The d.u.c.h.ess de Lucenay, who had been listening to the comte with the utmost attention, said, suddenly:
"Really it would be very singular if these should be the same persons in whom Madame d"Harville takes so much interest."
"What persons?" inquired the comte.
"The widow of whom you speak is still young, is she not?--her face very striking?"
"Yes, but how do you know?"
"Her daughter, as lovely as an angel, and about sixteen at most?"
"Yes, yes."
"And her name is Claire?"
"Oh, for mercy"s sake, say, where are they?"
"Alas! I know not."
"You know not?"
"I will tell you all I know. A lady of my acquaintance, Madame d"Harville, came to me to inquire whether or not I knew a widow lady whose daughter was named Claire, and whose brother had committed suicide. Madame d"Harville inquired of me because she had seen these words, "Write to Madame de Lucenay," written at the bottom of a rough sketch of a letter which this unfortunate lady was writing to some stranger of whom she was asking a.s.sistance."
"She wished to write to you; and wherefore to you?"
"I cannot solve your question."
"But she knew you, it would seem," said M. de Saint-Remy, struck with a sudden idea.
"What mean you?"
"She had heard me speak of your father a hundred times, as well as of you and your generous and excellent heart. In her misfortune, it occurred to her to address you."
"That really does explain this."
"And Madame d"Harville--tell me, how did she get this sketch of a letter into her possession?"
"That I do not know; all I can say is, that, without knowing whither this poor mother and child had gone for refuge, she was, I believe, on the trace of them."
"Then I rely on you, Clotilde, to introduce me to Madame d"Harville. I must see her this very day."
"Impossible! Her husband has just been the victim of a most afflicting accident: a pistol which he did not know to be loaded went off in his hands, and he was killed on the spot."
"How horrible!"
"The marquise went instantly to pa.s.s the first months of her mourning with her father in Normandy."
"Clotilde, I beseech you, write to her to-day; ask her for all the information in her power, and, as she takes an interest in these poor women, say she cannot find a warmer auxiliary than myself; that my only desire is to find the widow of my friend, and share with her and her daughter the little I possess. They are now all my family."
"Ever the same, always generous and devoted! Rely on me. I will write to-day to Madame d"Harville. Where shall I address my answer?"
"To Asnieres _Poste-Restante_."
"How odd! Why do you live there, and not in Paris?"
"I detest Paris, because of the recollections it excites in me!" said M.
de Saint-Remy, with a gloomy air. "My old physician, Doctor Griffon, with whom I have kept up a correspondence, has a small house on the banks of the Seine, near Asnieres, which he does not occupy in the winter; he offered it to me; it is almost close to Paris, and there I could be undisturbed, and find the solitude I desire. So I accepted it."
"I will then write to you at Asnieres, and I can give you some information which may be useful to you, and which I had from Madame d"Harville. Madame de Fermont"s ruin has been occasioned by the roguery of the notary in whose hands all your deceased relative"s fortune was deposited. The notary denied that the money was ever placed in his hands."
"The scoundrel! And his name?"
"M. Jacques Ferrand," replied the d.u.c.h.ess, without being able to conceal her inclination to laugh.
"How strange you are, Clotilde!" said the comte, surprised and annoyed; "nothing can be more serious, more sad than this, and yet you laugh."
In fact, Madame de Lucenay, at the recollection of the amorous declaration of the notary, had been unable to repress her hilarity.
"Pardon me, my dear sir," she replied, "but this notary is such a singular being, and they tell such odd stories about him; but, in truth, if his reputation as an honest man is not more deserved than his reputation as a religious man (and I declare that is hypocrisy) he is a great wretch."
"And he lives--"
"Rue du Sentier."
"I will call upon him. What you tell me confirms certain other suspicions."
"What suspicions?"
"From certain information as to the death of the brother of my poor friend, I should be almost tempted to believe that that unhappy man, instead of committing suicide, had been the victim of a.s.sa.s.sination."
"And what can make you suppose that?"
"Several reasons, which would be too long to detail to you now. I will leave you. Do not forget the promises of service which you have made me in your own and your husband"s name."
"What, will you go without seeing Florestan?"
"You may suppose how painful this interview would be to me. I would brave it only in the hope of finding some information as to Madame de Fermont, being unwilling to neglect anything to discover her. Now, then, adieu!"
"Ah, you are pitiless!"
"Do you not know?"
"I know that your son was never in greater need of your advice."
"What, is he not rich--happy?"
"Yes, but he is ignorant of mankind. Blindly extravagant, because he is generous and confiding in everything, and everywhere and always free and n.o.ble, I fear people take advantage of his liberality. If you but knew the n.o.bleness of his heart! I have never dared to preach to him on the subject of his expenditure and want of care: in the first place, because I am as inconsiderate as himself, and next, in the second place, for other reasons; whilst you, on the contrary--"