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The n.o.bleman added so largely to his purchase that Lady Augusta's astonishment must be greatly excited by the number of shawls and scarfs which her brother deemed it possible for a lady to bring into use during a season.
As may be supposed, it was not difficult to lure the lively Frenchwoman into talking of the head of the establishment; and she very speedily gratified Lord Linden by communicating as much of Mademoiselle Melanie's history as she herself knew. But had Mademoiselle Melanie lovers? Or was her vestal-like demeanor genuine? This was difficult and delicate ground to tread upon; yet his lords.h.i.+p was too much in earnest not to venture a step or two.
The wily Victorine now a.s.sumed a mysterious air, for she entertained a suspicion that the gentleman did not make inquiries without being deeply interested in the answers. It would be impossible to relate precisely _what_ she said. Her confidences were given more by inuendoes and arch glances and knowing shakes of the head, which suggest so much, because they leave so much to the imagination. Lord Linden received the impression that Mademoiselle Melanie, though much admired by the opposite s.e.x, had conducted herself with exemplary decorum _until lately_; but, of late, certain mysterious proceedings had become known to the forewoman of which she did not wish to speak too unreservedly.
The handsome black lace shawl which Lord Linden begged Victorine to accept delighted her to a point which won further confidence; for, while folding it up with caressing touches, and thanking the donor with that grace which belongs to her nation, she admitted that there was a certain M. de Gramont who was enamored of Mademoiselle Melanie, and for whom the latter had evinced a marked preference, though Mademoiselle Melanie evidently wished to act with all possible discretion, and keep his attentions from the eyes of the public.
Be it understood, that with Victorine's lax ideas of morality, keeping an _affaire de coeur_ from the eyes of the public was all that was necessary to preserve the honor of a woman who chose to indulge in a _liaison_.
Lord Linden had no alternative but to believe that Mademoiselle Melanie, in spite of her air of exquisite purity, and the chaste dignity which characterized all her words and actions, was, after all, not inaccessible. It was (he reflected) as much out of the question for the Viscount de Gramont to marry a mantua-maker as it was for Lord Linden to marry her; as a natural sequence, their intentions must be the same; and it remained to be proved which would be the successful lover.
He quitted the house enraged with himself for having been deceived; indignant with Madeleine for her successful acting; furious with Maurice, because he looked upon him as a rival; determined to seize an early opportunity of quarrelling with him, and resolved to find some pretext to gain admission to Mademoiselle Melanie's presence through the aid of her obliging forewoman.
Let us return to Maurice, whom we left in Madeleine's boudoir. When the door had closed upon Lord Linden, he said, in a wounded tone,--
"I thought only especial friends were admitted to this sanctum of yours.
I did not know, Madeleine, that you were acquainted with Lord Linden."
"He came to bring _Mademoiselle Melanie_ an important piece of information; and one which concerns you, Maurice."
Maurice was exasperated, rather than soothed, by this intelligence, and answered, hastily,--
"I am sorry for it. He belongs to a cla.s.s of men whom I hold in supreme contempt;--a _blase_ idler, whose chief occupation in life is to kill time. Madeleine, forgive me! What a brute I am to speak so harshly when I come to thank you! But the sight of that senseless _roue_ in your boudoir, and apparently upon a familiar footing, has made an idiot of me. I will not pay you so bad a compliment as to suggest that _he_ is the mysterious lover whom you have refused to name. But why is he here to-day? Why did I see him here yesterday? Why did he, yesterday, when he caught sight of me, suddenly disappear, as though desirous of eluding observation?"
"Maurice, if there be true affection between us," said Madeleine, gently, and laying her delicate white hand upon his, "if there be true, _cousinly_ affection between us, we should trust each other wholly, and _in spite of appearances_. Though it is easy for me to explain _why_ I admitted Lord Linden to a private interview, it may not always be equally easy to give you explanations; and we may bring great future sorrow upon each other if either give entertainment to a doubt."
"No, Madeleine, I can never doubt that all you do is well and wisely done. Would that I had no cause to doubt your affection for me; no cause to be distracted by jealousy when I see any other man allowed privileges which I long to claim as mine alone! But how is it possible to love you, and not to be hourly tormented by the position in which I am placed? Since you have rejected me as a lover, could I even be known to the world as your cousin, I might, at least, have the joy of protecting you. Must that, too, be denied me?"
"Yes, Maurice. Do you not know how important it is that our relations.h.i.+p should remain undivulged, unsuspected?"
"No; I cannot see the importance! I cannot submit to such an interdiction! Let my grandmother and my father say what they will, I am not bound to yield to so unnatural a request!"
"You will yield to it as my pet.i.tion, Maurice. Think of it as a favor, a sacrifice I ask of you. If you refuse me, I shall believe that you feel I have no right to ask favors."
"No right? There you touch me deeply! Madeleine, I am here to-day to learn whether you have not laid me under the deepest obligation--whether it was not by you"--
Madeleine, though she was not a little discomposed by learning that her recent interference in his behalf was suspected, had presence of mind left to endeavor to divert his thoughts. She interrupted him by saying, in a lively tone,--
"I have made several vain attempts to explain Lord Linden's presence here, and you will not permit me to do so, though his visit concerns yourself. Have you no curiosity? I am half inclined to punish you for your indifference."
Before Maurice could reply, Count Tristan de Gramont was announced.
"It is _you_ whom I have to thank,--you, good, generous, n.o.ble Madeleine, I am sure it is!" said he, excitedly. "It is your hand which has saved me and my son from the precipice over which we were suspended!
I could scarcely credit the good news."
"If you talk of good news," replied Madeleine, "I have some to give you which I have just received from Lord Linden. Mr. Rutledge has promised his vote for the left road."
The count looked at her as though he could not trust his ears; then he said, in a tremulous voice that broke into a childish sob, "It is all wonder! You are the Fairy they called you, the magician,--the--the--the"--
Robert opened the door and announced the Countess de Gramont and Mademoiselle de Merrivale.
CHAPTER x.x.xIII.
MADAME DE GRAMONT.
The countess entered the room casting disdainful glances around her.
Madeleine, who could not suspect the object of her visit, accosted her in astonishment.
"You, madame, beneath my roof; this is an unhoped-for condescension!"
"Do not imagine that I come to be cla.s.sed among your customers, and order my dresses of you," returned the countess, disdainfully, and waving Madeleine off as the latter advanced toward her.
Bertha felt strongly inclined to quote from a former remark of Gaston de Bois, and retort, "You have done that already, and the transaction was not particularly profitable," but she restrained herself.
"Nor do I come," continued the imperious lady, "as one who stoops to be your visitor! I came to rebuke impertinence, and to demand by what right you have dared to make use of my name as a cloak to give respectability to _charities_ forced upon your poor relations."
Madeleine was silent.
"Then the aid which came to me at such an opportune moment _was_ yours, Madeleine?" said Maurice. "It was you who saved me from worse than ruin?"
Still no answer from Madeleine's quivering lips.
"Do not force her to say,--do not force her to acknowledge her own goodness and liberality," said Bertha, "we all know that it _was_ she, and she will not deny it. Does not her silence speak for her?"
"You thought, perhaps," resumed the countess, even more angrily than before, "that because my son has flown in the face of my wishes, and has mingled himself up with business matters, and because Maurice has chosen to degrade himself by entering a profession,--you thought that you might take the liberty of coming to his a.s.sistance, in some temporary difficulty, and might also be pardoned the insolence of using my name; but I resent the impertinence; I will not permit it to pa.s.s uncorrected!
I will write to the person whom you have deceived and let him know that the name of the Countess de Gramont has been used without her authority.
I shall also inquire at whose suggestion he ventured to address an epistle to me."
"No need of that, madame," said M. de Bois, who had entered the room in time to hear this burst of indignation. "_I_, alone, am to blame for the liberty of using your name. Knowing how desirous Mademoiselle de Gramont was to conceal her relations.h.i.+p to your family, I suggested that the money indispensable to her cousin should be sent in such a manner that it might be supposed to come from you. I also took the responsibility of suggesting to Mr. Emerson that it would be well to send a line to you, enclosing a receipt for the sum paid into his hands by me; one of my motives was to insure that the news of its payment would at once reach Maurice."
"You presumed unwarrantably, sir," replied the countess. "You presumed almost as much as did Mademoiselle de Gramont, in supposing that she could use the money acquired in a manner so degrading to our _n.o.ble house_ for the benefit of my grandson."
"That money, madame," rejoined M. de Bois, warmly, "has saved the honor of your _n.o.ble house_! I will leave you to learn of Count Tristan how it was imperilled, and how it would have been sullied but for Mademoiselle Madeleine's timely aid."
"It has been _sullied_," began the countess.
"Not by Mademoiselle de Gramont," returned M. de Bois. "Once more, I tell you that she has saved your escutcheon from a stain which could never have been effaced. And for this act you spurn her, you scorn her generosity; you tell her she is not worthy of rendering you a service, instead of bowing down before her as you,--as we all might well do, in reverence and admiration; thanking Heaven that such a woman has been placed in the world, as a glorious example to her own s.e.x, and an inspiration to ours. The burden of her n.o.bility has not crushed the n.o.ble instincts of her heart, or paralyzed her n.o.ble hands. But you do not know all yet; you owe her another debt"--
"Another debt?" Count Tristan was the first to exclaim.
"Yes," continued M. de Bois, in a tone of pride, "through her influence, the influence of the d.u.c.h.ess-mantua-maker, the votes you could never otherwise have secured have been obtained; the committee met an hour ago, and the road to the left, which you so much desired, has been decided upon, and this, this too, you owe to Mademoiselle Madeleine's exertions."
Neither Maurice nor Count Tristan was allowed to speak, for M. de Bois went on without pause,--