Part 21 (1/2)
So saying, Camille bounded into her room, after showing her face, which was that of a maddened lioness, to the astonished Beatrix. Then she raised the portiere and looked in again.
”Do you intend to go to Croisic to-morrow,” she asked.
”Certainly,” replied the marquise, proudly. ”I shall not fly, and I shall not succ.u.mb.”
”I play above board,” replied Camille; ”I shall write to Conti.”
Beatrix became as white as the gauze of her scarf.
”We are staking our lives on this game,” she replied, not knowing what to say or do.
The violent pa.s.sions roused by this scene between the two women calmed down during the night. Both argued with their own minds and returned to those treacherously temporizing courses which are so attractive to the majority of women,--an excellent system between men and women, but fatally unsafe among women alone. In the midst of this tumult of their souls Mademoiselle des Touches had listened to that great Voice whose counsels subdue the strongest will; Beatrix heard only the promptings of worldly wisdom; she feared the contempt of society.
Thus Felicite's last deception succeeded; Calyste's blunder was repaired, but a fresh indiscretion might be fatal to him.
XIV. AN EXCURSION TO CROISIC
It was now the end of August, and the sky was magnificently clear. Near the horizon the sea had taken, as it is wont to do in southern climes, a tint of molten silver; on the sh.o.r.e it rippled in tiny waves. A sort of glowing vapor, an effect of the rays of the sun falling plumb upon the sands, produced an atmosphere like that of the tropics. The salt shone up like bunches of white violets on the surface of the marsh. The patient _paludiers_, dressed in white to resist the action of the sun, had been from early morning at their posts, armed with long rakes. Some were leaning on the low mud-walls that divided the different holdings, whence they watched the process of this natural chemistry, known to them from childhood. Others were playing with their wives and children. Those green dragons, otherwise called custom-house officers, were tranquilly smoking their pipes.
There was something foreign, perhaps oriental, about the scene; at any rate a Parisian suddenly transported thither would never have supposed himself in France. The baron and baroness, who had made a pretext of coming to see how the salt harvest throve, were on the jetty, admiring the silent landscape, where the sea alone sounded the moan of her waves at regular intervals, where boats and vessels tracked a vast expanse, and the girdle of green earth richly cultivated, produced an effect that was all the more charming because so rare on the desolate sh.o.r.es of ocean.
”Well, my friends, I wanted to see the marshes of Guerande once more before I die,” said the baron to the _paludiers_, who had gathered about the entrance of the marshes to salute him.
”Can a Guenic die?” said one of them.
Just then the party from Les Touches arrived through the narrow pathway. The marquise walked first alone; Calyste and Camille followed arm-in-arm. Ga.s.selin brought up the rear.
”There are my father and mother,” said the young man to Camille.
The marquise stopped short. Madame du Guenic felt the most violent repulsion at the appearance of Beatrix, although the latter was dressed to much advantage. A Leghorn hat with wide brims and a wreath of blue-bells, her crimped hair fluffy beneath it, a gown of some gray woollen stuff, and a blue sash with floating ends gave her the air of a princess disguised as a milkmaid.
”She has no heart,” thought the baroness.
”Mademoiselle,” said Calyste to Camille, ”this is Madame du Guenic, and this is my father.” Then he said turning to the baron and baroness, ”Mademoiselle des Touches, and Madame la Marquise de Rochefide, _nee_ de Casteran, father.”
The baron bowed to Mademoiselle des Touches, who made a respectful bow, full of grat.i.tude, to the baroness.
”That one,” thought f.a.n.n.y, ”really loves my boy; she seems to thank me for bringing him into the world.”
”I suppose you have come to see, as I have, whether the harvest is a good one. But I believe you have better reasons for doing so than I,” said the baron to Camille. ”You have property here, I think, mademoiselle.”
”Mademoiselle is the largest of all the owners,” said one of the _paludiers_ who were grouped about them, ”and may G.o.d preserve her to us, for she's a _good_ lady.”
The two parties bowed and separated.
”No one would suppose Mademoiselle des Touches to be more than thirty,”
said the baron to his wife. ”She is very handsome. And Calyste prefers that haggard Parisian marquise to a sound Breton girl!”
”I fear he does,” replied the baroness.