As this chamber had no other egress than through the study, the prince asked the officers if they had seen the person to whom he had given audience pa.s.s. They replied that the lady had come out of the parlour, and had left the palace a little while before the departure of M.
Pascal.
Madeleine had really gone away, although it was her first intention to wait for the prince after the conclusion of his interview with M.
Pascal.
This is why the marquise did not keep her first resolution.
She reentered the parlour, after having treated M. Pascal as he well deserved, when, looking into the garden by chance, she saw Frantz, who had asked the favour of a turn in the park, accompanied by Major Butler.
At the sight of Frantz, Madeleine stood petrified with astonishment. She recognised her blond archangel, the object of that ideal and only pa.s.sion which she had confessed to Sophie Dutertre.
CHAPTER XIX.
Madeleine did not doubt that the hero of the duel of which she had been an invisible witness, her blond archangel, and the ideal of her pa.s.sion, Frantz, and the lover of Antonine, were one and the same person.
At this sudden discovery the marquise felt a profound agitation. Until then, this love, surrounded with the mystery of the unknown, this vague and charming love which seemed like the memory of a sweet dream, had sufficed to fill her heart in the midst of the perturbations of her life, rendered so fantastic by the calm of her own indifference and the foolish transport that she involuntarily inspired in others.
It had never occurred to Madeleine that her ideal could be in love with another woman, or, rather, her thought had never rested on this doubt; for her, this radiant archangel was provided with beautiful wings, which might carry him away before all eyes into the infinite plains of ether.
Incessantly besieged by lovers, by no means platonic, she experienced a joy, an ineffable moral repose, in lifting herself into immaterial regions, where her charmed and dazzled eyes saw her ideal hovering. But suddenly reality cut the wings of the archangel, and, fallen from his celestial sphere, he was no more than a handsome young man, in love with a pretty girl of fifteen, who adored him.
At this discovery, Madeleine could not repress a sort of sadness, or, rather, of sweet melancholy like that which follows the awakening from an enchanted dream, for to experience the tortures of jealousy, would be to love carnally. In short, if Frantz had almost always occupied the thought of Madeleine, he had never had part in her life; it only concerned her, then, to break the thousand ties that habit, sympathy, and confidence had rendered so dear. Nevertheless, she felt herself a prey to a growing disquietude, to painful presentiments which she could not explain to herself. Suddenly she started, and said:
"If fate should order that this strange charm that I exercise on almost all who approach me should also act upon Frantz, if I, too, should share his feeling on seeing the only man who has ever occupied my heart and my thought!"
Then, trying to rea.s.sure herself by an appeal to her humility, Madeleine said:
"No, no; Frantz loves Antonine too much, it is his first love; the purity, the sincerity of this love will protect him. He will have for me that coldness which I have for all. Yes, and who can say that my pride, my self-esteem will not revolt from the coldness of Frantz? Who can tell me that, forgetting the duties of sacred friendship, almost maternal, toward Antonine, I may not employ all the resources of my mind and all my power of seduction to conquer Frantz? Oh, no, that would be odious, and then I deceive myself again, Frantz loves Antonine too much. Alas!
the husband of Sophie loves her tenderly, too, and I fear that--"
These reflections of the marquise were interrupted by the sound of the archduke"s voice as he ordered Pascal to go out; listening to this discussion, she said to herself:
"After he has put this man out, the prince will come in here. I must attend to what is most urgent."
Drawing a memorandum-book from her pocket, the marquise detached one of the leaflets, wrote a few lines with a pencil, folded the paper, and closed it firmly by means of a pin. After writing the address, "For the prince," she laid the note where it could be seen on a marble table in the middle of the parlour, put on her hat, and went out, as we have said, a little before the departure of M. Pascal.
While the archduke, astonished and disappointed not to find the marquise, was opening with inexpressible anguish the note she had left, she was on her way to the home of Antonine, where Sophie Dutertre was also expected.
Upon her arrival at the house of President Hubert, introduced in a modest parlour, the marquise was received by Sophie Dutertre, who, running to her, asked, anxiously:
"Ah, well, Madeleine, have you seen the prince?"
"Yes, and I have good hope."
"Will it be possible?"
"Possible; yes, my dear Sophie, but that is all. I do not wish to excite foolish hope in the heart of this poor child. Where is she?"
"With her uncle. Happily, the crisis of this morning appeared to leave results more and more satisfactory. The physician has just said that, if the present condition continues, M. Hubert will perhaps be out of danger this evening."
"Tell me, Sophie, do you think M. Hubert is in a state to receive a visitor?"
"From whom?"
"From a certain person. I cannot tell you more now."
"I think so; because one of his friends has just seen him. Only the physician advised him not to stay too long, as the invalid might become fatigued."
"That suits marvellously. And poor little Antonine! She must be in mortal uneasiness."
"Poor dear child! She is to be pitied. It is such an innocent sorrow, and at the same time so desperate, that my own heart is almost broken.
Indeed, Madeleine, I am sure she will die of grief if she must give up Frantz. Ah, death is preferable to some kinds of suffering," added Sophie, with an accent so profoundly sad that the tears rose to her eyes; then, drying them, she added, "Yes, but when one has children, one must live."
Madeleine was so impressed by the tone of Madame Dutertre, by her pallor that she had not observed before, and by the tears that she saw her shed, that she said to her:
"My G.o.d! Sophie, what is the matter, pray? Why these painful words? Why these tears? Yesterday I left you calm and happy, except, as you told me, the concern occasioned by your husband"s business. Is there anything new to-day?"
"No, I--think--not," replied Sophie Dutertre, with hesitation. "But since yesterday--my husband"s business concerns me less than--"
"Go on."
"No, no; I am foolish," replied Madame Dutertre, restraining herself, and seeming to hold back some words ready to escape; "but let us not talk of me, let us talk of Antonine; I am so touched by the despair of this poor child that one might say her suffering is mine."
"Sophie, you are not telling me the truth."
"I a.s.sure you."
"I see you are pale and changed. Yes, since yesterday you have suffered, and suffered much, I am sure."
"No," replied the young woman, putting her handkerchief to her eyes, "you are mistaken."
"Sophie," said Madeleine, quickly taking her friend"s hands in her own, "you do not know how much your lack of confidence distresses me; you will make me think you have some complaint against me."
"What are you saying?" cried Sophie, pained by this suspicion, "you are and you will always be my best friend, and I am only afraid of fatiguing you with my grievances."
"Ah, again?" replied the marquise, in a tone of affectionate reproach.
"Forgive me, forgive me, Madeleine; but really, is it not enough to confide to your friends your real sorrows, without saddening them by the confession of vague apprehensions, which are, nevertheless, very distressing?"
"My dear Sophie, tell me these apprehensions."
"Since yesterday,--but, again, I say no, no, I shall appear too foolish to you."
"You appear foolish to me, well, what of it? Speak, I beseech you."
"Ah, well, it seems to me that since yesterday my husband is under the influence of some idea which completely absorbs him."