanchor_C_3"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_C_3" class="fnanchor">[C]</SPAN>
This comes of being chained to a galley-oar. No,
’tis no dream. He will do what he promises, never
fear. ’Tis the most wonderful man this side of hell,
Killigrew!”</p>
<div class="footnote">
<p class="noi"><SPAN name="Footnote_C_3" id="Footnote_C_3"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor_C_3"><span class="label">[C]</span></SPAN> An instrument of torture.</p>
</div>
<p>I laughed at his manner of expressing it. Yet I
did not doubt that it was so. For after De Gourgues
had gone, I could not cast from me the spell of
those melancholy eyes, and so great was his charm
and vigor that it seemed as if the spirit of vengeance
had been born again and had taken a new life in us
all. Here was a man to dare a chimera—to achieve
the impossible. Brésac and I embraced each other
and went flying to M. de Teligny to tell him of the
good fortune.</p>
<p>As I think of it now it seemed as though we
were going upon a journey for sport or play at
beast hunting instead of a deadly mission of death
and destruction upon men like ourselves. But<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</SPAN></span>
like the Avenger, there was no restraining us. At
last we had a champion—at last there was a plan—something
definite and certain in our minds, however
foolhardy, to lift us from this quiet and inaction,
this slough of despond, which, after our travail
and excitement, lay upon us and weighed us down
like a sickness.</p>
<p>M. de Teligny listened in surprise to the plan of
De Gourgues, his eyes sparkling with joy at the news,
for all the world like those of some old war-horse
champing at the bit and impatient for the scent of
battle. It was a great venture, he vowed, and much
honor would come of it. It was one of those expeditions
most to his liking, for were we not outnumbered
three to one? And would not all men rejoice
that we had wiped away a stain from the fair name
of France? He sighed deeply that he was worn in
years and service. But he would have gone had we
not shown him how much more we would have
need for men with all the vigor of youth, to strike
blows quicker and harder than had ever been struck
before.</p>
<p>The week passed, and the King was still busy upon
his hunting and ballade-making. No word came
from the Court of Spain and no word was given
forth at the Louvre for the people. The affront had
been passed over.</p>
<p>De Gourgues, not wishing that M. de Teligny<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</SPAN></span>
should be implicated in his plots, came no more to
his house. Our meetings, which M. de Teligny attended,
however, were held in a small house just off
the Place St. Germain, where negotiations were conducted,
with the utmost secrecy. I had not acquainted
Goddard with our plans, for I knew from
what had happened in Dieppe that on any matter of
deep interest his tongue would wag in spite of himself.
I told him only that we were soon to depart upon
another mission to the New World. At which he
knew not whether to manifest most joy or sorrow;
for he was torn between a desire to remain at the
side of the damsel he had gained and the wish for
another packet of tobacco, as his own through much
squandering had been greatly reduced in size. Day
after day we saw our numbers slowly increase until
soon ten gallants, young and hardy like ourselves,
the rank and chivalry of France, were vowed to our
purpose. The Chevalier de Gourgues meanwhile
had entered upon negotiations for the sale of his
estates and had written to his brother in Guienne,
from whom after a time there came a reply most
encouraging, enclosing the commission from Blaise
de Montluc and an offer of money for the enterprise.
Fortune so far seemed to smile upon our efforts, for
nothing had occurred to mar our plans and all things
needful were readily procurable. Word came from
Bordeaux, where an agent of the Chevalier had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</SPAN></span>
been secretly at work, that several vessels lay at that
harbor which might be made to serve us admirably.</p>
<p>Twice M. de Teligny went to Admiral Coligny to
learn if despatches had passed between Paris and Madrid
and what was the disposition of the King. Each
time he came back with fury at his heart, saying that
the King had no humor for religious discussions.
But even had Charles shown a disposition to take up
his own quarrel, nothing would have deterred the
Chevalier de Gourgues from carrying out his plans,
upon which he had entered with a nervous energy
that knew no abating. By the end of a month or
so, all the necessary money having been secured,
De Gourgues and I set out for Bourdeaux to look into
the worthiness of the vessels upon which the agent
had reported. We found all three to be of small size.
One was somewhat larger than the others, being
built upon the plan of the vessels of the Levant,
propelled, if need be, by both wind and oars. The
two smaller ones were staunch enough and could
they hold all of our company, I did not doubt that
we might reach the Terra Florida in safety. They,
too, had banks of oars and this I considered to be a
matter of great value; for, the draught being not too
deep, all of the craft could be brought over the bar
and into the River of May if necessary. Arrangements
were made with a victualer that supplies to last
a year were to be set aboard; and arquebuses, morions,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</SPAN></span>
pikes, and arbalests were to be procured. The agent
was instructed upon the class of men we needed and
notices were set up in the shipping towns for men
of youth, skilled in the use of pike and arquebus,
who wished a venture of a year which would be
attended with honor and profit. During the second
month of our preparations the word had gone abroad
that we were gold-seeking and many hundreds of
adventurers came beseeching De Gourgues to take
them. From these he picked out those he wished,
with the same skill and quick judgment that he used
in buying his hemp and oakum. He had that nice
eye for hardiness that Pompée had for a piece of
steel or Montmorency for a saucy bit of horseflesh.
Toward the end of April, De Brésac with Goddard,
and the cavaliers, rode down from Paris, and with
great rejoicing we all straightway entered aboard
the ships which lay, full victualed and supplied, at
anchor in the Rade.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</SPAN></span></p>
</div>
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