At a little after six o'clock on the evening of Saturday, 12th October, in
the year 1678, the man known commonly as Edward Copshaw came to a halt
opposite the narrow entry of the Savoy, just west of the Queen's palace of
Somerset House. He was a personage of many names. In the register of the
Benedictine lay-brothers he had been entered as James Singleton. Sundry
Paris tradesmen had known him as Captain Edwards, and at the moment were
longing to know more of him. In a certain secret and tortuous
correspondence he figured as Octavius, and you may still read his sprawling
script in the Record Office. His true name, which was Nicholas Lovel, was
known at Weld House, at the White Horse Tavern, and the town lodgings of my
lords Powis and Bellasis, but had you asked for him by that name at these
quarters you would have been met by a denial of all knowledge. For it was a
name which for good reasons he and his patrons desired to have forgotten.
He was a man of not yet forty, furtive, ill-looking and lean to emaciation.
In complexion he was as swarthy as the King, and his feverish black eyes
were set deep under his bushy brows. A badly dressed peruke concealed his
hair. His clothes were the remnants of old finery, well cut and of good
stuff, but patched and threadbare. He wore a sword, and carried a stout
rustic staff. The weather was warm for October, and the man had been
walking fast, for, as he peered through the autumn brume into the dark
entry, he mopped his face with a dirty handkerchief.
The exercise had brought back his ailment and he shivered violently.
Punctually as autumn came round he had these fevers, the legacy of a year
once spent in the Pisan marshes. He had doped himself with Jesuits' powder
got from a woman of Madame Carwell's, so that he was half deaf and blind.
Yet in spite of the drug the fever went on burning.
But to anyone looking close it would have seemed that he had more to
trouble him than a malarial bout. The man was patently in an extreme
terror. His lantern-jaw hung as loose as if it had been broken. His lips
moved incessantly. He gripped savagely at his staff, and next moment
dropped it. He fussed with the hilt of his sword. . . . He was a coward,
and yet had come out to do murder.
It had taken real panic to bring him to the point. Throughout his tattered
life he had run many risks, but never a peril so instant as this. As he had
followed his quarry that afternoon his mind had been full of broken
memories. Bitter thoughts they were, for luck had not been kind to him. A
childhood in cheap lodgings in London and a dozen French towns, wherever
there was a gaming-table and pigeons for his father to pluck. Then drunken
father and draggletailed mother had faded from the scene, and the boy had
been left to a life of odd jobs and fleeting patrons. His name was against
him, for long before he reached manhood the King had come back to his own,
and his grandfather's bones had jangled on a Tyburn gibbet. There was no
hope for one of his family, though Heaven knew his father had been a stout
enough Royalist. At eighteen the boy had joined the Roman Church, and at
twenty relapsed to the fold of Canterbury. But his bread-and-butter lay
with Rome, and in his trade few questions were asked about creed
provided the work were done. He had had streaks of fortune, for there had
been times when he lay soft and ate delicately and scattered money. But
nothing lasted. He had no sooner made purchase with a great man and climbed
a little than the scaffolding fell from his feet. He thought meanly of
human nature for in his profess he must cringe or snarl, always
the undermost dog. Yet he had some liking for the priests, who had been
kind to him, and there was always a glow in his heart for the pale wife who
dwelt with his child in the attic in Billingsgate. Under happier
circumstances Mr. Nicholas Lovel might have shone with the domestic
virtues.
Business had been good of late, if that could ever be called good which was
undertaken under perpetual fear. He had been given orders which took him
into Whig circles, and had made progress among the group of the King's Head
Tavern. He had even won an entrance into my Lord Shaftesbury's great house
in Aldersgate Street. He was there under false colours, being a spy of the
other camp, but something in him found itself at home among the patriots. A
resolve had been growing to cut loose from his old employers and settle
down among the Whigs in comparative honesty. It was the winning cause, he
thought, and he longed to get his head out of the kennels. . . . But that
had happened yesterday which scattered his fine dreams and brought him face
to face with terror. God's curse on that ferrety Justice, Sir Edmund Berry
Godfrey.
He had for some time had his eye on the man. The year before he had run
across him in Montpelier, being then engaged in a very crooked business,
and had fancied that the magistrate had also his eye on him. Taught by long
experience to watch potential enemies, he had taken some trouble over the
lean high-beaked dignitary. Presently he had found out curious things. The
austere Protestant was a friend of the Duke's man, Ned Coleman, and used to
meet him at Colonel Weldon's house. This hinted at blackmailable stuff in
the magistrate, so Lovel took to haunting his premises in Hartshorn Lane by
Charing Cross, but found no evidence which pointed to anything but a
prosperous trade in wood and sea-coal. Faggots, but not the treasonable
kind! Try as he might, he could-get no farther with that pillar of the
magistracy, my Lord Danly's friend, the beloved of Aldermen. He hated his
solemn face, his prim mouth, his condescending stoop. Such a man was
encased in proof armour of public esteem, and he heeded Mr. Lovel no more
than the rats in the gutter.
But the day before had come a rude awakening. All this talk of a Popish
plot, discovered by the Salamanca Doctor, promised a good harvest to Mr.
Lovel. He himself had much to tell and more to invent. Could he but manage
it discreetly, he might assure his fortune with the Whigs and get to his
feet at last. God knew it was time, for the household in the Billingsgate
attic was pretty threadbare. His busy brain had worked happily on the plan.
He would be the innocent, cursed from childhood with undesired companions,
who would suddenly awaken in horror to the guilt of things he had not
understood. There would be a welcome for a well-informed penitent. . . .
But he must move slowly and at his own time. . . . And now he was being
himself hustled into the dock, perhaps soon to the gallows.
For the afternoon before he had been sent for by Godfrey and most
searchingly examined. He had thought himself the spy, when all the while he
had been the spied upon. The accursed Justice knew everything. He knew a
dozen episodes each enough to hang a poor man. He knew of Mr. Lovel's
dealings with the Jesuits Walsh and Phayre, and of a certain little hovel
in Battersea whose annals were not for the public ear. Above all, he knew
of the great Jesuit consult in April at the Duke of York's house. That
would have mattered little--indeed the revelation of it was part of Mr.
Lovel's plans--but he knew Mr. Lovel s precise connection with it, and had
damning evidence to boot. The spy shivered when he remembered the scene in
Hartshorn Lane. He had blundered and stuttered and confessed his alarm by
his confusion, while the Justice recited what he had fondly believed was
known only to the Almighty and some few whose mortal interest it was to be
silent. . . . He had been amazed that he had not been there and then
committed to Newgate. He had not gone home that night, but wandered the
streets and slept cold under a Mairylebone hedge. At first he had thought
of flight, but the recollection of his household detained him. He would not
go under. One pompous fool alone stood between him and safety--perhaps
fortune. Long before morning he had resolved that Godfrey should die.
He had expected a difficult task, but lo! it was unbelievably easy. About
ten o'clock that day he had found Sir Edmund in the Strand. He walked
hurriedly as if on urgent business, and Lovel had followed him up through
Covent Garden, across the Oxford road, and into the Marylebone fields.
There the magistrate's pace had slackened, and he had loitered like a
truant schoolboy among the furze and briars. His stoop had
deepened, his head was sunk on his breast, his hands twined behind him.
Now was the chance for the murderer lurking in the brambles. It would be
easy to slip behind and give him the sword-point. But Mr. Lovel tarried. It
may have been compunction, but more likely it was fear. It was also
curiosity, for the magistrate's face, as he passed Lovel's hiding-place,
was distraught and melancholy. Here was another man with bitter thoughts
--perhaps with a deadly secret. For a moment the spy felt a certain
kinship.
Whatever the reason he let the morning go by. About two in the afternoon
Godfrey left the fields and struck westward by a bridle-path that led
through the Paddington Woods to the marshes north of Kensington. He walked
slowly, but with an apparent purpose. Lovel stopped for a moment at the
White House, a dirty little hedge tavern, to swallow a mouthful of ale, and
tell a convincing lie to John Rawson, the innkeeper, in case it should come
in handy some day. Then occurred a diversion. Young Mr. Forset's harriers
swept past, a dozen riders attended by a ragged foot following. They
checked by the path, and in the confusion of the halt Godfrey seemed to
vanish. It was not till close on Paddington village that Mr. Lovel picked
him up again. He was waiting for the darkness, for he knew that he could
never do what he purposed in cold daylight. He hoped that the magistrate
would make for Kensington, for that was a lonely path.
But Sir Edmund seemed to be possessed of a freakish devil. No sooner was he
in Paddington than, after buying a glass of milk from a milk-woman, he set
off citywards again by the Oxford road. Here there were many people, foot
travellers and coaches, and Mr. Lovel began to fear for his chance. But at
Tyburn Godfrey struck into the fields and presently was in the narrow lane
called St. Martin's Hedges, which led to Charing Cross. Now was the
occasion. The dusk was falling, and a light mist was creeping up from
Westminster. Lovel quickened his steps, for the magistrate was striding at
a round pace. Then came mischance. First one, then another of the
Marylebone cow-keepers blocked the lane with their driven beasts. The place
became as public as Bartholomew's Fair. Before he knew it he was at Charing
Cross.
He was now in a foul temper. He cursed his weakness in the morning, when
fate had given him every opportunity. He was in despair too. His case was
hopeless unless he struck soon. If Godfrey returned to Hartshorn Lane he
himself would be in Newgate on the morrow. . . . Fortunately the strange
man did not seem to want to go home. He moved east along the Strand, Lovel
a dozen yards behind him.
Out from the dark Savoy entry ran a woman, screaming, and with her hair
flying. She seized on Godfrey and clutched his knees. There was a bloody
fray inside, in which her husband fought against odds. The watch was not to
be found. Would he, the great magistrate, intervene? The very sight of his
famous face would quell riot.
Sir Edmund looked up and down the street, pinched his chin and peered down
the precipitous Savoy causeway. Whatever the burden on his soul he did not
forget his duty.
"Show me," he said, and followed her into the gloom.
Lovel outside stood for a second hesitating. His chance had come. His foe
had gone of his own will into the place in all England where murder could
be most safely done. But now that the moment had come at last, he was all
of a tremble and his breath choked. Only the picture, always horribly clear
in his mind, of a gallows dark against a pale sky and the little fire
beneath where the entrails of traitors were burned--a nightmare which had
long ridden him--nerved him to the next step. "His life or mine," he told
himself, as he groped his way into a lane as steep, dank, and black as the
sides of a well.
For some twenty yards he stumbled in an air thick with offal and garlic. He
heard steps ahead, the boots of the doomed magistrate and the slipshod
pattens of the woman. Then. they stopped; his quarry seemed to be ascending
a stair on the right. It was a wretched tenement of wood, two hundred years
old, once a garden house attached to the Savoy palace. Lovel scrambled up
some rickety steps and found himself on the rotten planks of a long
passage, which was lit by a small window giving to the west. He heard the
sound of a man slipping at the other end, and something like an oath. Then
a door slammed violently, and the place shook. After that it was quiet.
Where was the bloody fight that Godfrey had been brought to settle?
It was very dark there; the window in the passage was only a square of
misty grey. Lovel felt eerie, a strange mood for an assassin. Magistrate
and woman seemed to have been spirited away. . . . He plucked up courage
and continued, one hand on the wall on his left. Then a sound broke the
silence--a scuffle, and the long grate of something heavy dragged on a
rough floor. Presently his fingers felt a door. The noise was inside that
door. There were big cracks in the panelling through which an eye could
look, but all was dark within. There were human beings moving there, and
speaking softly. Very gingerly he tried the hasp, but it was fastened firm
inside.
Suddenly someone in the room struck a flint and lit a lantern. Lovel set
his eyes to a crack and stood very still. The woman had gone, and the room
held three men. One lay on the floor with a coarse kerchief, such as grooms
wear, knotted round his throat. Over him bent a man in a long coat with a
cape, a man in a dark peruke, whose face was clear in the lantern's light.
Lovel knew him for one Bedloe, a
led-captain and cardsharper, whom he had himself employed on occasion. The
third man stood apart and appeared from his gesticulations to be speaking
rapidly. He wore his own sandy hair, and every line of his mean freckled
face told of excitement and fear. Him also Lovel recognised--Carstairs, a
Scotch informer who had once made a handsome living through
spying on conventicles, but had now fallen into poverty
owing to conducting an affair of Buckingham's with a
brutality which that fastidious nobleman had not bargained for. . . .
Lovel rubbed his eyes and looked again. He knew likewise the man on the
floor. It was Sir Edmund Godfrey, and Sir Edmund Godfrey was dead.
The men were talking. "No blood-letting," said Bedloe "This must be a dry
job. Though, by God, I wish I could stick my knife into him--once for
Trelawney, once for Frewen, and a dozen times for myself. Through this
swine I have festered a twelvemonth in Little Ease."
Lovel's first thought, as he stared, was an immense relief. His business
had been done for him, and he had escaped the guilt of it. His second, that
here lay a chance of fair profit. Godfrey was a great man, and Bedloe and
Carstairs were the seediest of rogues. He might make favor for himself with
the Government if he had them caught red-handed. It would help his status
in Aldersgate Street. . . . But he must act at once or the murderers would
be gone. He tiptoed back along the passage, tumbled down the crazy steps,
and ran up the steep entry to where he saw a glimmer of light from the
Strand.
At the gate he all but fell into the arms of a man--a powerful fellow, for
it was like running against a brick wall. Two strong arms gripped Lovel by
the shoulder, and a face looked into his. There was little light in the
street, but the glow from the window of a Court perruquier was sufficient
to reveal the features. Lovel saw a gigantic face, with a chin so long that
the mouth seemed to be only half-way down it. Small eyes, red and fiery,
were set deep under a beetling forehead. The skin was a dark purple, and
the wig framing it was so white and fleecy that the man had the appearance
of a malevolent black-faced sheep.
Lovel gasped, as he recognised the celebrated Salamanca Doctor. He was the
man above all others whom he most wished to see.
"Dr. Oates!" he cried. "There's bloody work in the Savoy. I was passing
through a minute agone and I saw that noble Justice, Sir Edmund Berry
Godfrey, lie dead, and his murderers beside the body. Quick, let us get the
watch and take them red-handed."
The big paws, like a gorilla's, were withdrawn from his shoulders. The
purple complexion seemed to go nearly black, and the wide mouth opened as
if to bellow. But the sound which emerged was only a whisper.
"By the maircy of Gaad we will have 'em! . . .
A maist haarrid and unnaitural craime. I will take 'em with my own haands.
Here is one who will help."
And he turned to a man who had come up and who looked like a city
tradesman. "Lead on, honest fellow, and we will see justice done. 'Tis
pairt of the bloody Plaat. . . . I foresaw it. I warned Sir Edmund, but he
flouted me. Ah, poor soul, he has paid for his unbelief."
Lovel, followed by Oates and the other whom he called Prance, dived again
into the darkness. Now he had no fears. He saw himself acclaimed with the
Doctor as the saviour of the nation, and the door of Aldersgate Street open
at his knocking. The man Prance produced a lantern, and lighted them up the
steps and into the tumbledown passage. Fired with a sudden valour, Lovel
drew his sword and led the way to the sinister room. The door was open, and
the place lay empty, save for the dead body.
Oates stood beside it, looking, with his bandy legs great shoulders, and
bull neck, like some forest baboon.
"Oh, maist haunourable and noble victim!" he cried. "England will maarn
you, and the spawn of Raam will maarn you, for by this deed they have
rigged for thaimselves the gallows. Maark ye, Sir Edmund is the
proto-martyr of this new fight for the Praatestant faith. He has died that
the people may live, and by his death Gaad has given England the sign she
required. . . . Ah, Prance, how little Tony Shaston will exult in our
news! 'Twill be to him like a bone to a cur-dog to take his ainemies thus
red-haanded."
By your leave, sir," said Lovel, "those same enemies have escaped us. I saw
them here five minutes since, but they have gone to earth. What say you to
a hue-and-cry--though this Savoy is a snug warrin to hide vermin."
Oates seemed to be in no hurry. He took the lantern from Prance and
scrutinised Lovel's face with savage intensity.
"Ye saw them, ye say. . . . I think, friend, I have seen ye before, and I
doubt in no good quaarter. There's a Paapist air about you."
"If you have seen me, 'twas in the house of my Lord Shaftesbury, whom I
have the honour to serve," said Lovel stoutly.
"Whoy, that is an haanest house enough. Whaat like were the villains, then?
Jaisuits, I'll warrant? Foxes from St. Omer's airth?"
"They were two common cutthroats whose names I know."
"Tools, belike. Fingers of the Paape's hand. . . . Ye seem to have a good
acquaintance among rogues, Mr. Whaat's-you-name."
The man Prance had disappeared, and Lovel suddenly saw his prospects less
bright. The murderers were being given a chance to escape, and to his
surprise he found himself in a fret to get after them. Oates had clearly no
desire for their capture, and the reason flashed on his mind. The murder
had come most opportunely for him, and he sought to lay it at Jesuit doors.
It would ill suit his plans if only two common rascals were to swing for
it. Far better let it remain a mystery open to awful guesses. Omne ignotum
pro horrifico. . . . Lovel's temper was getting the better of his
prudence, and the sight of this monstrous baboon with his mincing speech
stirred in him a strange abhorrence.
"I can bear witness that the men who did the deed were no more Jesuits than
you. One is just out of Newgate, and the other is a blackguard Scot late
dismissed the Duke of Buckingham's service."
"Ye lie," and Oates' rasping voice was close to his ear.
"'Tis an incraidible tale. Will ye outface me, who alone discovered the
Plaat, and dispute with me on high poalicy? . . . Now I come to look at it,
ye have a true Jaisuit face. I maind of ye at St. Omer. I judge ye an
accoamplice . . ."
At that moment Prance returned and with him another, a man in a dark
peruke, wearing a long coat with a cape. Lovel's breath went from him as he
recognised Bedloe.
"There is the murderer," he cried in a sudden fury "I saw him handle the
body. I charge you to hold him.
Bedloe halted and looked at Oates, who nodded. Then he strode up to Lovel
and took him by the throat
"Withdraw your words, you dog," he said, "or I will cut your throat. I have
but this moment landed at the river stairs and heard of this horrid
business. If you say you have ever seen me before you lie most foully.
Quick, you ferret. Will Bedloe suffers no man to charge his honour."
The strong hands on his neck, the fierce eyes of the bravo, brought back
Lovel's fear and with it his prudence. He saw very plainly the game, and he
realised that he must assent to it. His contrition was deep and voluble.
"I withdraw," he stammered, "and humbly crave pardon. I have never seen
this honest gentleman before."
"But ye saw this foul murder, and though the laight was dim ye saw the
murderers, and they had the Jaisuitical air?"
Oates' menacing voice had more terror for Lovel than Bedloe's truculence.
"Beyond doubt," he replied.
"Whoy, that is so far good," and the Doctor laughed. "Ye will be helped
later to remember the names for the benefit of his Maajesty's Court. . . .
'Tis time we set to work. Is the place quiet?"
"As the grave, doctor," said Prance.
"Then I will unfold to you my pairpose. This noble magistrate is foully
murdered by pairsons unknown as yet, but whom this haanest man will swear
to have been disguised Jaisuits. Now in the sairvice of Goad and the King
'tis raight to pretermit no aiffort to bring the guilty to justice. The
paiple of England are already roused to a holy fairvour, and this haarrid
craime will be as the paistol flash to the powder caask. But that the
craime may have its full effaict on the paapulace 'tis raight to take some
trouble with the staging. 'Tis raight so to dispose of the boady that the
complaicity of the Paapists will be clear to every doubting fool. I, Taitus
Oates, take upon myself this responsibility, seeing that under Goad I am
the chosen ainstrument for the paiple's salvation. To Soamersait Haase with
it, say I, which is known for a haaunt of the paapistically-minded. . . .
The postern ye know of is open, Mr. Prance?"
"I have seen to it," said the man, who seemed to conduct himself in this
wild business with the decorum of a merchant in his shop.
"Up with him, then," said Oates.
Prance and Bedloe swung the corpse on their shoulders and moved out, while
the doctor, gripping Lovel's arm like a vice, followed at a little
distance.
The Savoy was very quiet that night, and very dark. The few loiterers who
observed the procession must have shrugged their shoulders and turned
aside, zealous only to keep out of trouble. Such sights were not uncommon
in the Savoy. They entered a high ruinous house on the east side, and after
threading various passages reached a door which opened on a flight of
broken steps where it was hard for more than one to pass at a time. Lovel
heard the carriers of the dead grunting as they squeezed up with their
burden. At the top another door gave on an outhouse in the yard of Somerset
House between the stables and the west water-gate. . . . Lovel, as he
stumbled after them with Oates' bulk dragging at his arm, was in a
confusion of mind such as his mean time-serving life had never known.
He was in mortal fear, and yet his quaking heart would suddenly be braced
by a gust of anger. He knew he was a rogue, but there were limits to
roguery, and something in him--conscience, maybe, or forgotten
gentility--sickened at this outrage. He had an impulse to defy them, to
gain the street and give the alarm to honest men. These fellows were going
to construct a crime in their own way which would bring death to the
innocent. . . . Mr. Lovel trembled at himself, and had to think hard on his
family in the Billingsgate attic to get back to his common-sense. He would
not be believed if he spoke out. Oates would only swear that he was the
culprit, and Oates had the ear of the courts and the mob. Besides , he had
too many dark patches in his past. It was not for such as he to be
finicking.
The body was pushed under an old truckle-bed which stood in the corner, and
a mass of frails, such as gardeners use, flung over it for concealment.
Oates rubbed his hands.
"The good work goes merrily," he said. "Sir Edmund dead, and for a week the
good fawk of London are a-fevered. Then the haarrid discovery, and such a
Praatestant uprising as will shake the maightiest from his pairch.
Wonderful are Goad's ways and surprising His jaidgements! Every step must
be weighed, since it is the Laard's business. Five
days we must give this city to grow uneasy, and then
. . . The boady will be safe here?"
"I alone have the keys," said Prance.
The doctor counted on his thick fingers. "Monday--Tuesday--Waidnesday--aye,
Waidneday's the day. Captain Bedloe, ye have chairge of the removal. Before
dawn by the water-gate, and
then a chair and a trusty man to cairry it to the plaace
of discovery. Ye have appainted the spoat?"
"Any ditch in the Marylebone fields," said Bedloe.
"And before ye remove it--on the Tuesday naight haply--ye will run the
boady through with his swaard--Sir Edmund's swaard."
"So you tell me," said Bedloe gruffly, "but I see no reason in it. The
foolishest apothecary will be able tell how the man met his death."
Oates grinned and laid his finger to his nose. "Ye laack subtelty, fraiend.
The priests of Baal must be met with their own waipons. Look ye. This poor
man is found with his swaard in his braist. He has killed himself, says the
fool. Not so, say the apothecaries. Then why the swaard" asks the coroner.
Because of the daivilish cunning of his murderers, says Doctor Taitus
Oates. A clear proof that the Jaisuits are in it, says every honest
Praatistant. D'ye take me?"
Bedloe declared with oaths his admiration of the Doctor's wit, and good
humour filled the hovel; All but Lovel, who once again was wrestling with
something elemental in him that threatened to ruin every thing. He
remembered the bowed stumbling figure that had gone before him in the
Marylebone meadows. Then he had been its enemy; now by a queer contortion
of the mind he thought of himself as the only protector of that cold clay
under the bed--honoured in life, but in death a poor pawn in a rogue's
cause. He stood a little apart from the others near the door, and his eyes
sought it furtively. He was not in the plot, and yet the plotters did not
trouble about him. They assumed his complaisance. Doubtless they knew his
shabby past.
He was roused by Oates' voice. The Doctor was arranging his plan of
campaign with gusto. Bedloe was to disappear to the West Country till the
time came for him to offer his evidence. Prance was to go about his
peaceful trade till Bedloe gave him the cue. It was a masterly
stratagem--Bedloe to start the ball, Prance to be accused as accomplice and
then on his own account to give the other scoundrel corroboration.
"Attend, you sir," the doctor shouted to Lovel. "Ye will be called to swear
to the murderers whom this haanest man will name. If ye be a true
Praatestant ye will repeat the laisson I taich you. If not, ye will be set
down as one of the villains and the good fawk of this city will tear the
limbs from ye at my nod. Be well advaised, my friend, for I hold ye in my
haand." And Oates raised a great paw and opened and shut it.
Lovel mumbled assent. Fear had again descended on him. He heard dimly the
Doctor going over the names of those to be accused.
"Ye must bring in one of the sairvants of this place," he said. "Some
common paarter, who has no friends."
"Trust me," said Prance. "I will find a likely fellow among the Queen's
household. I have several in my mind for the honour."
"Truly the plaace is a nest of Paapists," said Oates. "And not such as you,
Mr. Prance, who putt England before the Paape. Ye are worth a score of
Praatestants to the good caause, and it will be remaimbered. Be assured it
will be remaimbered. . . . Ye are clear about the main villains? Walsh,
you say, and Pritchard and the man called Le Fevre?"
"The last most of all. But they are sharp-nosed as hounds, and unless we go
wiarily they will give us the slip, and we must fall back on lesser game."
"Le Fevre." Oates mouthed the name. "The Queen's confessor. I was spit upon
by him at St. Omer, and would waipe out the affront. A dog of a Frainch
priest! A man I have long abhaarred."
"So also have I." Prance had venom in his level voice. "But he is no
Frenchman. He is English as you--a Phayre out of Huntingdon."
The name penetrated Lovel's dulled wits. Phayre! It was the one man who in
his father's life had shown him unselfish kindness. Long ago in Paris this
Phayre had been his teacher, had saved him from starvation, had treated him
with a gentleman's courtesy. Even his crimes had not estranged this friend.
Phayre had baptized his child, and tended his wife when he was in hiding.
But a week ago he had spoken a kindly word in the Mall to one who had
rarely a kind word from an honest man.
That day had been to the spy a revelation of odd corners in his soul. He
had mustered in the morning the resolution to kill one man. Now he
discovered a scruple which bade him at all risks avert the killing of
another. He perceived very clearly what the decision meant--desperate
peril, perhaps ruin and death. He dare not delay, for in a little he would
be too deep in the toils. He must escape and be first with the news of
Godfrey's death in some potent quarter. Buckingham, who was a great prince.
Or Danby. Or the King himself. . . .
The cunning of a lifetime failed him in that moment. He slipped through the
door, but his coat caught in a splinter of wood, and the rending of it gave
the alarm. As with quaking heart he ran up the silent stable-yard towards
the Strand gate he felt close on him the wind of the pursuit. In the dark
he slipped on a patch of horse-dung and was down. Something heavy fell atop
of him, and the next second a gross agony tore the breath from him.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Five minutes later Bedloe was unknotting a coarse kerchief and stuffing it
into his pocket. It was the same that had strangled Godfrey
"A good riddance," said Oates. "The fool had seen too much and would have
proved but a saarry witness. Now by the mairciful dispensation of Goad he
has ceased to trouble us. Ye know him, Captain Bedloe?"
A Papistical cur, and white-livered at that," the bravo answered.
"And his boady? It must be praamptly disposed of."
"An easy task. There is the Savoy water-gate and in an hour the tide will
run. He has no friends to inquire after him."
Oates rubbed his hands and cast his eyes upward. Great are the doings of
the Laard," he said, "and wonderful in our saight!"