Volume II Part 25 (1/2)
”Some folly, without doubt! Be inexorable, my dear Puritan,” cried Madame d'Orbigny, laughing. ”You hear, sir; I cannot act contrary to the advice of so handsome a lady.”
”My dear M. Ferrand, let us speak seriously of serious things, and you know that this is so. You refuse decidedly?” asked the viscount, with anguish he could not conceal.
The notary was cruel enough to appear to hesitate; Saint Remy had a moment of hope.
”How, man of iron, you relent?” said the step-mother of Madame d'Harville, laughing; ”you submit also to the charms of the irresistible?”
”Faith, madame, I was on the point of yielding, as you say, but you make me blush for my weakness,” said Ferrand; then turning to the viscount, with an expression of which he comprehended all the signification, he continued, ”There, seriously, it is impossible; I will not suffer that, through caprice, you should commit such an absurdity. M. le Vicomte, I regard myself as the mentor of my clients; I have no other family, and I should regard myself as an accomplice of any errors I should allow them to commit.”
”Oh! the Puritan, the Puritan!” cried Madame d'Orbigny.
”Yet, see M. Pet.i.t Jean; he will think, I am sure, as I do; and, like me, he will refuse.”
Saint Remy left in a state of desperation. After a moment's thought, he said, ”It must be!” Then, addressing his footman, who held open the door of the carriage, ”To Lucenay House.” While Saint Remy is on his way to the d.u.c.h.ess, we will be present with the reader at the interview between Ferrand and the stepmother of Madame d'Harville.
CHAPTER VII.
THE WILL.
Madame D'Orbigny was a slender blonde, with eyebrows nearly white, and pale blue eyes, almost round; her speech honeyed, her look hypocritical, her manners insinuating and insidious.
”What a charming young man is the Viscount de Saint Remy!” said she to Jacques Ferrand, when the viscount had gone.
”Charming; but, madame, let us talk of business. You wrote me from Normandy that you wished to consult me on some grave affairs.”
”Have you not always been my adviser since good Dr. Polidori referred me to you? Apropos, have you heard from him?” asked Madame d'Orbigny, in a careless manner.
”Since his departure from Paris he has not written me once,” answered the notary, no less indifferently. We must inform the reader that these two personages lied most boldly to each other. The notary had seen Polidori recently (one of his two accomplices), and had proposed to him to go to Asnieres, to the Martials, the freshwater pirates (of whom we shall speak presently), under the name of Dr. Vincent, to poison Louise Morel. The stepmother of Madame d'Harville came to Paris expressly to have a conference with this scoundrel, who now went by the name of Caesar Bradamanti.
”But it is not concerning the good doctor,” said Madame d'Orbigny, ”you see me much troubled; my husband is sick--he grows worse daily.
Without causing me serious fears, his condition troubles me, or, rather, troubles him,” continued she, wiping her tearless eyes.
”What is the matter?”
”He continually speaks of his final arrangements--of his will.” Here Madame d'Orbigny hid her face in her handkerchief for some moments.
”That is sad, doubtless,” said the notary; ”but this precaution is not alarming. What are his intentions, madame?”
”How can I tell? You know well, when he touches on this subject I change it.”
”But has he said nothing positive?”
”I believe,” said Madaine d'Orbigny, in a most disinterested manner, ”I believe he wishes not only to give me all the law allows--but--oh!
hold, I beg you, let us not speak of this!”
”What shall we speak of?”
”Alas! you are right, relentless man; we must return to the sad subject which brought me here. Well, D'Orbigny carries his kindness so far as to wish to convert a part of his fortune, and give me a considerable sum.”