Part 38 (1/2)
”What is the matter?” I said to her in a low voice.
She pressed my hand without a word, for tears still veiled her voice.
But after a few minutes, recovering herself a little, she said to me:
”You have been very unkind to me, Armand, and I have done nothing to you.”
”Nothing?” I answered, with a bitter smile.
”Nothing but what circ.u.mstances forced me to do.”
I do not know if you have ever in your life experienced, or if you will ever experience, what I felt at the sight of Marguerite.
The last time she had come to see me she had sat in the same place where she was now sitting; only, since then, she had been the mistress of another man, other kisses than mine had touched her lips, toward which, in spite of myself, my own reached out, and yet I felt that I loved this woman as much, more perhaps, than I had ever loved her.
It was difficult for me to begin the conversation on the subject which brought her. Marguerite no doubt realized it, for she went on:
”I have come to trouble you, Armand, for I have two things to ask: pardon for what I said yesterday to Mlle. Olympe, and pity for what you are perhaps still ready to do to me. Intentionally or not, since your return you have given me so much pain that I should be incapable now of enduring a fourth part of what I have endured till now. You will have pity on me, won't you? And you will understand that a man who is not heartless has other n.o.bler things to do than to take his revenge upon a sick and sad woman like me. See, take my hand. I am in a fever. I left my bed to come to you, and ask, not for your friends.h.i.+p, but for your indifference.”
I took Marguerite's hand. It was burning, and the poor woman s.h.i.+vered under her fur cloak.
I rolled the arm-chair in which she was sitting up to the fire.
”Do you think, then, that I did not suffer,” said I, ”on that night when, after waiting for you in the country, I came to look for you in Paris, and found nothing but the letter which nearly drove me mad? How could you have deceived me, Marguerite, when I loved you so much?
”Do not speak of that, Armand; I did not come to speak of that. I wanted to see you only not an enemy, and I wanted to take your hand once more.
You have a mistress; she is young, pretty, you love her they say. Be happy with her and forget me.”
”And you. You are happy, no doubt?”
”Have I the face of a happy woman, Armand? Do not mock my sorrow, you, who know better than any one what its cause and its depth are.”
”It only depended on you not to have been unhappy at all, if you are as you say.”
”No, my friend; circ.u.mstances were stronger than my will. I obeyed, not the instincts of a light woman, as you seem to say, but a serious necessity, and reasons which you will know one day, and which will make you forgive me.”
”Why do you not tell me those reasons to-day?”
”Because they would not bring about an impossible reunion between us, and they would separate you perhaps from those from whom you must not be separated.”
”Who do you mean?”
”I can not tell you.”
”Then you are lying to me.”
Marguerite rose and went toward the door. I could not behold this silent and expressive sorrow without being touched, when I compared in my mind this pale and weeping woman with the madcap who had made fun of me at the Opera Comique.
”You shall not go,” I said, putting myself in front of the door.