Part 7 (2/2)
”But, my dear cousin, it is so natural to have children.”
That immoral speech coming from the heart of the old maid staggered the treasurer of the Maternity Society. Du Bousquier had evidently advanced in the estimation of Mademoiselle Cormon.
”Upon my word,” said Madame Granson, ”du Bousquier is not only a monster, he is a villain. When a man has done a wrong like that, he ought to pay the indemnity. Isn't it his place rather than ours to look after the girl?--who, to tell you the truth, seems to me rather questionable; there are plenty of better men in Alencon than that cynic du Bousquier. A girl must be depraved, indeed, to go after him.”
”Cynic! Your son teaches you to talk Latin, my dear, which is wholly incomprehensible. Certainly I don't wish to excuse Monsieur du Bousquier; but pray explain to me why a woman is depraved because she prefers one man to another.”
”My dear cousin, suppose you married my son Athanase; nothing could be more natural. He is young and handsome, full of promise, and he will be the glory of Alencon; and yet everybody will exclaim against you: evil tongues will say all sorts of things; jealous women will accuse you of depravity,--but what will that matter? you will be loved, and loved truly. If Athanase seemed to you an idiot, my dear, it is that he has too many ideas; extremes meet. He lives the life of a girl of fifteen; he has never wallowed in the impurities of Paris, not he!
Well, change the terms, as my poor husband used to say; it is the same thing with du Bousquier in connection with Suzanne. /You/ would be calumniated; but in the case of du Bousquier, the charge would be true. Don't you understand me?”
”No more than if you were talking Greek,” replied Mademoiselle Cormon, who opened her eyes wide, and strained all the forces of her intellect.
”Well, cousin, if I must dot all the i's, it is impossible for Suzanne to love du Bousquier. And if the heart counts for nothing in this affair--”
”But, cousin, what do people love with if not their hearts?”
Here Madame Granson said to herself, as the chevalier had previously thought: ”My poor cousin is altogether too innocent; such stupidity pa.s.ses all bounds!--Dear child,” she continued aloud, ”it seems to me that children are not conceived by the spirit only.”
”Why, yes, my dear; the Holy Virgin herself--”
”But, my love, du Bousquier isn't the Holy Ghost!”
”True,” said the old maid; ”he is a man!--a man whose personal appearance makes him dangerous enough for his friends to advise him to marry.”
”You could yourself bring about that result, cousin.”
”How so?” said the old maid, with the meekness of Christian charity.
”By not receiving him in your house until he marries. You owe it to good morals and to religion to manifest under such circ.u.mstances an exemplary displeasure.”
”On my return from Prebaudet we will talk further of this, my dear Madame Granson. I will consult my uncle and the Abbe Couturier,” said Mademoiselle Cormon, returning to the salon, where the animation was now at its height.
The lights, the group of women in their best clothes, the solemn tone, the dignified air of the a.s.sembly, made Mademoiselle Cormon not a little proud of her company. To many persons nothing better could be seen in Paris in the highest society.
At this moment du Bousquier, who was playing whist with the chevalier and two old ladies,--Madame du Coudrai and Madame du Ronceret,--was the object of deep but silent curiosity. A few young women arrived, who, under pretext of watching the game, gazed fixedly at him in so singular a manner, though slyly, that the old bachelor began to think that there must be some deficiency in his toilet.
”Can my false front be crooked?” he asked himself, seized by one of those anxieties which beset old bachelors.
He took advantage of a lost trick, which ended a seventh rubber, to rise and leave the table.
”I can't touch a card without losing,” he said. ”I am decidedly too unlucky.”
”But you are lucky in other ways,” said the chevalier, giving him a sly look.
That speech naturally made the rounds of the salon, where every one exclaimed on the exquisite taste of the chevalier, the Prince de Talleyrand of the province.
”There's no one like Monsieur de Valois for such wit.”
Du Bousquier went to look at himself in a little oblong mirror, placed above the ”Deserter,” but he saw nothing strange in his appearance.
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