Malencontre.
Malencontre who, wearing his leather hat and a bandage on his left hand, was being directed toward the inn by a passerby. He gazed up toward the room’s window, stiffened in surprise and promptly turned tail.
“Merde!” swore Leprat.
He knew that he would never catch the hired assassin if he took the stairs. He shoved open the window, causing the chamber pot to smash on the floor, and jumped out into the air just as La Fargue-drawn by the noise-came into the room.
Leprat landed near Almades in front of the inn. But he had forgotten the wound to his thigh. Pain shot through his leg and he crumpled with a loud yelp that alarmed people in the street. Unable to stand, grimacing, and cursing at himself, he nevertheless had the presence of mind to point out Malencontre to the Spanish master of arms.
“There! The leather hat! Quick!”
Malencontre was moving away, almost running, jostling people as he went.
As he set off in pursuit, Almades heard Leprat yelling at him from behind: “Alive! We need him alive!”
The Spaniard had already lost sight of the assassin when he arrived at the corner of rue de la Clef and rue d’Orleans. He climbed onto a cart that was being unloaded and, paying no heed to the protests he was raising, looked further down the street. He spotted the leather hat just as Malencontre was turning into an alley. He leaped into the crowd, banging his hip into a stall which tipped and spilled its vegetables onto the paving stones. He did not stop, pushing aside anyone who did not get out of his way quickly enough, provoking shouts and raised fists in his wake. Finally, he reached the alley.
It was deserted.
He drew his sword.
La Fargue left the inn with his rapier in his fist, only to find Leprat twisting in agony on the ground, clenching his teeth and holding his thigh with both hands. Some kind souls came over to help him, but they hung back upon seeing the captain.
“Blast it, Leprat! What the hell…?”
“Malencontre!”
“What?”
“Leather hat. Bandaged hand. Almades is after him. I’ll explain later. That way! Quick!”
La Fargue took a pistol from the saddle of his horse and dashed off down the street.
Step by cautious step, Almades inched his way through silent alleys as narrow as corridors in a building. He had left the noises of the crowded streets behind him and he knew his prey had stopped running. Otherwise he would have heard his footsteps. The man was hiding. Either to escape from his pursuer, or to set an ambush for him.
Careful…
The attack came suddenly, from the right.
Emerging from a recess, Malencontre struck with a log he had taken from a woodpile. Almades raised his sword to protect himself. The log hit the rapier’s hilt violently, dislodging the weapon from the Spaniard’s grip. The two men immediately shifted to hand-to-hand fighting. Each held the right wrist of the other, grunting as they wrestled, bouncing off the walls of the alley, both of them receiving jarring blows as their backs collided with the rough stone. Then Almades drove his knee hard into the assassin’s side. Malencontre lost his hold but succeeded in landing a sharp blow with the log to the temple of his opponent. Stunned, the Spaniard reeled and then stumbled backward. His vision blurred while his ears filled with a deafening buzz. The universe seemed to lurch dizzily about him.
Dimly, he perceived Malencontre unsheathing his rapier.
Dimly, he perceived him preparing to deliver the fatal stroke while he himself slid down the wall to a sitting position on the ground, vanquished.
And as if wrapped in some woolly dream, he scarcely heard the detonation at all.
Malencontre fell in a heap.
At a distance of ten metres, La Fargue was pointing a pistol with a smoking barrel.
15
There were three riders waiting at Place de la Croix-du-Trahoir, which was a modest square in the neighbourhood near the Louvre, where rue de l’Arbre-Sec met rue Saint-Honore. Silent and still, they sat on their horses near the fountain with an ornamental cross which gave its name to the square. One of them was a tall gentleman with a pale complexion who had a scar on his temple. Not many passersby would have recognised the comte de Rochefort, the cardinal’s henchman. But his sinister bearing never failed to disturb those who saw him.
Drawn by a handsome team, a coach without any coat of arms pulled up.
Rochefort descended from his horse and gave his reins to the closer of the two other riders, saying: “Wait for me.”
And then he climbed into the coach which immediately drove off.
The leather curtains were lowered, so that the interior of the vehicle was bathed in ochre shadow. Two white wax candles were burning in wall holders fixed to either side of the rear bench of the coach. A very elegant gentleman had taken a seat on this bench. With thick long hair and greying temples, he wore a brocade doublet with braids embellished by gold and diamonds. He was in his fifties, a respectable age for these times. But he was still robust and alert, and even exuded a physical charm that was enhanced by maturity. His moustache, as well as his royale beard, was perfectly trimmed. A thin scar marked his cheekbone.
By comparison, the man sitting to his right was rather undistinguished.
Short and bald, he was modestly dressed in a brown outfit with white stockings and buckled shoes. His manner was both humble and reserved. He was not a servant, yet one perceived him to be a subordinate, a commoner who had risen above his state by dint of zeal and hard work. He was perhaps thirty or thirty-five years in age. His features were of a type that did not attract much notice and were easily forgotten.
Rochefort was seated opposite these two persons, with his back to the direction of travel.
“I’m listening,” said the comte de Pontevedra in perfect French.
Rochefort hesitated, glancing at the little man.
“What? Is it Ignacio who worries you…? Forget him. He does not matter. He is not here.”
“So be it… The cardinal wishes you to know that the Blades are already at work in this matter.”
“Already?”
“Yes. Everything was prepared. It only remained for them to answer the call.”
“Which they did promptly, I suppose… And La Fargue?”
“He is in command.”
“Good. What does he know?”
“He knows that he is searching for a certain chevalier d’Ireban, whose disappearance upsets Madrid because he is the son of a Spanish grandee.”
“And that is all?”
“Just as you wished it.”
Pontevedra nodded and took a moment to reflect, the candlelight highlighting his forceful profile from the side.
“La Fargue must remain unaware of the true underpinnings of this affair,” he said finally. “It is of the utmost importance.”
“His Eminence has seen to that.”
“If he should discover that-”
“Do not be concerned about this, monsieur le comte. The secret you evoke is well guarded. However…”
Rochefort left his sentence unfinished.
“Well, what?” said Pontevedra.
“However, you should know that the success of the Blades is by no means certain. And if La Fargue and his men should fail, the Cardinal is anxious to know what-”
The other interrupted: “It is my turn to reassure you, Rochefort. The Blades shall not fail. And if they do, it will be because no one could succeed.”
“And so Spain…”
“… will keep its word, come what may, yes.”
Once again, Pontevedra looked away.
He suddenly seemed struck by great sadness, and in his eyes there was a flicker revealing a profound worry.
“The Blades shall not fail,” he repeated in a strangled voice. But rather than asserting a sense of conviction, he seemed to be addressing a prayer to Heaven.