She approached Count Tristan with an unfaltering step, holding a letter in her hand. That letter had given a sudden check to her vehement sorrow, and restored her equilibrium.
"I have received this communication from Count Damoreau."
As she spoke, she extended the epistle to the count, who for one instant quailed before her clairvoyant eyes. It seemed as though a prophetic judgment spoke out of their shining depths.
He took the letter mechanically, without opening it. His gaze was riveted, as though by a magnetism too powerful for him to resist, upon her purposeful countenance.
Madeleine went on,--
"Count Damoreau tells me that you and my aunt desire to withdraw your protection from me; that you feel I have sufficiently long enjoyed the shelter of your roof; that you wish to provide me with some other asylum."
There was no hesitation in her voice as she uttered these words. She spoke in a tone rendered clear and quiet by the dignity of self-respect.
"Count Damoreau had no authority to write in such a strain to you,"
observed the countess, with asperity.
"There is his letter. He informed me that he has the Count Tristan"s authority. To prove it, he encloses the letter yesterday delivered to him by M. Gaston de Bois."
Count Tristan was too thoroughly confounded to attempt any reply. He was painfully aware of the unmistakable character of that epistle.
"Count Damoreau announces to me," continued Madeleine, undisturbed, "that he is unable to comply with your request, and extend an invitation for me to join his family circle; and that my other relatives have also declined to accede to a solicitation of yours that they should by turns receive me as an inmate. He adds that his friend, Lady Vivian, is seeking an humble companion to accompany her to Scotland; and he trusts that I will thankfully accept this situation."
"It is an insult,--a deliberate insult to us and you!" broke forth the countess.
Madeleine"s lips trembled with a half smile.
"I do not deem it an insult to myself: I am as thankful as Count Damoreau can desire me to be; but I decline his well-intentioned offer."
Count Tristan ground his teeth, and cast upon Madeleine a glance of fury and menacing detestation. Their eyes met, and she returned the look with an expression which simply declared she recognized what was pa.s.sing in his mind.
"You did right to decline: I should never have permitted you to accept,"
remarked the countess, in a somewhat softer tone.
She deemed it politic to conciliate Madeleine for the present, fearing that she might be driven to take some humiliating step which would cast a reflection upon her kindred.
"I regret that my son has acted hastily. If you conduct yourself with the propriety which I have the right to demand, you will still find a home in the Chateau de Gramont, and in myself the mother I have ever been to you."
"Mother!" at that word Madeleine"s glacial composure melted. "A _mother!_--oh, my aunt, thank you for that word! You do not know how much good it does me to hear it from your lips! But the Chateau de Gramont can never more be my home. That is settled: I came to tell you so."
"What do you mean?" asked the count, with a gleam of ill-disguised satisfaction.
"I mean that I purpose shortly to quit this mansion, _never to return_!"
"Then you _do_ intend to accompany Lady Vivian to Scotland?" he inquired.
"You--my niece--_a de Gramont_--become the humble companion of Lady Vivian!" exclaimed the countess, in wrathful astonishment. "Can you even contemplate such an alternative?"
"No, madame," returned Madeleine, with an emphasis which might have been interpreted into a tone of pride. "I shall _not_ become the humble companion of any lady."
"With whom do you expect to live?" demanded the count.
"I shall live alone."
"_Live alone_, at your age,--without fortune, without friends? It is impracticable,--impossible!" replied her aunt, decisively.
"I have reached my majority. I shall try to deserve friends. I have some small possession: the family diamonds of my mother still remain to me."
"But your n.o.ble name."
"Rest a.s.sured that it will never be disgraced by me!"
"I tell you that your project is impossible," maintained the countess, resolutely. "I forbid you to even attempt to put it into execution. I forbid you by the grat.i.tude you owe me. I forbid you in the name of all the kindnesses I have lavished upon you!"
"And do you not see, my aunt, it is because I would still be grateful for these kindnesses that I would go hence? From the moment I learned I was a burden to you, that my presence here was unwelcome, this was no longer my home. If I leave you now, the memory of your goodness only, will dwell in my heart. If I were to remain longer, each day my presence would become more intolerable to you; each day your words and looks would grow colder and harsher; each day I should feel more degraded in my own eyes. _You_ would spoil your own benefactions: _I_ perhaps, might forget them, and be stained with the crime of ingrat.i.tude. No, let us now part,--now, while I may still dare to hope that you will think of me with tenderness and regret,--now, while I can yet cherish the recollection of the happy days I have pa.s.sed beneath your roof. My resolution is taken: it is unalterable. I could not rest here. You will, perhaps, accord me a few days to make needful preparations; then I must bid you farewell."
She turned to quit the room, but encountered Maurice and Bertha, who had entered in time to hear the last sentence.
Bertha, on leaving her cousin, had sought Maurice and told him of Madeleine"s prostrating sorrow. They hastened back to the _chalet_ together, but she had disappeared. They were in search of her when they entered the library.
"Bid us farewell, Madeleine?" cried Bertha. "What do you mean? Where are you going? Surely you will never leave us?"
"I must."
"But my aunt will not let you; Cousin Tristan will not let you; Maurice will not let you. Speak to her, some of you, and say that she shall not go."
"Bertha," answered the count, "you do not know all the circ.u.mstances which have caused Madeleine to form this resolution; and, if my mother will pardon me for differing with her, I must say, frankly, that I approve of the course Madeleine has chosen. I honor her for it. I think she acts wisely in remaining here no longer!"
Then Maurice came forward boldly, and placing himself beside Madeleine, with an air of manly protection, spoke out,--
"And _I_ agree with you, my father. I honor Madeleine for her resolution. I think she acts wisely in remaining here no longer."
"O Maurice, Maurice! how can you speak so? Don"t let her go, unless you want to make me miserable!" pleaded Bertha.
Madeleine"s hueless face was overspread with a brilliant glow as she cast upon Maurice one hasty look of grat.i.tude.
"I speak what I mean. Madeleine cannot, without sacrificing her self-respect, accept hospitality which is not freely given,--protection which is unwillingly accorded. She cannot remain here as an inferior,--a dependent; one who is under daily obligation,--who is merely tolerated because she has no other place of refuge. My father, there is only _one_ position in which she _can_ remain in the Chateau de Gramont, and that is as an equal; as its future mistress; as your daughter; _as my wife!_"
The countess was stricken dumb with rage; and a sudden revulsion of feeling toward the shrinking girl, whose deep blushes she interpreted into a token of exultation, made her almost as willing to drive her forth, no matter whither, as her son himself.
Bertha, with an exclamation of delight, flung her arms joyfully about Madeleine"s neck.
"Maurice, are you mad? Do you forget that you are my son?" was all that the count could gasp out, in his indignant amazement.
"It is as your son that I speak; it is as the inheritor of your name,--that name which Madeleine also bears."
"You seem to have forgotten"--began his father.
Maurice interrupted him,--