The Chaplet of Pearls - Page 10/99

The thicket was so close that Beranger was almost among the

congregation before he could see more than a passing glimpse of a

sea of heads. Stout, ruddy, Norman peasants, and high white-capped

women, mingled with a few soberly-clad townsfolk, almost all with

the grave, steadfast cast of countenance imparted by unresisted

persecution, stood gathered round the green mound that served as a

natural pulpit for a Calvinist minister, who more the dress of a

burgher, but entirely black. To Beranger's despair, he was in the

act of inviting his hearers to join with him in singing one of

Marot's psalms; and the boy, eager to lose not a moment, grasped

the skirt of the outermost of the crowd. The man, an absorbed-

looking stranger, merely said, 'Importune me not, child.'

'Listen!' said Beranger; 'it imports---'

'Peace,' was the stern answer; but a Norman farmer looked round at

that moment, and Beranger exclaimed, 'Stop the singing! The gens

d'armes!' The psalm broke off; the whisper circulated; the words

'from Leurre' were next conveyed from lip to lip, and, as it were

in a moment, the dense human mass had broken up and vanished,

stealing through the numerous paths in the brushwood, or along the

brook, as it descended through tall sedges and bulrushes. The

valley was soon as lonely as it had been populous; the pulpit

remained a mere mossy bank, more suggestive or fairy dances than of

Calvinist sermons, and no one remained on the scene save Beranger

with his pony, Jacques the groom, a stout farmer, the preacher, and

a tall thin figure in the plainest dark cloth dress that could be

worn by a gentleman, a hawk on his wrist.

'Thou here, my boy!' he exclaimed, as Beranger came to his side;

and as the little fellow replied in a few brief words, he took him

by the hand, and said to the minister, 'Good Master Isaac, let me

present my young son to you, who under Heaven hath been the means

of saving many lives this day.'

Maitre Isaac Gardon, a noted preacher, looked kindly at the boy's

fair face, and said, 'Bless thee, young sir. As thou hast been

already a chosen instrument to save life, so mayest thou be ever

after a champion of the truth.'

'Monsieur le Baron,' interposed Jacques, 'it were best to look to

yourself. I already hear sounds upon the wind.'

'And you, good sir?' said the Baron.

'I will see to him,' said the farmer, grasping him as a sort of

property. 'M. le Baron had best keep up the beck. Out on the moor

there he may fly the hawk, and that will best divert suspicion.'