On this side, at least, Mademoiselle
Marguerite had no very wide field of investigation
to explore. Her common sense told her that her
task would merely consist in carefully watching the
behavior of the General and his wife, in noting their
expenditure, and so on. It was a matter of close
attention, and of infinitesimal trifles. Nor was
she much encouraged by her first success. It
was, perhaps, important; and yet it might be nothing.
For she felt that the real difficulties would not
begin until she became morally certain that the General
had stolen the millions that were missing from the
count’s escritoire. Even then it would
remain for her to discover how he had obtained possession
of this money. And when she had succeeded in
doing this, would her task be ended? Certainly
not. She must obtain sufficient evidence to give
her the right of accusing the General openly, and
in the face of every one. She must have material
and indisputable proofs before she could say:
“A robbery has been committed. I was accused
of it. I was innocent. Here is the culprit!”
What a long journey must be made before
this goal was reached! No matter! Now that
she had a positive and fixed point of departure, she
felt that she possessed enough energy to sustain her
in her endeavors for years, if need be. What
troubled her most was that she could not logically
explain the conduct of her enemies from the time M.
de Fondege had asked her hand for his son up to the
present moment. And first, why had they been
so audacious or so imprudent as to bring her to their
own home if they had really stolen one of those immense
amounts that are sure to betray their possessors?
“They are mad,” she thought, “or
else they must deem me blind, deaf, and more stupid
than mortal ever was!” Secondly, why should
they be so anxious to marry her to their son, Lieutenant
Gustave? This also was a puzzling question.
However, she was fully decided on one point:
the suspicions of the Fondege family must not be aroused.
If they were on their guard, it would be the easiest
thing in the world for them to pay their debts quietly,
and increase their expenditure so imperceptibly that
she would not be able to prove a sudden acquisition
of wealth.
But the events of the next few days
dispelled these apprehensions. That very afternoon,
although it was Sunday, it became evident that a shower
of gold had fallen on the General’s abode.
The door-bell rang incessantly for several hours,
and an interminable procession of tradesmen entered.
It looked very much as if M. de Fondege had called
a meeting of his creditors. They came in haughty
and arrogant, with their hats upon their heads, and
surly of speech, like people who have made up their
minds to accept their loss, but who intend to pay themselves
in rudeness. They were ushered into the drawing-room
where the General was holding his levee; they remained
there from five to ten minutes, and then, bowing low
with hat in hand, they retired with radiant countenances,
and an obsequious smile on their lips. So they
had been paid. And as if to prove to Mademoiselle
Marguerite that her suspicions were correct, she chanced
to be present when the livery stable-keeper presented
his bill.
Madame de Fondege received him very
haughtily. “Ah! here you are!” she
exclaimed, rudely, as soon as he appeared. “So
you are the man who teaches his drivers to insult
his customers? That is an excellent way to gain
patronage. What! I hire a one-horse carriage
from you by the month, and because I happen to wish
for a two-horse vehicle for a single day, you make
me pay the difference. You should demand payment
in advance if you are so suspicious.”
The stable-keeper, who had a bill
for nearly four thousand francs in his pocket, stood
listening with the air of a man who is meditating some
crushing reply; but she did not give him time to deliver
it. “When I have cause to complain of the
people I employ, I dismiss them and replace them by
others. Insolence is one of those things that
I never forgive. Give me your bill.”
The man, in whose face doubt, fear,
and hope had succeeded each other in swift succession,
thereupon drew an interminable bill from his pocket.
And when he saw the bank-notes, when he saw the bill
paid without dispute or even examination, he was seized
with a wondering respect, and his voice became sweeter
than honey. They say the payment of a bad debt
delights a merchant a thousand times more than the
settlement of fifty good ones. The truth of this
assertion became apparent in the present case.
Mademoiselle Marguerite thought the man was going to
beg “Madame la Comtesse to do him
the favor to withhold a portion of the small amount.”
For the Parisian tradesman is so constituted that very
frequently it is not necessary to pay him money, but
only to show it.
However, this creditor’s abnegation
did not extend so far; still he did entreat Madame
la Comtesse not to leave him on account of
a blunder — for it was a blunder — he
swore it on his children’s heads. His coachman
was only a fool and a drunkard, who had misunderstood
him entirely, and whom he should ignominiously dismiss
on returning to his establishment. But “Madame
la Comtesse” was inflexible. She
sent the man about his business, saying, “I
never place myself in a position to be treated with
disrespect a second time.”
This probably accounted for the fact
that Evariste, the footman, who had been so wanting
in respect the previous evening, had been sent away
that very morning. Mademoiselle Marguerite did
not see him again. Dinner was served by a new
servant, who had been sent by an Employment Office,
and engaged without a question, no doubt because Evariste’s
livery fitted him like a glove. Had the cook
also been replaced? Mademoiselle Marguerite thought
so, though she had no means of convincing herself on
this point. It was certain, however, that the
Sunday dinner was utterly unlike that of the evening
before. Quality had replaced quantity, and care,
profusion. It was not necessary to send to the
cellar for a bottle of Chateau-Laroze; it made its
appearance at the proper moment, warmed to the precise
degree of temperature, and seemed quite to the taste
of excellent Madame Leon.
In twenty-four hours the Fondege family
had been raised to such affluence that they must have
asked themselves if it were possible they had ever
known the agonies of that life of false appearances
and sham luxury which is a thousand times worse than
an existence of abject poverty. “Is it
possible that I am deceived?” Marguerite said
to herself, on retiring to her room that evening.
For it surprised her that a keen-sighted person like
Madame Leon should not have remarked this revolution;
but the worthy companion merely declared the General
and his wife to be charming people, and did not cease
to congratulate her dear young lady upon having accepted
their hospitality. “I feel quite at home
here,” said she; “and though my room is
a trifle small, I shall have nothing to wish for when
it has been refurnished.”
Mademoiselle Marguerite spent a restless
and uncomfortable night. In spite of her reason,
in spite of the convincing proofs she had seen, the
most disturbing doubts returned. Might she not
have judged the situation with a prejudiced mind?
Had the Fondeges really been as reduced in circumstances
as she supposed? Like every one who has been unfortunate,
she feared illusions, and was extremely distrustful
of everything that seemed to favor her hopes and wishes.
The only thing that really encouraged her was the
thought that she could consult the old magistrate,
and that M. de Chalusse’s former agent might
succeed in finding Pascal Ferailleur. M. Fortunat
must have received her letter by this time: he
would undoubtedly expect her on Tuesday, and it only
remained for her to invent some excuse which would
give her a couple of hours’ liberty without
awakening suspicion.
She rose early the next morning, and
had almost completed her toilette, when she heard
some one in the passage outside rapping at the door
of Madame Leon’s room. “Who’s
there?” inquired that worthy lady.
It was Justine, Madame de Fondege’s
maid, who answered in a pert voice, “Here is
a letter, madame, which has just been sent up
by the concierge. It is addressed to Madame Leon.
That is your name, is it not?”
Marguerite staggered as if she had
received a heavy blow. “My God! a letter
from the Marquis de Valorsay!” she thought.
It was evident that the estimable
lady was expecting this missive by the eagerness with
which she sprang out of bed and opened the door.
And Marguerite heard her say to the servant in her
sweetest voice: “A thousand thanks, my
child! Ah! this is a great relief, I have heard
from my brother-in-law at last. I recognize his
hand-writing.” And then the door closed
again.
Standing silent and motionless in
the middle of her room, Marguerite listened with that
feverish anxiety that excites the perceptive faculties
to the utmost degree. An inward voice, stronger
than reason, told her that this letter threatened
her happiness, her future, perhaps her life!
But how could she convince herself of the truth of
this presentiment? If she had followed her first
impulse, she would have rushed into Madame Leon’s
room and have snatched the letter from her hands.
But if she did this, she would betray herself, and
prove that she was not the dupe they supposed her
to be, and this supposition on the part of her enemies
constituted her only chance of salvation.
If she could only watch Madame Leon
as she read the letter, and gain some information
from the expression of her face; but this seemed impossible,
for the keyhole was blocked up by the key, which had
been left in the lock on the other side. Suddenly
a crack in the partition attracted her attention,
and finding that it extended through the wall, she
realized she might watch what was passing in the adjoining
room. So she approached the spot on tiptoe, and,
with bated breath, stooped and looked in.
In her impatience to learn the contents
of her letter, Madame Leon had not gone back to bed.
She had broken the seal, and was reading the missive,
standing barefooted in her night-dress, directly opposite
the little crevice. She read line after line,
and word after word, and her knitted brows and compressed
lips suggested deep concentration of thought mingled
with discontent. At last she shrugged her shoulders,
muttered a few inaudible words, and laid the open letter
upon the rickety chest of drawers, which, with two
chairs and a bed, constituted the entire furniture
of her apartment.
“My God!” exclaimed Marguerite,
with bated breath, “if she would only forget
it!”
But she did not forget it. She
began to dress, and when she had finished she read
the letter again, and then placed it carefully in one
of the drawers, which she locked, putting the key
in her pocket.
“I shall never know, then,”
thought Marguerite; “no, I shall never know.
But I must know — and I will!” she added
vehemently.
From that moment a firm determination
to obtain that letter took possession of her mind;
and so deeply was she occupied in seeking for some
means to surmount the difficulties which stood in her
way that she did not say a dozen words during breakfast.
“I must be a fool if I can’t find some
way of gaining possession of that letter,” she
said to herself again and again. “I’m
sure I could find in it the explanation of the abominable
intrigue which Pascal and I are the victims of.”
Happily, her preoccupation was not
remarked. Each person present was too deeply
engrossed in his or her own concerns to notice the
behavior of the others. Madame Leon’s mind
was occupied with the news she had just received;
and, besides, her attention was considerably attracted
by some partridges garnished with truffles, and a
bottle of Chateau-Laroze. For she was rather
fond of good living, the dear lady, as she confessed
herself, adding that no one is perfect. The General
talked of nothing but a certain pair of horses which
he was to look at that afternoon, and which he thought
of buying — being quite disgusted with job-masters,
so he declared. Besides, he expected to get the
animals at a bargain, as they were the property of
a young gentleman who had been led to commit certain
misdemeanors by his love of gambling and his passion
for a notorious woman who was addicted with an insatiable
desire for jewelry.
As for Madame de Fondege, her head
seemed to have been completely turned by the prospect
of the approaching fête at the Countess de Commarin’s.
She had only a fortnight left to make her preparations.
All the evening before, through part of the night,
and ever since she had been awake that morning, she
had been racking her brain to arrive at an effective
combination of colors and materials. And at the
cost of a terrible headache, she had at last conceived
one of those toilettes which are sure to make
a sensation, and which the newspaper reporters will
mention as noticeable for its “chic.”
“Picture to yourself,” she said, all ablaze
with enthusiasm, “picture to yourself a robe
of tea-flower silk, trimmed with bands of heavy holland-tinted
satin, thickly embroidered with flowers. A wide
flounce of Valenciennes at the bottom of the skirt.
Over this, I shall wear a tunic of pearl-gray crepe,
edged with a fringe of the various shades in the dress,
and forming a panier behind.”
But how much trouble, time and labor
must be expended before such an elaborate chef-d’oeuvre
could be completed! How many conferences with
the dressmaker, with the florist, and the embroiderer!
How many doubts, how many inevitable mistakes!
Ah! there was not a moment to lose! Madame de
Fondege, who was dressed to go out, and who had already
sent for a carriage, insisted that Mademoiselle Marguerite
should accompany her. And certainly, the General’s
wife deemed the proposal a seductive one. It
is a very fashionable amusement to run from one shop
to another, even when one cannot, or will not, buy.
It is a custom, which some noble ladies have imported
from America, to the despair of the poor shopkeepers.
And thus every fine afternoon, the swell shops are
filled to overflowing with richly-attired dames
and damsels, who ask to see all the new goods.
It is far more amusing than remaining at home.
And when they return to dinner in the evening, after
inspecting hundreds of yards of silk and satin, they
are very well pleased with themselves, for they have
not lost the day. Nor do the shrewdest always
return from these expeditions empty-handed. A
dozen gloves or a piece of lace can be hidden so easily
in the folds of a mantle!
And yet, to Madame de Fondege’s
great surprise, Marguerite declined the invitation.
“I have so many things to put in order,”
she added, feeling that an excuse was indispensable.
But Madame Leon, who had not the same
reasons as her dear child for wishing to remain at
home, kindly offered her services. She was acquainted
with several of the best shops, she declared, particularly
with the establishment of a dealer in laces, in the
Rue de Mulhouse, and thanks to an introduction from
her, Madame de Fondege could not fail to conclude
a very advantageous bargain there. “Very
well,” replied Madame de Fondege, “I will
take you with me, then; but make haste and dress while
I put on my bonnet.”
They left the breakfast-room at the
same time, closely followed by Mademoiselle Marguerite,
who was disturbed by a hope which she scarcely dared
confess to herself. With her forehead resting
against the wall, and her eye peering through the
tiny crack, she watched her governess change her dress,
throw a shawl over her shoulders, put on her best
bonnet, and, after a glance at the looking-glass, rush
from the room, exclaiming: “Here I am,
my dear countess. I’m ready.”
And a few moments afterward they left the house together.
As the outer door closed after them,
Marguerite’s brain whirled. If she were
not deceived, Madame Leon had left the key of the drawers
in the pocket of the dress she had just taken off.
So it was with a wildly throbbing heart that she opened
the communicating door and entered her “companion’s”
room. She hastily approached the bed on which
the dress was lying, and, with a trembling hand, she
began to search for the pocket. Fortune favored
her! The key was there. The letter was within
her reach. But she was about to do a deed against
which her whole nature revolted. To steal a key,
to force an article of furniture open, and violate
the secret of a private correspondence, these were
actions so repugnant to her sense of honor, and her
pride, that for some time she stood irresolute.
At last the instinct of self-preservation overpowered
her scruples. Was not her honor, and Pascal’s
honor also, at stake — as well as their mutual
love and happiness? “It would be folly to
hesitate.” she murmured. And with a firm
hand she placed the key in the lock.
The latter was out of order and the
drawer was only opened with difficulty. But there,
on some clothes which Madame Leon had not yet found
time to arrange, Marguerite saw the letter. She
eagerly snatched it up, unfolded it, and read:
“Dear Madame Leon — ” “Dear
me,” she muttered, “here is the name in
full. This is an indiscretion which will render
denial difficult.” And she resumed her perusal:
“Your letter, which I have just received, confirms
what my servants had already told me: that twice
during my absence — on Saturday evening and
Sunday morning — you called at my house to
see me.” So Mademoiselle Marguerite’s
penetration had served her well. All this talk
about anxious relatives had only been an excuse invented
by Madame Leon to enable her to absent herself whenever
occasion required. “I regret,” continued
the letter, “that you did not find me at home,
for I have instructions of the greatest importance
to give you. We are approaching the decisive moment.
I have formed a plan which will completely, and forever,
efface all remembrance of that cursed P. F., in case
any one condescended to think of him after the disgrace
we fastened upon him the other evening at the house
of Madame d’Argeles.” P. F. — these
initials of course meant Pascal Ferailleur. Then
he was innocent, and she held an undeniable, irrefutable
proof of his innocence in her hands. How coolly
and impudently Valorsay confessed his atrocious crime!
“A bold stroke is in contemplation which, if
no unfortunate and well-nigh impossible accident occur,
will throw the girl into my arms.” Marguerite
shuddered. “The girl” referred to
her, of course. “Thanks to the assistance
of one of my friends,” added the letter “I
can place this proud damsel in a perilous, terribly
perilous position, from which she cannot possibly extricate
herself unaided. But, just as she gives herself
up for lost, I shall interpose. I shall save
her; and it will be strange if gratitude does not
work the necessary miracle in my favor. The plan
is certain to succeed. Still, it will be all
the better if the physician who attended M. de C —
in his last moments, and whom you spoke to me about
(Dr. Jodon, if I remember rightly), will consent to
lend us a helping hand. What kind of a man is
he? If he is accessible to the seductive influence
of a few thousand francs, I shall consider the business
as good as concluded. Your conduct up to the
present time has been a chef-d’oeuvre, for which
you shall be amply compensated. You have cause
to know that I am not ungrateful. Let the F’s
continue their intrigues, and even pretend to favor
them. I am not afraid of these people. I
understand their game perfectly, and know why they
wish my little one to marry their son. But when
they become troublesome, I shall crush them like glass.
In spite of these explanations, which I have just given
you for your guidance, it is very necessary that I
should see you. I shall look for you on Tuesday
afternoon, between three and four o’clock.
Above all, don’t fail to bring me the desired
information respecting Dr. Jodon. I am, my dear
madame, devotedly yours — V.”
Below ran a postscript which read as follows:
“When you come on Tuesday bring this letter with
you. We will burn it together. Don’t
imagine that I distrust you — but there is
nothing so dangerous as letters.”
For some time Marguerite stood, stunned
and appalled by the Marquis de Valorsay’s audacity,
and by the language of this letter, which was at once
so obscure and so clear, every line of it threatening
her future. The reality surpassed her worst apprehensions,
but realizing the gravity of the situation, she shook
off the torpor stealing over her. She felt that
every second was precious, and that she must act, and
act at once. But what should she do? Simply
return the letter to its place, and continue to act
the rôle of a dupe, as if nothing had happened?
No; that must not be. It would be madness not
to seize this flagrant proof of the Marquis de Valorsay’s
infamy. But on the other hand, if she kept the
letter, Madame Leon would immediately discover its
loss, and an explanation would be unavoidable.
M. de Valorsay would be worsted, but not annihilated,
and the plans which made the physician’s intervention
a necessity would never be revealed. She thought
of hastening to her friend the old magistrate; but
he lived a long way off, and time was pressing.
Besides she might not find him at home. Then she
thought of going to a notary, to a judge. She
would show them the letter, and they could take a
copy of it. But no — this would do no
good — the marquis could still deny it.
She was becoming desperate, and was accusing herself
of stupidity, when a sudden inspiration illumined her
mind, turning night into day, as it were. “Oh,
Pascal, we are saved!” she exclaimed. And
without pausing to deliberate any longer, she threw
a mantle over her shoulders, hastily tied on her bonnet,
and hurried from the house, without saying a word
to any one.
Unfortunately she was not acquainted
with this part of Paris, and on reaching the Rue Pigalle
she was at a loss for her way. Unwilling to waste
any more time, she hastily entered a grocer’s
shop at the corner of the Rue Pigalle and the Rue
Notre Dame de Lorette, and anxiously inquired:
“Do you know any photographer in this neighborhood,
monsieur?”
Her agitation made this question seem
so singular that the grocer looked at her closely
for a moment, as if to make sure that she was not
jesting. “You have only to go down the Rue
Notre Dame de Lorette,” he replied, “and
on the left-hand side, at the foot of the hill, you
will find the photographer Carjat.”
“Thank you.”
The grocer stepped to the door to
watch her. “That girl’s certainly
light-headed,” he thought.
Her demeanor was really so extraordinary
that it attracted the attention of the passers-by.
She saw this, and slackening her pace, tried to become
more composed. At the spot the grocer had indicated,
she perceived several show frames filled with photographs
hanging on either side of a broad, open gateway, above
which ran the name, “E. Carjat.”
She went in, and seeing a man standing at the door
of an elegant pavilion on the right-hand side of a
large courtyard, she approached him, and asked for
his employer.
“He is here,” replied
the man. “Does madame come for a photograph?”
“Yes.”
“Then will madame be so
kind as to pass in. She will not be obliged to
wait long. There are only four or five persons
before her.”
Four or five persons! How long
would she be obliged to wait? — half an hour — two
hours? She had not the slightest idea. But
she did know that she had not a second to lose,
that Madame Leon might return at any moment, and find
the letter missing; and, to crown all, she remembered
now that she had not even locked the drawer again.
“I cannot wait,” she said, imperiously.
“I must speak to M. Carjat at once.”
“But — ”
“At once, I tell you. Go and tell him that
he must come.”
Her tone was so commanding, and there
was so much authority in her glance, that the servant
hesitated no longer. He ushered her into a little
sitting-room, and said, “If madame
will take a seat, I will call monsieur.”
She sank on to a chair, for her limbs
were failing her. She was beginning to realize
the strangeness of the step she had taken — to
fear the result it might lead to — and to
be astonished at her own boldness. But she had
no time to prepare what she wished to say, for a man
of five-and-thirty, wearing a mustache and imperial,
and clad in a velvet coat, entered the room, and bowing
with an air of surprise, exclaimed: “You
desire to speak with me, madame?”
“I have a great favor to ask of you, monsieur.”
“Of me?”
She drew M. de Valorsay’s letter
from her pocket, and, showing it to the photographer,
she said, “I have come to you, monsieur, to ask
you to photograph this letter — but at once — before
me — and quickly — very quickly.
The honor of two persons is imperilled by each moment
I lose here.”
Mademoiselle Marguerite’s embarrassment
was extreme. Her cheeks were crimson, and she
trembled like a leaf. Still her attitude was proud,
generous enthusiasm glowed in her dark eyes, and her
tone of voice revealed the serenity of a lofty soul
ready to dare anything for a just and noble cause.
This striking contrast — this struggle between
girlish timidity and a lover’s virgil energy,
endowed her with a strange and powerful charm, which
the photographer made no attempt to resist. Unusual
as was the request, he did not hesitate. “I
am ready to do what you desire, madame,”
he replied, bowing again.
“Oh! monsieur, how can I ever thank you?”
He did not stop to listen to her thanks.
Not wishing to return to the reception-room, where
five or six clients were impatiently awaiting their
turn, he called one of his subordinates, and ordered
him to bring the necessary apparatus at once.
While he was speaking, Mademoiselle Marguerite paused;
but, as soon as his instructions were concluded, she
remarked: “Perhaps you are too hasty, sir.
You have not allowed me to explain; and perhaps what
I desire is impossible. I came on the impulse
of the moment, without any knowledge on the subject.
Before you set to work, I must know if what you can
do will answer my purpose.”
“Speak, madame.”
“Will the copy you obtain be
precisely like the original in every particular?”
“In every particular.”
“The writing will be the same — exactly
the same?”
“Absolutely the same.”
“So like, that if one of your
photographs should be presented to the person who
wrote this letter — ”
“He could no more deny his handwriting
than he could if some one handed him the letter itself.”
“And the operation will leave no trace on the
original?”
“None.”
A smile of triumph played upon Mademoiselle
Marguerite’s lips. It was as she had thought;
the defensive plan which she had suddenly conceived
was a good one. “One more question, sir,”
she resumed. “I am only a poor, ignorant
girl: excuse me, and give me the benefit of your
knowledge. This letter will be returned to its
author to-morrow, and he will burn it. But afterward,
in case of any difficulty — in case of a law-suit — or
in case it should be necessary for me to prove certain
things which one might establish by means of this
letter, would one of your photographs be admitted
as evidence?”
The photographer did not answer for
a moment. Now he understood Mademoiselle Marguerite’s
motive, and the importance she attached to a facsimile.
But this imparted an unexpected gravity to the service
he was called upon to perform. He therefore wished
some time for reflection, and he scrutinized Mademoiselle
Marguerite as if he were trying to read her very soul.
Was it possible that this young girl, with such a pure
and noble brow, and with such frank, honest eyes, could
be meditating any cowardly, dishonorable act?
No, he could not believe it. In whom, or in what,
could he trust if such a countenance deceived him?
“My facsimile would certainly be admitted as
evidence,” he replied at last; “and this
would not be the first time that the decision of a
court has depended on proofs which have been photographed
by me.”
Meanwhile, his assistant had returned,
bringing the necessary apparatus with him. When
all was ready, the photographer asked her, “Will
you give me the letter, madame?”
She hesitated for a second — only
for a second. The man’s honest, kindly
face told her that he would not betray her, that he
would rather give her assistance. So she handed
him the Marquis de Valorsay’s letter, saying,
with melancholy dignity, “It is my happiness
and my future that I place in your hands — and
I have no fears.”
He read her thoughts, and understood
that she either dared not ask for a pledge of secrecy,
or else that she thought it unnecessary. He took
pity on her, and his last doubt fled. “I
shall read this letter, madame,” said he,
“but I am the only person who will read it.
I give you my word on that! No one but myself
will see the proofs.”
Greatly moved, she offered him her
hand, and simply said, “Thanks; I am more than
repaid.”
To obtain an absolutely perfect facsimile
of a letter is a delicate and sometimes lengthy operation.
However, at the end of about twenty minutes, the photographer
possessed two negatives that promised him perfect
proofs. He looked at them with a satisfied air;
and then returning the letter to Mademoiselle Marguerite,
he said, “In less than three days the facsimiles
will be ready, madame; and if you will tell me
to what address I ought to send them — ”
She trembled on hearing these words,
and quickly answered, “Don’t send them,
sir — keep them carefully. Great heavens!
all would be lost if it came to the knowledge of any
one. I will send for them, or come myself.”
And, feeling the extent of her obligation, she added,
“But I will not go without introducing myself — I
am Mademoiselle Marguerite de Chalusse.”
And, thereupon, she went off, leaving the photographer
surprised at the adventure and dazzled by his strange
visitor’s beauty.
Rather more than an hour had elapsed
since Marguerite left M. de Fondege’s house.
“How time flies!” she murmured, quickening
her pace as much as she could without exciting remark — “how
time flies!” But, hurried as she was, she stopped
and spent five minutes at a shop in the Rue Notre
Dame de Lorette where she purchased some black ribbon
and a few other trifles. How else could she explain
and justify her absence, if the servants, who had
probably discovered she had gone out, chanced to speak
of it?
But her heart throbbed as if it would
burst as she ascended the General’s staircase,
and anxiety checked her breathing as she rang the
bell. “What if Madame de Fondege and Madame
Leon had returned, and the abstraction of the letter
been discovered!” Fortunately, Madame de Fondege
required more than an hour to purchase the materials
for the elaborate toilette she had dreamt of.
The ladies were still out, and Mademoiselle Marguerite
found everything in the same condition as she had
left it. She carefully placed the letter in the
drawer again, locked it, and put the key in the pocket
of Madame Leon’s dress. Then she breathed
freely once more; and, for the first time in six days,
she felt something very like joy in her heart.
Now she had no fear of the Marquis de Valorsay.
She had him in her power. He would destroy his
letter the next day, and think that he was annihilating
all proofs of his infamy. Not so. At the
decisive moment, at the very moment of his triumph,
she would produce the photograph of this letter, and
crush him. And she — only a young girl — had
outwitted this consummate scoundrel! “I
have not been unworthy of Pascal,” she said to
herself, with a flash of pride.
However, her nature was not one of
those weak ones which are become intoxicated by the
first symptom of success, and then relax in their
efforts. When her excitement had abated a little,
she was inclined to disparage rather than to exaggerate
the advantage she had gained. What she desired
was a complete, startling, incontestable victory.
It was not enough to prove Valorsay’s guilt — she
was resolved to penetrate his designs, to discover
why he pursued her so desperately. And, though
she felt that she possessed a formidable weapon of
defence, she could not drive away her gloomy forebodings
when she thought of the threats contained in the marquis’s
letter. “Thanks to the assistance of one
of my friends,” he wrote, “I can place
this proud girl in a perilous, terribly perilous,
position, from which she cannot possibly extricate
herself unaided.”
These words persistently lingered
in Mademoiselle Marguerite’s mind. What
was the danger hanging over her? whence would it come?
and in what form? What abominable machination
might she not expect from the villain who had deliberately
dishonored Pascal? How would he attack her?
Would he strive to ruin her reputation, or did he
intend to forcibly abduct her? Would he attempt
to decoy her into a trap where she would be subjected
to the insults of the vilest wretches? A thousand
frightful memories of the time when she was an apprentice
drove her nearly frantic. “I will never
go out unarmed,” she thought, “and woe
to the man who raises his hand against me!”
The vagueness of the threat increased
her fears. No one is courageous enough to confront
an unknown, mysterious, and always imminent danger
without sometimes faltering. Nor was this all.
The marquis was not her only enemy. She had the
Fondege family to dread — these dangerous
hypocrites, who had taken her to their home so that
they might ruin her the more surely. M. de Valorsay
wrote that he had no fears of the Fondeges — that
he understood their little game. What was their
little game? No doubt they were resolved that
she should become their son’s wife, even if
they were obliged to use force to win her consent.
At this thought a sudden terror seized her soul, so
full of peace and hope an instant before. When
she was attacked, would she have time to produce and
use the facsimile of Valorsay’s letter?
“I must reveal my secret to a friend — to
a trusty friend — who will avenge me!”
she muttered.
Fortunately she had a friend in whom
she could safely confide — the old magistrate
who had given her such proofs of sympathy. She
felt that she needed the advice of a riper experience
than her own, and the thought of consulting him at
once occurred to her. She was alone; she had no
spy to fear; and it would be folly not to profit by
the few moments of liberty that remained. So
she drew her writing-case from her trunk, and, after
barricading her door to prevent a surprise, she wrote
her friend an account of the events which had taken
place since their last interview. She told him
everything with rare precision and accuracy of detail,
sending him a copy of Valorsay’s letter, and
informing him that, in case any misfortune befell
her, he could obtain the facsimiles from Carjat.
She finished her letter, but did not seal it.
“If anything should happen before I have an
opportunity to post it, I will add a postscript,”
she said to herself.
She had made all possible haste, fearing
that Madame de Fondege and Madame Leon might return
at any moment. But this was truly a chimerical
apprehension. It was nearly six o’clock
when the two shoppers made their appearance, wearied
with the labors of the day, but in fine spirits.
Besides purchasing every requisite for that wonderful
costume of hers, the General’s wife had found
some laces of rare beauty, which she had secured for
the mere trifle of four thousand francs. “It
was one of those opportunities one ought always to
profit by,” she said, as she displayed her purchase.
“Besides, it is the same with lace as with diamonds,
you should purchase them when you can — then
you have them. It isn’t an outlay — it’s
an investment.” Subtle reasoning that has
cost many a husband dear!
On her side, Madame Leon proudly showed
her dear young lady a very pretty present which Madame
de Fondege had given her. “So money is no
longer lacking in this household,” thought Mademoiselle
Marguerite, all the more confirmed in her suspicions.
The General came in a little later,
accompanied by a friend, and Marguerite soon discovered
that the worthy man had spent the day as profitably
as his wife. He too was quite tired out; and he
had reason to be fatigued. First, he had purchased
the horses belonging to the ruined spendthrift, and
he had paid five thousand francs for them, a mere
trifle for such animals. Less than an hour after
the purchase he had refused almost double that amount
from a celebrated connoisseur in horse-flesh, M. de
Breulh-Faverlay. This excellent speculation had
put him in such good humor that he had been unable
to resist the temptation of purchasing a beautiful
saddle-horse, which they let him have for a hundred
louis. He had not been foolish, for he was
sure that he could sell the animal again at an advance
of a thousand francs whenever he wished to do so.
“So,” remarked his friend, “if you
bought such a horse every day, you would make three
hundred and sixty-five thousand francs a year.”
Was this only a jest — one
of those witticisms which people who boast of wonderful
bargains must expect to parry, or had the remark a
more serious meaning? Marguerite could not determine.
One thing is certain, the General did not lose his
temper, but gayly continued his account of the way
in which he had spent his time. Having purchased
the horses, his next task was to find a carriage,
and he had heard of a barouche which a Russian prince
had ordered but didn’t take, so that the builder
was willing to sell it at less than cost price; and
to recoup this worthy man, the General had purchased
a brougham as well. He had, moreover, hired stabling
in the Rue Pigalle, only a few steps from the house,
and he expected a coachman and a groom the following
morning.
“And all this will cost us less
than the miserable vehicle we have been hiring by
the year,” observed Madame de Fondege, gravely.
“Oh, I know what I say. I’ve counted
the cost. What with gratuities and extras, it
costs us now fully a thousand francs a month, and three
horses and a coachman won’t cost you more.
And what a difference! I shall no longer be obliged
to blush for the skinny horses the stable-keeper sends
me, nor to endure the insolence of his men. The
first outlay frightened me a little; but that is made
now, and I am delighted. We will save it in something
else.”
“In laces, no doubt,”
thought Mademoiselle Marguerite. She was intensely
exasperated, and on regaining her chamber she said
to herself, for the tenth time, “What do they
take me for? Do they think me an idiot to flaunt
the millions they have stolen from my father — that
they have stolen from me — before my eyes
in this fashion? A common thief would take care
not to excite suspicion by a foolish expenditure of
the fruits of his knavery, but they — they
have lost their senses.”
Madame Leon was already in bed, and
when Mademoiselle Marguerite was satisfied that she
was asleep, she took her letter from her trunk, and
added this post-script: “P. S. — It
is impossible to retain the shadow of a doubt, M.
and Madame de Fondege have spent certainly twenty thousand
francs to-day. This audacity must arise from a
conviction that no proofs of the crime they have committed
exist. Still they continue to talk to me about
their son, Lieutenant Gustave. He will be presented
to me to-morrow. To-morrow, also, between three
and four, I shall be at the house of a man who can
perhaps discover Pascal’s hiding-place for me, — the
house of M. Isidore Fortunat. I hope to make my
escape easily enough, for at that same hour, Madame
Leon has an appointment with the Marquis de Valorsay.”