Part 32 (2/2)

Now the _fiacre_ clattered before the Hotel de Puysange.

The door was opened by a dull-eyed lackey, whom de Puysange greeted with a smile, ”Bon jour, Antoine!” cried the Duke; ”I trust that your wife and doubtless very charming children have good health?”

”Beyond question, monseigneur,” the man answered, stolidly.

”That is excellent hearing,” de Puysange said, ”and it rejoices me to be rea.s.sured of their welfare. For the happiness of others, Antoine, is very dear to the heart of a father--and of a husband.” The Duke chuckled seraphically as he pa.s.sed down the hall. The man stared after him, and shrugged.

”Rather worse than usual,” Antoine considered.

II

Next morning the d.u.c.h.esse de Puysange received an immoderate armful of roses, with a fair copy of some execrable verses. De Puysange spent the afternoon, selecting bonbons and wholesome books,--”for his fiancee,” he gravely informed the shopman.

At the Opera he never left her box; afterward, at the Comtesse de Hauteville's, he created a furor by sitting out three dances in the conservatory with his wife. Mademoiselle Tiercelin had already received his regrets that he was spending that night at home.

III

The month wore on.

”It is the true honeymoon,” said the Duke.

In that event he might easily have found a quieter place than Paris wherein to spend it. Police agents had of late been promised a premium for any st.u.r.dy beggar, whether male or female, they could secure to populate the new plantation of Louisiana; and as the premium was large, genteel burgesses, and in particular the children of genteel burgesses, were presently disappearing in a fas.h.i.+on their families found annoying. Now, from nowhere, arose and spread the curious rumor that King Louis, somewhat the worse for his diversions in the Parc-aux-Cerfs, daily restored his vigor by bathing in the blood of young children; and parents of the absentees began to manifest a double dissatisfaction, for the deduction was obvious.

There were riots. In one of them Madame de Pompadour barely escaped with her life, [Footnote: This was on the afternoon of the famous ball given by the Pompadour in honor of the new d.u.c.h.ess of Ormskirk.] and the King himself on his way to Compiegne, was turned back at the Porte St. Antoine, and forced to make a detour rather than enter his own capital. After this affair de Puysange went straight to his brother-in-law.

”Jean,” said he, ”for a newly married man you receive too much company. And afterward your visitors talk blasphemously in cabarets and shoot the King's musketeers. I would appreciate an explanation.”

Ormskirk shrugged. ”Merely a makes.h.i.+ft, Gaston. Merely a device to gain time wherein England may prepare against the alliance of France and Austria. Your secret treaty will never be signed as long as Paris is given over to rioters. Nay, the Empress may well hesitate to ally herself with a king who thus clamantly cannot govern even his own realm. And meanwhile England will prepare herself. We will be ready to fight you in five years, but we do not intend to be hurried about it.”

”Yes,” de Puysange a.s.sented;--”yet you err in sending c.u.mberland to defend Hanover. You will need a better man there.”

Ormskirk slapped his thigh. ”So you intercepted that last despatch, after all! And I could have sworn Candale was trustworthy!”

”My adored Jean,” replied de Puysange, ”he has been in my pay for six months! Console yourself with the reflection that you overbid us in Noumaria.”

”Yes, but old Ludwig held out for more than the whole duchy is worth. We paid of course. We had to pay.”

”And one of course congratulates you upon securing the quite essential support of that duchy. Still, Jean, if there were any accident--” De Puysange was really unbelievably ugly when he smiled. ”For accidents do occur.... It is war, then?”

”My dear fellow,” said Ormskirk, ”of course it is war. We are about to fly at each other's throats, with half of Europe to back each of us. We begin the greatest game we have ever played. And we will manage it very badly, I dare say, since we are each of us just now besotted with adoration of our wives.”

”At times,” said de Puysange, with dignity, ”your galimatias are insufferable. Now let us talk like reasonable beings. In regard to Pomerania, you will readily understand that the interests of humanity--”

IV

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