Part 23 (2/2)
”What a handsome man Henry is.”
”Bijou,” said the marchioness, ”I want you to sing something for us.”
”Oh! grandmamma, please”--she began, in a beseeching tone, and looking annoyed.
”M. de Clagny wants to hear you,” said Madame de Bracieux, insisting.
”Oh, very well, then, I will, certainly,” replied Bijou pleasantly, without taking into account that her way of consenting was not very flattering for the rest of her grandmother's guests.
She went to the piano, and, taking up a guitar, put the pink ribbon which was attached to it round her neck, and then came back and took up her position in the midst of the semi-circle formed by the arm-chairs.
”I am going to accompany myself with the guitar,” she said; ”it is simpler.” And then turning to M. de Clagny, she asked: ”What do you want me to sing? Do you like the old-fas.h.i.+oned songs?” and without waiting for a reply, she began the ballad of the ”Pet.i.t Soldat”:
”Je me suis engage Pour l'amour d'une blonde.”
She had a good ear and a pretty voice, which she used skilfully, and it was with plaintive sweetness that she sang the touching story of the young soldier who ”veut qu'on mette son coeur dans une serviette blanche.”
The drawing-room soon filled when Bijou began to sing, and the various expressions on the different faces were most amusing to see.
Jean was listening in a nervous, excited way, pulling his fair moustache irritably through his fingers.
M. de Rueille, affected in spite of himself by the doleful air, and annoyed that all these people should be admiring Bijou, was pacing up and down at the other end of the drawing-room, pretending not to be listening to the music.
Pierrot, with his mouth open, was all attention. Young La Balue, with his elbow resting on a side-table in an awkward and ridiculous pose, kept his colourless eyes fixed on the young girl in a gaze which he tried to make magnetic, and with such bold persistency that Henry de Bracieux felt the most extraordinary desire to walk up to him and box his ears. Even Abbe Courteil was carried away by the plaintive ballad; he was deeply moved, and sat there with his eyes stretched wide open, breathing heavily. Hubert de Bernes only was listening with polite attention, but comparative indifference. As to the ladies, all, except, perhaps, Gisele de la Balue, admired Bijou sincerely.
Madame de Nezel was listening with a mournful expression in her eyes, and a kind-hearted smile, whilst as for M. de Clagny, it was as though all the sensitiveness and affection of his nature had gone out towards this pretty, fragile-looking, young creature. His eyes, beaming with tenderness, seemed to take in at the same time, the beautiful face, the little rosy fingers as they touched the strings of the guitar, and the slender, supple figure.
When Bijou had come to the end of her song, she went up to him, without paying any attention to the compliments that were being showered on her, and, in a pretty, coaxing way, she asked:
”It did not bore you too much, I hope?”
M. de Clagny could not answer for a moment. He felt choked with emotion.
”I shall often ask you for that song again,” he said at last. ”Yes, I shall come often, and you will sing me the 'Pet.i.t Soldat,' won't you?”
He had a great desire to hear Bijou sing for him--for him alone; he did not want to share her voice and her charm with all these people whom he now detested.
”You shall come as often as you please,” she answered, looking delighted, ”and I will sing you everything you like,” and then gliding away she went across to Jean de Blaye, who was standing alone at the other end of the drawing-room. ”It annoys you when I sing, doesn't it?” she asked him.
”Why, no!” he answered, surprised at the question, and surprised that Bijou should trouble about him. ”Why should you think so?”
”Because I saw you just now--you were pulling your moustache in the most furious way, and you looked bored to death. Yes, you certainly did look bored!”
”It was just your own imagination.”
”Oh, no! it was not just my imagination. When I care about anyone I am always very clear-sighted! so, you see, it is quite the contrary. Why are you frowning now?”
”I am not frowning.”
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