CARMEN KEEPS HER WORD.
“I will watch the enemy,”
Carmen had said to Goutran, when they parted.
The enemy was the man who had taken advantage of her
inexperience, and induced her to call him father.
Why had she not realized what she was doing sooner?
She had, however, shown her womanly courage by the
confession she had made to Goutran, and now she found
herself without shield or buckler in opposition to
the man under whose roof she lived. She resolved
to defend Goutran and all those he loved. Woe
to whomsoever should attack them.
That same morning, Laisangy asked
to be received by her. She was quite ready for
another quarrel, but Laisangy was amiable and smiling,
for he had at that moment heard from Benedetto that
his vengeance was near being accomplished.
Strangely enough this man Laisangy
was in deadly terror of Monte-Cristo, and fully estimated
the almost superhuman power of this wonderful man.
But when Benedetto appeared before him and he found
that there was one villain greater than himself, he
was encouraged and comforted. What joy it would
be to torture, without danger to himself, the soul
of him whom he had so feared.
Danglars had given himself, soul and
body, to Benedetto, as in legends a man abandons himself
to a demon. He smiled as he entered Carmen’s
room.
“What do you want of me?” she said, coldly.
“You have not forgotten that we give a grand
reception this evening.”
“This evening! Surely you mistake ”
“No. This is your own list of invitations
that I hold in my hand.”
Carmen had forgotten entirely that
these invitations had been sent out a week before.
Laisangy looked at her closely.
“I fancied,” he said, “that this
entertainment had escaped your memory.”
“I certainly shall not appear!” answered
Carmen.
The banker bit his lips, this was
precisely what he feared. He began to argue the
matter gently. And she, in her turn, began to
reflect. She saw on the list the name of Goutran,
which she had written with a breaking heart.
After all, had she the right to desert her post?
“Very well,” she said, “I will be
present.”
Laisangy was astonished at his prompt success.
“Yes,” she repeated, “on
condition that you do not once call me your daughter.”
“What shall I call you?” stammered Laisangy.
“Whatever you choose, only take care that you
do not disobey me!”
In fact, the banker cared little upon
this point. He had obtained what he wanted.
His fête would be made brilliant by Carmen’s
presence. He did not retire, however, and the
girl saw that he had something else to say.
“What more do you want?” she asked, impatiently.
“My dear child,” began
Laisangy, with some pomposity, “you have, doubtless,
ere this discovered that matters of finance are composed
of a thousand details more important than those of
diplomacy.”
“I have certainly learned that
swindling is a troublesome business,” she said
through her teeth, and with intense disdain.
Laisangy pretended not to hear this.
“To-night,” he said, with
perfect sang froid, “we leave the Tuileries.”
He had counted on the effect of these
words. Carmen shrugged her shoulders, which certainly
was not respectful to the Emperor.
“And I am greatly disturbed,”
continued the banker. “It may be necessary
for me to leave for an hour. I shall pretend indisposition,
which may be attributed to the heat, and while I am
supposed to be recovering in my own room, I can go
out and attend to my affairs.”
“You may be obliged to go out, then?”
“Certainly; did you not understand?”
“Why do you not tell me that you wish to go
to the Bourse?”
Laisangy was annoyed. He saw
that Carmen was on the qui vive, and Carmen
said to herself: “What does this mean?
He is lying, and some infernal machination is on foot.
I must learn what it is.”
She replied more gently:
“But I care little about these
matters; the Bourse does not interest me. At
what hour did you say you might be called away?”
“About midnight.”
“Very good. Then you would
like me, I suppose, to be very anxious about you,
and urge you to withdraw?”
“Precisely!” answered
the banker, much pleased. “Ah, Carmen, how
well you understand me. Had you chosen, we two
would have governed France!”
“Not I!” answered Carmen,
abruptly. “We are companions, not accomplices.
I do not understand you, and I do not propose to aid
you in your infamy.”
At this word Laisangy started, and
thus confirmed the suspicions of Carmen, who was watching
him.
He took her hand, and she withdrew
it quickly. He had obtained what he desired,
and was now ready to depart.
“What is he planning?”
said Carmen to herself. “Is it really some
financial operation, which, of course, I care nothing
about, or is it ?”
Goutran’s name rose to her lips.
All day she watched him, but saw nothing to justify
her in her belief, and yet she knew that her woman’s
instinct had not played her false. Over and over
again she was tempted to retract her promise, for
the idea of this fête was intolerable to her.
She thought of Goutran, and remembered that she might
save him.
The evening came, and Carmen’s
maid could hardly believe it was she who replied:
“What dress, did you say? I don’t
care in the least!”
Nevertheless, when Carmen appeared
in the salons there was an audible murmur of admiration.
In her white dress, with a few flowers in her beautiful
hair, Carmen had never been more beautiful. She
moved slowly through the rooms, looking for Goutran,
who was not there, as we know.
Little did Carmen care for these men
and women, who were the tools and slaves of the man
of December. Laisangy was radiant, however.
Carmen shivered whenever she looked at him. It
seemed to her that he was in a state of unusual excitement.
The orchestra was playing delightfully,
and lacqueys were announcing the first names of the
empire counts, and barons, and princes.
Suddenly a new name was heard:
“Mohammed-Ben-Omar!”
And a magnificent personage, wearing
the Legion of Honor on his white bournous, entered
the room. Every one turned to look at him.
He was a magnificent looking Arab. With a gravity
that was truly oriental, and with his face half concealed
in the folds of his mantle, his brown hands folded
on his breast, Mohammed-Ben-Omar advanced.
Laisangy went forward to meet him.
In fact, he could hardly believe in his good fortune.
Mohammed-Ben-Omar belonged to that class of Algerians
who, listening to the counsel of French financiers,
always cherished the project of making Algeria into
a veritable El Dorado, and had now come to France
to lend the support of his name and authority to some
one of the speculations built on the sands of the
desert, of which the Tuileries people were so fond.
Laisangy, learning of his arrival
in Paris, had hastened to send him an invitation,
but had hardly hoped to see him. He was, therefore,
more than usually civil.
Ben-Omar replied to his courtesies
only by carrying his hand to his heart and then to
his forehead, in the recognized Mussulman manner.
He did not speak one word of French, and yet, when
Carmen passed, he said “Beautiful!” with
a guttural intonation.
“My daughter, sir!” answered the banker,
with pride.
“Beautiful! beautiful!” repeated the Mohammedan.
Laisangy signed to Omar to accompany
him to the group where Carmen was talking. There
he went through the ceremony of introduction.
Then, leaning toward her, Omar said, under his breath:
“I come from Goutran. Allah il Allah!”
he added, aloud.
Carmen started. Never was she
so astonished. The name of Goutran from these
lips was like lightning from a clear sky. She
looked at the Arab’s bronze face and his huge
moustache.
“Take His Excellency’s
arm,” said Laisangy, “and show him the
gallery and statuary.”
Carmen hesitated, but Omar at once
threw his bournous aside and offered the young lady
his arm.
Laisangy whispered in Carmen’s ear:
“Do not delay too long.
I have received the signal and must do what was agreed
upon between us.”
Carmen paid little heed to these words,
but moved through the crowd on Omar’s arm, slowly
and thoughtfully. Omar was very solemn, but under
his moustache he whispered:
“I come from Monsieur Goutran.”
“Who are you?” she asked, raising her
fan to hide her lips as she spoke.
Whenever the crowd came too near he
raised his arm, and with a grand sweep of bournous,
hand and arm, he said:
“Allah il Allah! Rassoul il Allah!”
Everybody drew back much impressed,
for the incomprehensible has always great power.
At last, Omar and Carmen were alone in a small salon.
“Will you tell me who you are?” asked
Carmen once again.
“I am Coucon devoted
to Monsieur Goutran and to Esperance, the son of Monte-Cristo.”
“And you disguised yourself to see me?”
“Yes, for I had a note to bring from Monsieur
Goutran.”
“Give it to me!” Carmen cried.
When at last Coucon succeeded in finding
it among the folds of his bournous, she snatched it
from him.
This is what she read:
“Carmen, my friend and my ally,
you have promised your assistance. Gladly do
I claim it. My friends are in great peril.
Jane Zeld has vanished in the most mysterious manner,
as has Esperance. There must be in the Hotel
de Monte-Cristo some secret issue which our enemies
do not know. The infamous L
must possess this secret. Do your best to discover
it. You see that I place my reliance on you, for
I love you.
“GOUTRAN.”
Carmen uttered a joyous exclamation.
Goutran loved her! Coucon turned toward her.
“Well,” he asked, “what am I to
tell him?”
“Return to Monsieur Goutran
and tell him that if it costs me my life I will discover
what he wishes to know. And remember that you
must open the door of the hotel to me at whatever
time I may come. Of course, you and Monsieur
Goutran will be there all night. Now, go!”
At this moment a terrified looking
servant entered the room.
“Mademoiselle,” he said,
“your father has just been taken ill.”
Omar respectfully saluted the young
girl, and was lost in the crowd. No one noticed
him, for there was much excitement over the illness
of the great financier. Carmen followed the lacquey
with rather too slow a step for the occasion.
She was intensely irritated at this new comedy, and
she was tempted to cry out to the crowd:
“He lies! He has always lied!”
Laisangy was lying back in his chair.
There was no physician in the room, and yet the people
about him talked knowingly of bleeding him. Fortunately
for him, Carmen arrived.
“I know what it is,” she
said; “he has had similar attacks before.
He will be better after a little rest.”
And Carmen gave orders that the banker
should be carried to his chamber. Then excusing
herself to her guests, she followed.
Laisangy, who was becoming greatly
bored by the part he was playing, supposed that Carmen
would dismiss the servants and remain with him herself;
but she had quite other plans. She bade the men
undress their master and put him in his bed.
Laisangy was ready to swear at her, but, of course,
he was too ill to dispute. If he suddenly revived
and made a row, then the story would get about of
the ridiculous comedy he had played. His patience
was not long tried, however. Carmen only wanted
to gain a little time, in which she might hope to
discover the contents of a letter which she saw the
banker receive and put in his pocket early in the
evening. She found the letter and retired into
the next room to read it.
“Vengeance is assured.
Fanfar and Goutran are prisoners in the house of Monte-Cristo.
As to the girl, she is at the house at Courberrie,
where Esperance will arrive too late.”
Hardly had Carmen grasped the sense
of these words than she ran to her room, and wrapping
herself in her long black cloak, left the hotel by
the private door.