"My lad, do not question me further! I cannot say more."
Fandor desisted: Juve"s sincerity was obvious.
"All serene, Juve! I leave it to you. Whatever happens. I shall try not to lose sight of you. I shall stick to you like a leech--if you have need of me."
Juve held out his hands.
"Thanks, dear lad!"
With fast-beating hearts, thrilling with excitement, expectation, anxiety, the friends embraced.
"You know, dear lad," said Juve in quiet tones: "We are going to risk our skins?... I am sure of the final victory unless a stupid ball from a revolver."...
Fandor was his old teasing self once more.
"Oh, that"s all right! You are not going to frighten me with that old black bogey of yours!"...
At this moment the carriage turned the corner at the end of the Alexander bridge....
The Baron de Naarboveck"s mansion was brilliantly illuminated. The much-talked-of fete was at its height.
Below, the s.p.a.cious hall had been turned into a magnificent supper-room--a veritable transformation scene--while dancers thronged the rooms above.... The end room only was deserted: it was the library. It had been made the receptacle of an overflow of furniture when the reception suite was cleared for dancing.
An orchestra, concealed by foliage plants, discoursed seductive waltzes in the princ.i.p.al ballroom, whilst crowds of lovely women and distinguished men listened, chatted, and looked on.
Madame Paradel, wife of the Minister for Foreign Affairs, was talking to her host. Observing Wilhelmine, all grace and smiles, she murmured:
"What a charming girl she is!"
Turning again to de Naarboveck, she remarked:
"But you must be in the depths of desolation, dear Baron! Have I not heard that the young couple are leaving for the centre of Africa?"
"Oh, that is an exaggeration," laughed the Baron. "As a matter of fact, my future son-in-law, de Loubersac, is leaving the Staff Office, and with the rank of captain. His chiefs are sending him, not, as you think, to the wilds of Central Africa, but only to Algiers! An excellent garrison!"
"Well, Baron, I like to think you will soon be paying a visit to your newly married pair."
The Baron bowed, and, as Madame Paradel moved away, he went towards the entrance of the gallery commanding a view of the hall and stairs.
The figures of two advancing guests had caught his eye.
In a tone at once enigmatic and perfectly correct, de Naarboveck accosted them:
"You are among my guests, gentlemen."
"That is obvious, is it not?" replied one of the new-comers.... "You may be a.s.sured, Baron, that neither my friend Fandor nor I would have allowed ourselves the liberty otherwise."...
"I know! I know, Monsieur Juve!... Besides--I was expecting you!" An ironic smile curved the lips of de Naarboveck.
"We should have reproached ourselves, Baron, had we not come this evening to offer you the felicitations to which you have a right."
"Really?... No doubt you refer to the marriage of Wilhelmine?"
"No, Baron. I reserve such congratulations for Monsieur de Loubersac and Mademoiselle Therese--pardon, for Mademoiselle Wilhelmine."
When making this deliberate mistake in the name, Juve looked squarely at the diplomat--but de Naarboveck made no sign.
"What, then, do you refer to, Monsieur Juve?" he asked.
"I mean, my dear Baron, that I have recently heard of your new office, heard that your credentials have just been presented, heard that they will be ratified to-morrow.... From this evening, Baron, are you not then the representative of the kingdom of Hesse-Weimar?... I fancy, Monsieur the Amba.s.sador, that you are satisfied with this nomination?"
De Naarboveck, smiling that ironical smile, bowed.
"It carries with it some advantages, certainly."
"Among them, Baron, the privilege of inviolability--ah, that famous inviolability!"
Juve laid stress on the word _inviolability_.
De Naarboveck did not seem to understand the insinuation conveyed.
"It is quite true, Monsieur," he said in a matter-of-fact manner: "I do enjoy the right of inviolability; it is one of the privileges attached to my office." On a bantering note he added:
"An appreciable advantage, is it not?"
"Appreciable indeed!" was Juve"s reply.
A wave of fresh arrivals surged up the grand staircase and separated the speakers. The master of the house stepped forward to greet them, whilst Fandor drew Juve by the sleeve into the corner of a window recess. Speaking low, he asked:
"Juve! what is the meaning of this comedy?"
"Alas, Fandor! it is no comedy!"
"De Naarboveck is an amba.s.sador?"
"For the kingdom of Hesse-Weimar, yes. He has been that for over a week--since that evening we failed to arrest him in the rue Lepic."
"And he is inviolable?"
"Naturally. In conformity with international conventions, every representative accredited to a foreign power as amba.s.sador is an untouchable, inviolable person--wherever he may be.... Therefore, Fandor, when in this mansion, situated in the heart of Paris, we are no longer legally in France, but in Hesse-Weimar. You can understand the kind of consequences which must follow from such a state of things.... But all is not over.... Ah! excuse me ... there is something I must see to immediately!"...
Leaving Fandor, Juve made his way through innumerable dress-coats and magnificent toilettes, moving with difficulty in the press.
He approached a guest stationed apart, watching all that was going on about him. This guest, who stood un.o.btrusively aloof, was a distinguished-looking man of about thirty-five; he wore a blonde moustache turned up German fashion.
Juve bowed low before this personage, and murmured with profound deference: