The White Plumes of Navarre: A Romance of the Wars of Religion
The night was hot in Paris. Breathless heat had brooded over the city all Saturday, the 23rd of August, 1572. It was the eve of Saint Bartholomew. The bell of Saint Germain l'Auxerrois had just clashed out the signal. The Louvre was one blaze of lights. Men with lanterns and poleaxes, as if going to the shambles to kill oxen, hurried along the streets.
Only in the houses in which were lodged the great Huguenot gentlemen, come to the city for the marriage of the King's sister Marguerite to the King of Navarre, there were darkness and silence. None had warned them—or, at least, they had taken no warning. If any suspected, the word of a King, his sworn oaths and multitudinous safe-conducts, lulled them back again into security.
In one chamber, high above the courtyard, a light burned faint and steady. It was that beside the bed of the great Admiral—Coligny. He had been treacherously wounded by the arquebuse of one of the guard of the King's brother—Monsieur de France, Henry Duke of Anjou, afterwards to be known to history as Henry III., the favourite son of Catherine de Medici, the cunningest, and the most ungrateful.
There watched by that bedside many grave men, holding grave discourse with each other and with the sick man, concerning the high mysteries of the religion, pure and reformed, of the state of France, and their hopes of better days for the Faith as it had been delivered to the saints.
And at the bed-foot, with towels, bandages, and water in a silver salver ready for service, one young lad, a student of Geneva, fresh from Calvin and Beza, held his tongue and opened wide his ears.
Pray, Merlin de Vaux, said the wounded Admiral to his aged pastor, pray for life if such be God's will, that we may use it better—for death (the which He will give us in any case), that the messenger may not find us unprepared.
And Merlin prayed, the rest standing up, stern, grave, prepared men, with bowed and reverent heads. And the Genevan Scot thought most of his dead master Calvin, whom, in the last year of his life, he had often seen so stand, while his own power rocked under him in the city of his adoption, and the kingdoms of the earth stormed about him like hateful waves of the sea.
S. R. Crockett
THE WHITE PLUMES OF NAVARRE
A Romance of the Wars of Religion
CONTENTS
The White Plumes of Navarre
THE DAY OF BARRICADES
CLAIRE AGNEW
THE PROFESSOR OF ELOQUENCE
LITTLE COLETTE OF COLLIOURE
THE SPROUTING OF CABBAGE JOCK
THE ARCHER'S CLOAK
THE GREAT NAME OF GUISE
THE GOLDEN LARK IN ORLEANS TOWN
THE REBELLION OF HERODIAS' DAUGHTER
THE GOLDEN DUKE
THE BEST-KNOWN FACE IN THE WORLD
THE WAKING OF THE BEARNAIS
A MIDNIGHT COUNCIL
EYES OF JADE
MISTRESS CATHERINE
LA REINE MARGOT
MATE AND CHECKMATE
THE APOSTLE OF PEACE
DEATH WARNINGS
THE BLOOD ON THE KERCHIEF
THE TIGER IN THE FOX'S TRAP
BERÁK THE LIGHTNING AND TOÀH HIS DOG
THE THREE SONS OF MADAME AMÉLIE
COUSIN RAPHAEL, LORD OF COLLIOURE
CLAIRE'S EMBARRASSMENT OF CHOICE
FIRST COUNCIL OF WAR
SECOND COUNCIL OF WAR
THIRD COUNCIL OF WAR
THE SHUT HOUSE IN MONEY STREET
JEAN-AUX-CHOUX TAKES HIS WAGES
THE WAY OF THE SALT MARSHES
IN THEIR CLUTCHES
AND ONE WAS NOT!
BISHOP, ARCHBISHOP, AND ANGELICAL DOCTOR
THE PLACE OF EYES
VALENTINE LA NIÑA
THE WILD ANIMAL—WOMAN
THE VENGEANCE OF VALENTINE LA NIÑA
SAVED BY SULKS
THE MAS OF THE MOUNTAIN
"AND LAZARUS CAME FORTH!"
SECRETS OF THE PRISON HOUSE
IN TARRAGONA BAY
VALENTINE AND HER VENGEANCE
VALENTINE FINDS CLAIRE WORTHY
KING AND KING'S DAUGHTER
GREAT LOVE—AND GREATER
THE END