During the last twenty-four hours,
Mechinet had changed so much, that his sisters recognized
him no longer. Immediately after Dionysia’s
departure, they had come to him, hoping to hear at
last what was meant by that mysterious interview;
but at the first word he had cried out with a tone
of voice which frightened his sisters to death, —
“That is none of your business!
That is nobody’s business!” and he had
remained alone, quite overcome by his adventure, and
dreaming of the means to make good his promise without
ruining himself. That was no easy matter.
When the decisive moment arrived,
he discovered that he would never be able to get the
note into M. de Boiscoran’s hands, without being
caught by that lynx-eyed M. Galpin: as the letter
was burning in his pocket, he saw himself compelled,
after long hesitation, to appeal for help to the man
who waited on Jacques, — to Trumence, in fine.
The latter was, after all, a good enough fellow; his
only besetting sin being unconquerable laziness, and
his only crime in the eyes of the law perpetual vagrancy.
He was attached to Mechinet, who upon former occasions,
when he was in jail, had given him some tobacco, or
a little money to buy a glass of wine. He made
therefore no objection, when the clerk asked him to
give a letter to M. de Boiscoran, and to bring back
an answer. He acquitted himself, moreover, faithfully
and honestly of his commission. But, because
every thing had gone well once, it did not follow that
Mechinet felt quite at peace. Besides being tormented
by the thought that he had betrayed his duty, he felt
wretched in being at the mercy of an accomplice.
How easily might he not be betrayed! A slight
indiscretion, an awkward blunder, an unlucky accident,
might do it. What would become of him then?
He would lose his place and all his
other employments, one by one. He would lose
confidence and consideration. Farewell to all
ambitious dreams, all hopes of wealth, all dreams
of an advantageous marriage. And still, by an
odd contradiction, Mechinet did not repent what he
had done, and felt quite ready to do it over again.
He was in this state of mind when the old nurse brought
him Dionysia’s letter.
“What, again?” he exclaimed.
And when he had read the few lines, he replied, —
“Tell your mistress I will be
there!” But in his heart he thought some untoward
event must have happened.
The little garden-gate was half-open:
he had only to push it to enter. There was no
moon; but the night was clear, and at a short distance
from him, under the trees, he recognized Dionysia,
and went towards her.
“Pardon me, sir,” she
said, “for having dared to send for you.”
Mechinet’s anxiety vanished
instantly. He thought no longer of his strange
position. His vanity was flattered by the confidence
which this young lady put in him, whom he knew very
well as the noblest, the most beautiful, and the richest
heiress in the whole country.
“You were quite right to send
for me, madam,” he replied, “if I can be
of any service to you.”
In a few words she had told him all;
and, when she asked his advice, he replied, —
“I am entirely of M. Folgat’s
opinion, and think that grief and isolation begin
to have their effect upon M. de Boiscoran’s mind.”
“Oh, that thought is maddening!” murmured
the poor girl.
“I think, as M. Magloire does,
that M. de Boiscoran, by his silence, only makes his
situation much worse. I have a proof of that.
M. Galpin, who, at first, was all doubt and anxiety,
is now quite reassured. The attorney-general
has written him a letter, in which he compliments his
energy.”
“And then.”
“Then we must induce M. de Boiscoran
to speak. I know very well that he is firmly
resolved not to speak; but if you were to write to
him, since you can write to him” —
“A letter would be useless.”
“But” —
“Useless, I tell you. But I know a means.”
“You must use it promptly, madam:
don’t lose a moment. There is no time.”
The night was clear, but not clear
enough for the clerk to see how very pale Dionysia
was.
“Well, then, I must see M. de
Boiscoran: I must speak to him.”
She expected the clerk to start, to
cry out, to protest. Far from it: he said
in the quietest tone, —
“To be sure; but how?”
“Blangin the keeper, and his
wife, keep their places only because they give them
a support. Why might I not offer them, in return
for an interview with M. de Boiscoran, the means to
go and live in the country?”
“Why not?” said the clerk.
And in a lower voice, replying to
the voice of his conscience, he went on, —
“The jail in Sauveterre is not
at all like the police-stations and prisons of larger
towns. The prisoners are few in number; they are
hardly guarded. When the doors are shut, Blangin
is master within.”
“I will go and see him to-morrow,” declared
Dionysia.
There are certain slopes on which
you must glide down. Having once yielded to Dionysia’s
suggestions, Mechinet had, unconsciously, bound himself
to her forever.
“No: do not go there, madam,”
he said. “You could not make Blangin believe
that he runs no danger; nor could you sufficiently
arouse his cupidity. I will speak to him myself.”
“O sir!” exclaimed Dionysia, “how
can I ever?” —
“How much may I offer him?” asked the
clerk.
“Whatever you think proper — any thing.”
“Then, madam, I will bring you
an answer to-morrow, here, and at the same hour.”
And he went away, leaving Dionysia
so buoyed up by hope, that all the evening, and the
next day, the two aunts and the marchioness, neither
of whom was in the secret, asked each other incessantly, —
“What is the matter with the child?”
She was thinking, that, if the answer
was favorable, ere twenty-four hours had gone by,
she would see Jacques; and she kept saying to herself, —
“If only Mechinet is punctual!”
He was so. At ten o’clock
precisely, he pushed open the little gate, just as
the night before, and said at once, —
“It is all right!”
Dionysia was so terribly excited, that she had to
lean against a tree.
“Blangin agrees,” the
clerk went on. “I promised him sixteen thousand
francs. Perhaps that is rather much?”
“It is very little.”
“He insists upon having them in gold.”
“He shall have it.”
“Finally, he makes certain conditions
with regard to the interview, which will appear rather
hard to you.”
The young girl had quite recovered by this time.
“What are they?”
“Blangin is taking all possible
precautions against detection, although he is quite
prepared for the worst. He has arranged it this
way: To-morrow evening, at six o’clock,
you will pass by the jail. The door will stand
open, and Blangin’s wife, whom you know very
well, as she has formerly been in your service, will
be standing in the door. If she does not speak
to you, you keep on: something has happened.
If she does speak to you, go up to her, you, quite
alone, and she will show you into a small room which
adjoins her own. There you will stay till Blangin,
perhaps at a late hour, thinks he can safely take you
to M. de Boiscoran’s cell. When the interview
is over, you come back into the little room, where
a bed will be ready for you, and you spend the night
there; for this is the hardest part of it: you
cannot leave the prison till next day.”
This was certainly terrible; still,
after a moment’s reflection, Dionysia said, —
“Never mind! I accept. Tell Blangin,
M. Mechinet, that it is all right.”
That Dionysia should accept all the
conditions of Blangin the jailer was perfectly natural;
but to obtain M. de Chandore’s consent was a
much more difficult task. The poor girl understood
this so well, that, for the first time in her life,
she felt embarrassed in her grandfather’s presence.
She hesitated, she prepared her little speech, and
she selected carefully her words. But in spite
of all her skill, in spite of all the art with which
she managed to present her strange request, M. de
Chandore had no sooner understood her project than
he exclaimed, —
“Never, never, never!”
Perhaps in his whole life the old
gentleman had never expressed himself in so positive
a manner. His brow had never looked so dark.
Usually, when his granddaughter had a petition, his
lips might say, “No;” but his eyes always
said, “Yes.”
“Impossible!” he repeated,
and in a tone of voice which seemed to admit of no
reply.
Surely, in all these painful events,
he had not spared himself, and he had so far done
for Dionysia all that she could possibly expect of
him. Her will had been his will. As she
had prompted, he had said, “Yes,” or “No.”
What more could he have said or done?
Without telling him what she was going
to do with it, Dionysia had asked him for twenty thousand
francs, and he had given them to her, however big
the sum might be everywhere, however immense in a small
town like Sauveterre. He was quite ready to give
her as much again, or twice as much, without asking
any more questions.
But for Dionysia to leave her home
one evening at six o’clock, and not to return
to it till the next morning —
“That I cannot permit,” he repeated.
But for Dionysia to spend a night
in the Sauveterre jail, in order to have an interview
with her betrothed, who was accused of incendiarism
and murder; to remain there all night, alone, absolutely
at the mercy of the jailer, a hard, coarse, covetous
man —
“That I will never permit,”
exclaimed the old gentleman once more.
Dionysia remained calm, and let the
storm pass. When her grandfather became silent,
she said, —
“But if I must?”
M. de Chandore shrugged his shoulders. She repeated
in a louder tone, —
“If I must, in order to decide
Jacques to abandon this system that will ruin him,
to induce him to speak before the investigation is
completed?”
“That is not your business, my child,”
said the old gentleman.
“Oh!”
“That is the business of his
mother, the Marchioness of Boiscoran. Whatever
Blangin agrees to venture for your sake, he will do
as well for her sake. Let the marchioness go
and spend the night at the jail. I agree to that.
Let her see her son. That is her duty.”
“But surely she will never shake Jacques’s
resolution.”
“And you think you have more influence over
him than his mother?”
“It is not the same thing, dear papa.”
“Never mind!”
This “never mind” of Grandpapa
Chandore was as positive as his “impossible;”
but he had begun to discuss the question, and to discuss
means to listen to arguments on the other side.
“Do not insist, my dear child,”
he said again. “My mind is made up; and
I assure you” —
“Don’t say so, papa,” said the young
girl.
And her attitude was so determined,
and her voice so firm, that the old gentleman was
quite overwhelmed for a moment.
“But, if I am not willing,” he said.
“You will consent, dear papa,
you will certainly not force your little granddaughter,
who loves you so dearly, to the painful necessity of
disobeying you for the first time in her life.”
“Because, for the first time
in her life I am not doing what my granddaughter wants
me to do?”
“Dear papa, let me tell you.”
“Rather listen to me, poor child,
and let me show you to what dangers, to what misfortunes,
you expose yourself. To go and spend a night at
this prison would be risking, understand me well, your
honor, — that tender, delicate honor which
is tarnished by a breath, which involves the happiness
and the peace of your whole life.”
“But Jacques’s honor and life are at stake.”
“Poor imprudent girl! How
do you know but he would be the very first to blame
you cruelly for such a step?”
“He?”
“Men are made so: the most perfect devotion
irritates them at times.”
“Be it so. I would rather
endure Jacques’s unjust reproaches than the
idea of not having done my duty.”
M. de Chandore began to despair.
“And if I were to beg you, Dionysia,
instead of commanding. If your old grandfather
were to beseech you on his knees to abandon your fatal
project.”
“You would cause me fearful
pain, dear papa: but it would be all in vain;
for I must resist your prayers, as I must resist your
orders.”
“Inexorable!” cried the
old gentleman. “She is immovable!”
And suddenly changing his tone, he cried, —
“But, after all, I am master here.”
“Dear papa, pray!”
“And since nothing can move
you, I will speak to Mechinet, I will let Blangin
know my will.”
Dionysia, turning as pale as death,
but with burning eyes, drew back a step, and said, —
“If you do that, grandpapa,
if you destroy my last hope” —
“Well?”
“I swear to you by the sacred
memory of my mother, I will be in a convent to-morrow,
and you will never see me again in your life, not
even if I should die, which would certainly soon” —
M. de Chandore, raising his hands
to heaven, and with an accent of genuine despair,
exclaimed, —
“Ah, my God! Are these
our children? And is this what is in store for
us old people? We have spent a lifetime in watching
over them; we have submissively gratified all their
fancies; they have been our greatest anxiety, and
our sweetest hope; we have given them our life day
by day, and we would not hesitate to give them our
life’s blood drop by drop; they are every thing
to us, and we imagine they love us — poor
fools that we are! One fine day, a man goes by,
a careless, thoughtless man, with a bright eye and
a ready tongue, and it is all over. Our child
is no longer our own; our child no longer knows us.
Go, old man, and die in your corner.”
Overwhelmed by his grief, the old
man staggered and sank into a chair, as an old oak,
cut by the woodman’s axe, trembles and falls.
“Ah, this is fearful!”
murmured Dionysia. “What you say, grandpapa,
is too fearful. How can you doubt me?”
She had knelt down. She was weeping;
and her hot tears fell upon the old gentleman’s
hands. He started up as he felt them on his icy-cold
hand; and, making one more effort, he said, —
“Poor, poor child! And
suppose Jacques is guilty, and, when he sees you,
confesses his crime, what then?”
Dionysia shook her head.
“That is impossible,”
she said; “and still, even if it were so, I ought
to be punished as much as he is; for I know, if he
had asked me, I should have acted in concert with
him.”
“She is mad!” exclaimed
M. de Chandore, falling back into his chair.
“She is mad!”
But he was overcome; and the next
day, at five in the afternoon, his heart torn by unspeakable
grief, he went down the steep street with his daughter
on his arm. Dionysia had chosen her simplest and
plainest dress; and the little bag she carried on
her arm contained not sixteen but twenty thousand
francs. As a matter of course, it had been necessary
to take the marchioness into their confidence; but
neither she, nor the Misses Lavarande, nor M. Folgat,
had raised an objection. Down to the prison,
grandfather and grandchild had not exchanged a word;
but, when they reached it, Dionysia said, —
“I see Mrs. Blangin at the door: let us
be careful.”
They came nearer. Mrs. Blangin saluted them.
“Come, it is time,” said
the young girl. “Till to-morrow, dear papa!
Go home quickly, and be not troubled about me.”
Then joining the keeper’s wife, she disappeared
inside the prison.