The Count of Monte Cristo, Illustrated by Alexandre Dumas (electronic reader txt) đ
- Author: Alexandre Dumas
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âI?âI kill my boy?â cried the distracted mother, rushing toward Villefort; âI kill my son? Ha, ha, ha!â and a frightful, demoniac laugh finished the sentence, which was lost in a hoarse rattle.
Madame de Villefort fell at her husbandâs feet. He approached her.
âThink of it, madame,â he said; âif, on my return, justice has not been satisfied, I will denounce you with my own mouth, and arrest you with my own hands!â
She listened, panting, overwhelmed, crushed; her eye alone lived, and glared horribly.
âDo you understand me?â he said. âI am going down there to pronounce the sentence of death against a murderer. If I find you alive on my return, you shall sleep tonight in the conciergerie.â
Madame de Villefort sighed; her nerves gave way, and she sunk on the carpet. The kingâs attorney seemed to experience a sensation of pity; he looked upon her less severely, and, bowing to her, said slowly:
âFarewell, madame, farewell!â
That farewell struck Madame de Villefort like the executionerâs knife. She fainted. The procureur went out, after having double-locked the door.
The Benedetto affair, as it was called at the Palais, and by people in general, had produced a tremendous sensation. Frequenting the Café de Paris, the Boulevard de Gand, and the Bois de Boulogne, during his brief career of splendor, the false Cavalcanti had formed a host of acquaintances. The papers had related his various adventures, both as the man of fashion and the galley-slave; and as everyone who had been personally acquainted with Prince Andrea Cavalcanti experienced a lively curiosity in his fate, they all determined to spare no trouble in endeavoring to witness the trial of M. Benedetto for the murder of his comrade in chains.
In the eyes of many, Benedetto appeared, if not a victim to, at least an instance of, the fallibility of the law. M. Cavalcanti, his father, had been seen in Paris, and it was expected that he would re-appear to claim the illustrious outcast. Many, also, who were not aware of the circumstances attending his withdrawal from Paris, were struck with the worthy appearance, the gentlemanly bearing, and the knowledge of the world displayed by the old patrician, who certainly played the nobleman very well, so long as he said nothing, and made no arithmetical calculations.
As for the accused himself, many remembered him as being so amiable, so handsome, and so liberal, that they chose to think him the victim of some conspiracy, since in this world large fortunes frequently excite the malevolence and jealousy of some unknown enemy.
Everyone, therefore, ran to the court; some to witness the sight, others to comment upon it. From seven oâclock in the morning a crowd was stationed at the iron gates, and an hour before the trial commenced the hall was full of the privileged. Before the entrance of the magistrates, and indeed frequently afterwards, a court of justice, on days when some especial trial is to take place, resembles a drawing-room where many persons recognize each other and converse if they can do so without losing their seats; or, if they are separated by too great a number of lawyers, communicate by signs.
It was one of the magnificent autumn days which make amends for a short summer; the clouds which M. de Villefort had perceived at sunrise had all disappeared as if by magic, and one of the softest and most brilliant days of September shone forth in all its splendor.
Beauchamp, one of the kings of the press, and therefore claiming the right of a throne everywhere, was eying everybody through his monocle. He perceived ChĂąteau-Renaud and Debray, who had just gained the good graces of a sergeant-at-arms, and who had persuaded the latter to let them stand before, instead of behind him, as they ought to have done. The worthy sergeant had recognized the ministerâs secretary and the millionnaire, and, by way of paying extra attention to his noble neighbors, promised to keep their places while they paid a visit to Beauchamp.
âWell,â said Beauchamp, âwe shall see our friend!â
âYes, indeed!â replied Debray. âThat worthy prince. Deuce take those Italian princes!â
âA man, too, who could boast of Dante for a genealogist, and could reckon back to the Divina Comedia.â
âA nobility of the rope!â said ChĂąteau-Renaud phlegmatically.
âHe will be condemned, will he not?â asked Debray of Beauchamp.
âMy dear fellow, I think we should ask you that question; you know such news much better than we do. Did you see the president at the ministerâs last night?â
âYes.â
âWhat did he say?â
âSomething which will surprise you.â
âOh, make haste and tell me, then; it is a long time since that has happened.â
âWell, he told me that Benedetto, who is considered a serpent of subtlety and a giant of cunning, is really but a very commonplace, silly rascal, and altogether unworthy of the experiments that will be made on his phrenological organs after his death.â
âBah,â said Beauchamp, âhe played the prince very well.â
âYes, for you who detest those unhappy princes, Beauchamp, and are always delighted to find fault with them; but not for me, who discover a gentleman by instinct, and who scent out an aristocratic family like a very bloodhound of heraldry.â
âThen you never believed in the principality?â
âYes.âin the principality, but not in the prince.â
âNot so bad,â said Beauchamp; âstill, I assure you, he passed very well with many people; I saw him at the ministersâ houses.â
âAh, yes,â said ChĂąteau-Renaud. âThe idea of thinking ministers understand anything about princes!â
âThere is something in what you have just said,â said Beauchamp, laughing.
âBut,â said Debray to Beauchamp, âif I spoke to the president, you must have been with the procureur.â
âIt was an impossibility; for the last week M. de Villefort has secluded himself. It is natural enough; this strange chain of domestic afflictions, followed by the no less strange death of his daughterâââ
âStrange? What do you mean, Beauchamp?â
âOh, yes; do you pretend that all this has been unobserved at the ministerâs?â said Beauchamp, placing his eye-glass in his eye, where he tried to make it remain.
âMy dear sir,â said ChĂąteau-Renaud, âallow me to tell you that you do not understand that manĆuvre with the eye-glass half so well as Debray. Give him a lesson, Debray.â
âStay,â said Beauchamp, âsurely I am not deceived.â
âWhat is it?â
âIt is she!â
âWhom do you mean?â
âThey said she had left.â
âMademoiselle EugĂ©nie?â said ChĂąteau-Renaud; âhas she returned?â
âNo, but her mother.â
âMadame Danglars? Nonsense! Impossible!â said ChĂąteau-Renaud; âonly ten days after the flight of her daughter, and three days from the bankruptcy of her husband?â
Debray colored slightly, and followed with his eyes the direction of Beauchampâs glance.
âCome,â he said, âit is only a veiled lady, some foreign princess, perhaps the mother of Cavalcanti. But you were just speaking on a very interesting topic, Beauchamp.â
âI?â
âYes; you were telling us about the extraordinary death of Valentine.â
âAh, yes, so I was. But how is it that Madame de Villefort is not here?â
âPoor, dear woman,â said Debray, âshe is no doubt occupied in distilling balm for the hospitals, or in making cosmetics for herself or friends. Do you know she spends two or three thousand crowns a year in this amusement? But I wonder she is not here. I should have been pleased to see her, for I like her very much.â
âAnd I hate her,â said ChĂąteau-Renaud.
âWhy?â
âI do not know. Why do we love? Why do we hate? I detest her, from antipathy.â
âOr, rather, by instinct.â
âPerhaps so. But to return to what you were saying, Beauchamp.â
âWell, do you know why they die so multitudinously at M. de Villefortâs?â
ââMultitudinouslyâ is good,â said ChĂąteau-Renaud.
âMy good fellow, youâll find the word in Saint-Simon.â
âBut the thing itself is at M. de Villefortâs; but letâs get back to the subject.â
âTalking of that,â said Debray, âMadame was making inquiries about that house, which for the last three months has been hung with black.â
âWho is Madame?â asked ChĂąteau-Renaud.
âThe ministerâs wife, pardieu!â
âOh, your pardon! I never visit ministers; I leave that to the princes.â
âReally, you were only before sparkling, but now you are brilliant; take compassion on us, or, like Jupiter, you will wither us up.â
âI will not speak again,â said ChĂąteau-Renaud; âpray have compassion upon me, and do not take up every word I say.â
âCome, let us endeavor to get to the end of our story, Beauchamp; I told you that yesterday Madame made inquiries of me upon the subject; enlighten me, and I will then communicate my information to her.â
âWell, gentlemen, the reason people die so multitudinously (I like the word) at M. de Villefortâs is that there is an assassin in the house!â
The two young men shuddered, for the same idea had more than once occurred to them.
âAnd who is the assassin;â they asked together.
âYoung Edward!â A burst of laughter from the auditors did not in the least disconcert the speaker, who continued,ââYes, gentlemen; Edward, the infant phenomenon, who is quite an adept in the art of killing.â
âYou are jesting.â
âNot at all. I yesterday engaged a servant, who had just left M. de VillefortâI intend sending him away tomorrow, for he eats so enormously, to make up for the fast imposed upon him by his terror in that house. Well, now listen.â
âWe are listening.â
âIt appears the dear child has obtained possession of a bottle containing some drug, which he every now and then uses against those who have displeased him. First, M. and Madame de Saint-MĂ©ran incurred his displeasure, so he poured out three drops of his elixirâthree drops were sufficient; then followed Barrois, the old servant of M. Noirtier, who sometimes rebuffed this little wretchâhe therefore received the same quantity of the elixir; the same happened to Valentine, of whom he was jealous; he gave her the same dose as the others, and all was over for her as well as the rest.â
âWhy, what nonsense are you telling us?â said ChĂąteau-Renaud.
âYes, it is an extraordinary story,â said Beauchamp; âis it not?â
âIt is absurd,â said Debray.
âAh,â said Beauchamp, âyou doubt me? Well, you can ask my servant, or rather him who will no longer be my servant tomorrow, it was the talk of the house.â
âAnd this elixir, where is it? what is it?â
âThe child conceals it.â
âBut where did he find it?â
âIn his motherâs laboratory.â
âDoes his mother then, keep poisons in her laboratory?â
âHow can I tell? You are questioning me like a kingâs attorney. I only repeat what I have been told, and like my informant I can do no more. The poor devil would eat nothing, from fear.â
âIt is incredible!â
âNo, my dear fellow, it is not at all incredible. You saw the child pass through the Rue Richelieu last year, who amused himself with killing his brothers and sisters by sticking pins in their ears while they slept. The generation who follow us are very precocious.â
âCome, Beauchamp,â said ChĂąteau-Renaud, âI will bet anything you do not believe a word of all you have been telling us. But I do not see the Count of Monte Cristo here.â
âHe is worn out,â said Debray; âbesides, he could not well appear in public, since he has been the dupe of the Cavalcanti, who, it appears, presented themselves to him with false letters of credit, and cheated him out of 100,000 francs upon the hypothesis of this principality.â
âBy the way, M. de ChĂąteau-Renaud,â asked Beauchamp, âhow is Morrel?â
âMa foi, I have called three times without once seeing him. Still, his sister did not seem uneasy, and told me that though she had not seen him for two or three days, she was sure he was well.â
âAh, now I think of it, the Count of Monte Cristo cannot appear in the hall,â said Beauchamp.
âWhy not?â
âBecause he is an actor in the drama.â
âHas he assassinated anyone, then?â
âNo, on the contrary, they wished to assassinate him. You know that it was in leaving his house that M. de Caderousse was murdered by his friend Benedetto. You know that the famous waistcoat was found in his house, containing the letter which stopped the signature of the marriage-contract. Do you see the waistcoat? There it is, all blood-stained, on the desk, as a testimony of the crime.â
âAh, very good.â
âHush, gentlemen, here is the court; let us go back to our places.â
A noise was heard in the hall; the sergeant called his two patrons with an energetic âhem!â and the door-keeper appearing, called out with that shrill voice peculiar to his order, ever since the days of Beaumarchais:
âThe court, gentlemen!â
The judges took their places in the midst of the most profound silence; the jury took their seats; M. de Villefort, the object of unusual attention, and we had almost said of general admiration, sat in the armchair and cast a tranquil glance around him. Everyone looked with astonishment on that grave and severe face, whose calm expression
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