Part 28 (2/2)
”This spring, at Easter, when we went to Bordeaux to stay with my aunt.”
”And it was settled at once.”
”No, but I liked him from the first.”
”Yes, you are one of the affectionate kind.”
”And I soon saw that he, too, liked very much to be with me.”
”And then?”
”Well, then, we came away, and I felt wretched, of course. I thought I was mistaken, and that he did not care about me at all.”
”You did not tell me anything about all that.”
”No; in the first place I imagined that it was all over, and then I should not have liked to talk about it to anyone, not even to you; it seems to me that, about such matters--well, when one is in love, one should only talk about it to one's own self; that is the only way to be quite understood.”
”Oh, then, you fancy that I do not understand anything about love?”
”About love such as I understand it? no! you are too pretty, you see, and then you are too much feted and adored by everyone to be able, as I have done, to satisfy and content yourself with an immense affection for one person only.”
Bijou sighed, as she said regretfully:
”It must be so happy, though, to love anyone like that.”
”Well, it would be easy enough for you; your cousin M. de Blaye adores you. Oh, it is no use denying it--it is so perfectly evident; I saw it instantly.”
”You are dreaming--” said Bijou, looking astounded.
”Oh, dear, no! he is in love with you, madly in love with you, and he seems to me to be a man worthy of your love.”
”Instead of talking nonsense, finish telling me the story of your engagement. We had got as far as where you left Bordeaux, thinking that all was over. What next?”
”Well, next, a fortnight ago, the professors.h.i.+p of philosophy was vacant, and papa was surprised to hear that M. Spiegel had been appointed to it. 'It is a come-down,' he said to me, 'for Pont-sur-Loire is not as good as Bordeaux'; but not at all--it was no come-down.”
”It was he himself, then, who had asked for the change?”
”Exactly! and last Monday, he and his mother arrived at our house to ask papa's consent.”
”What's his mother like?”
”Very nice, and good-looking still; but she seems rather severe, a little bit hard.”
”Don't take any notice of that; Protestants always appear like that.”
”How do you know that she is a Protestant?”
”Because I suppose that she is of the same religion as her son.”
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