Part 22 (2/2)
The duke regarded his son with a bantering air.
”Really, you delight me!” he exclaimed. ”I feared that this love-affair might derange, at least for the moment, certain plans that I have formed--for I have formed certain plans for you.”
”The devil!”
”Yes, I have my plans, and I will communicate them to you later in detail. I will content myself today by recommending you to examine Mademoiselle Blanche de Courtornieu.”
Martial made no reply. This recommendation was entirely unnecessary. If Mlle. Lacheneur had made him forget Mlle. de Courtornieu that morning for some moments, the remembrance of Marie-Anne was now effaced by the radiant image of Blanche.
”Before discussing the daughter,” resumed the duke, ”let us speak of the father. He is one of my strongest friends; and I know him thoroughly.
You have heard men reproach me for what they style my prejudices, have you not? Well, in comparison with the Marquis de Courtornieu, I am only a Jacobin.”
”Oh! my father!”
”Really, nothing could be more true. If I am behind the age in which I live, he belongs to the reign of Louis XIV. Only--for there is an only--the principles which I openly avow, he keeps locked up in his snuff-box--and trust him for not forgetting to open it at the opportune moment. He has suffered cruelly for his opinions, in the sense of having so often been obliged to conceal them. He concealed them, first, under the consulate, when he returned from exile. He dissimulated them even more courageously under the Empire--for he played the part of a kind of chamberlain to Bonaparte, this dear marquis. But, chut! do not remind him of that proof of heroism; he has deplored it bitterly since the battle of Lutzen.”
This was the tone in which M. de Sairmeuse was accustomed to speak of his best friends.
”The history of his fortune,” he continued, ”is the history of his marriages--I say _marriages_, because he has married a number of times, and always advantageously. Yes, in a period of fifteen years he has had the misfortune of losing three wives, each richer than the other. His daughter is the child of his third and last wife, a Cisse Blossac--she died in 1809. He comforted himself after each bereavement by purchasing a quant.i.ty of lands or bonds. So that now he is as rich as you are, Marquis, and his influence is powerful and widespread. I forgot one detail, however, he believes, they tell me, in the growing power of the clergy, and has become very devout.”
He checked himself; the carriage had stopped before the entrance of the Chateau de Courtornieu, and the marquis came forward to receive his guests in person. A nattering distinction, which he seldom lavished upon his visitors. The marquis was long rather than tall, and very solemn in deportment. The head that surmounted his angular form was remarkably small, a characteristic of his race, and covered with thin, glossy black hair, and lighted by cold, round black eyes.
The pride that becomes a gentleman, and the humility that befits a Christian, were continually at war with each other in his countenance.
He pressed the hands of M. de Sairmeuse and Martial, overwhelming them with compliments uttered in a thin, rather nasal voice, which, issuing from his immense body, was as astonis.h.i.+ng as the sound of a flute issuing from the pipes of an orphicleide would be.
”At last you have come,” he said; ”we were waiting for you before beginning our deliberations upon a very grave, and also very delicate matter. We are thinking of addressing a pet.i.tion to His Majesty. The n.o.bility, who have suffered so much during the Revolution, have a right to expect ample compensation. Our neighbors, to the number of sixteen, are now a.s.sembled in my cabinet, transformed for the time into a council chamber.”
Martial shuddered at the thought of all the ridiculous and tiresome conversation he would probably be obliged to hear; and his father's recommendation occurred to him.
”Shall we not have the honor of paying our respects to Mademoiselle de Courtornieu?”
”My daughter must be in the drawing-room with our cousin,” replied the marquis, in an indifferent tone; ”at least, if she is not in the garden.”
This might be construed into, ”Go and look for her if you choose.” At least Martial understood it in that way; and when they entered the hall, he allowed his father and the marquis to go upstairs without him.
A servant opened the door of the drawing-room for him--but it was empty.
”Very well,” said he; ”I know my way to the garden.”
But he explored it in vain; no one was to be found.
He decided to return to the house and march bravely into the presence of the dreaded enemy. He had turned to retrace his steps when, through the foliage of a bower of jasmine, he thought he could distinguish a white dress.
He advanced softly, and his heart quickened its throbbing when he saw that he was right.
Mlle. Blanche de Courtornieu was seated on a bench beside an old lady, and was engaged in reading a letter in a low voice.
<script>