"Good heavens! my dear Aure, what is the matter now?"
"The matter is, that Madame suspects _everything_."
"Explain yourself."
"Is there any occasion for us to enter into explanations, and do you not understand what I mean? Come, you must have noticed the fluctuations in Madame"s humor during several days past; you must have noticed how she first kept you close beside her, then dismissed you, and then sent for you again."
"Yes, I have noticed it, of course."
"Well, it seems Madame has now succeeded in obtaining sufficient information, for she has now gone straight to the point, as there is nothing further left in France to withstand the torrent which sweeps away all obstacles before it; you know what I mean by the torrent?"
La Valliere hid her face in her hands.
"I mean," continued Montalais, pitilessly, "that torrent which burst through the gates of the Carmelites of Chaillot, and overthrew all the prejudices of the court, as well at Fontainebleau as at Paris."
"Alas! alas!" murmured La Valliere, her face still covered by her hands, and her tears streaming through her fingers.
"Oh, don"t distress yourself in that manner, or you have only heard half of your troubles."
"In Heaven"s name," exclaimed the young girl, in great anxiety, "what is the matter?"
"Well, then, this is how the matter stands: Madame, who can no longer rely upon any further a.s.sistance in France; for she has, one after the other, made use of the two queens, of Monsieur, and the whole court, too, now bethinks herself of a certain person who has certain pretended rights over you."
La Valliere became as white as a marble statue.
"This person," continued Madame, "is not in Paris at this moment; but, if I am not mistaken, is, just now, in England."
"Yes, yes," breathed La Valliere, almost overwhelmed with terror.
"And is to be found, I think, at the court of Charles II.; am I right?"
"Yes."
"Well, this evening a letter has been dispatched by Madame to Saint James"s, with directions for the courier to go straight to Hampton Court, which I believe is one of the royal residences, situated about a dozen miles from London."
"Yes, well?"
"Well; as Madame writes regularly to London once a fortnight, and as the ordinary courier left for London not more than three days ago, I have been thinking that some serious circ.u.mstance alone could have induced her to write again so soon, for you know she is a very indolent correspondent."
"Yes."
"This letter has been written, therefore, something tells me so, at least, on your account."
"On my account?" repeated the unhappy girl, mechanically.
"And I, who saw the letter lying on Madame"s desk before she sealed it, fancied I could read--"
"What did you fancy you could read?"
"I might possibly have been mistaken, though--"
"Tell me,--what was it?"
"The name of Bragelonne."
La Valliere rose hurriedly from her chair, a prey to the most painful agitation. "Montalais," she said, her voice broken by sobs, "all my smiling dreams of youth and innocence have fled already. I have nothing now to conceal, either from you or any one else. My life is exposed to every one"s inspection, and can be opened like a book, in which all the world can read, from the king himself to the first pa.s.ser-by. Aure, dearest Aure, what can I do--what will become of me?"
Montalais approached close to her, and said, "Consult your own heart, of course."
"Well; I do not love M. de Bragelonne; when I say I do not love him, understand that I love him as the most affectionate sister could love the best of brothers, but that is not what he requires, nor what I promised him."
"In fact, you love the king," said Montalais, "and that is a sufficiently good excuse."
"Yes, I do love the king," hoa.r.s.ely murmured the young girl, "and I have paid dearly enough for p.r.o.nouncing those words. And now, Montalais, tell me--what can you do either for me, or against me, in my position?"
"You must speak more clearly still."
"What am I to say, then?"
"And so you have nothing very particular to tell me?"
"No!" said Louise, in astonishment.
"Very good; and so all you have to ask me is my advice respecting M.
Raoul?"
"Nothing else."
"It is a very delicate subject," replied Montalais.
"No, it is nothing of the kind. Ought I to marry him in order to keep the promise I made, or ought I continue to listen to the king?"
"You have really placed me in a very difficult position," said Montalais, smiling; "you ask me if you ought to marry Raoul, whose friend I am, and whom I shall mortally offend in giving my opinion against him; and then, you ask me if you should cease to listen to the king, whose subject I am, and whom I should offend if I were to advise you in a particular way. Ah, Louise, you seem to hold a difficult position at a very cheap rate."
"You have not understood me, Aure," said La Valliere, wounded by the slightly mocking tone of her companion; "if I were to marry M. de Bragelonne, I should be far from bestowing on him the happiness he deserves; but, for the same reason, if I listen to the king he would become the possessor of one indifferent in very many aspects, I admit, but one whom his affection confers an appearance of value. What I ask you, then, is to tell me some means of disengaging myself honorably either from the one or from the other; or rather, I ask you, from which side you think I can free myself most honorably."
"My dear Louise," replied Montalais, after a pause, "I am not one of the seven wise men of Greece, and I have no perfectly invariable rules of conduct to govern me; but, on the other hand, I have a little experience, and I can a.s.sure you that no woman ever asks for advice of the nature which you have just asked me, without being in a terrible state of embarra.s.sment. Besides, you have made a solemn promise, which every principle of honor requires you to fulfil; if, therefore, you are embarra.s.sed, in consequence of having undertaken such an engagement, it is not a stranger"s advice (every one is a stranger to a heart full of love), it is not my advice, I repeat, that can extricate you from your embarra.s.sment. I shall not give it you, therefore; and for a greater reason still--because, were I in your place, I should feel much more embarra.s.sed after the advice than before it. All I can do is, to repeat what I have already told you; shall I a.s.sist you?"
"Yes, yes."
"Very well; that is all. Tell me in what way you wish me to help you; tell me for and against whom,--in this way we shall not make any blunders."
"But first of all," said La Valliere, pressing her companion"s hand, "for whom or against whom do you decide?"
"For you, if you are really and truly my friend."
"Are you not Madame"s confidant?"
"A greater reason for being of service to you; if I were not to know what is going on in that direction I should not be of any service at all, and consequently you would not obtain any advantage from my acquaintance. Friendships live and thrive upon a system of reciprocal benefits."