Baron Trigault's Vengeance by Emile Gaboriau (graded readers .TXT) đ
- Author: Emile Gaboriau
Book online «Baron Trigault's Vengeance by Emile Gaboriau (graded readers .TXT) đ». Author Emile Gaboriau
Suddenly a door opposite the one by which he had entered opened, and Madame dâArgeles appeared on the threshold. She was no longer the woman whose anguish and terror had alarmed her guests. During the brief moment of respite which fate had granted her, she had summoned all her energy and courage, and had mastered her despair. She felt that her salvation depended upon her calmness, and she had succeeded in appearing calm, haughty, and disdainfulâas impassive as if she had been a statue. âWas it you, sir, who sent me this card?â she inquired.
Greatly disconcerted, M. Wilkie could only bow and stammer out an almost unintelligible answer. âExcuse me! I am much grieved, upon my word! I disturb you, perhapsâââ
âYou are Monsieur Wilkie!â interrupted Madame dâArgeles, in a tone of mingled irony and disdain.
âYes,â he replied, drawling out the name affectedly, âI am M. Wilkie.â
âDid you desire to speak with me?â inquired Madame dâArgeles, dryly.
âIn factâyes. I should likeâââ
âVery well. I will listen to you, although your visit is most inopportune, for I have eighty guests or more in my drawing-room. Still, speak!â
It was very easy to say âspeak,â but unfortunately for M. Wilkie he could not articulate a syllable. His tongue was as stiff, and as dry, as if it had been paralyzed. He nervously passed and repassed his fingers between his neck and his collar, but although this gave full play to his cravat, his words did not leave his throat any more readily. For he had imagined that Madame dâArgeles would be like other women he had known, but not at all. He found her to be an extremely proud and awe-inspiring creature, who, to use his own vocabulary, SQUELCHED him completely. âI wished to say to you,â he repeated, âI wished to say to youâââ But the words he was seeking would not come; and, so at last, angry with himself, he exclaimed: âAh! you know as well as I, why I have come. Do you dare to pretend that you donât know?â
She looked at him with admirably feigned astonishment, glanced despairingly at the ceiling, shrugged her shoulders, and replied: âMost certainly I donât knowâunless indeed it be a wager.â
âA wager!â M. Wilkie wondered if he were not the victim of some practical joke, and if there were not a crowd of listeners hidden somewhere, who, after enjoying his discomfiture, would suddenly make their appearance, holding their sides. This fear restored his presence of mind. âWell, then,â he replied, huskily, âthis is my reason. I know nothing respecting my parents. This morning, a man with whom you are well acquainted, assured me that I wasâyour son. I was completely stunned at first, but after a while I recovered sufficiently to call here, and found that you had gone out.â
He was interrupted by a nervous laugh from Madame dâArgeles. For she was heroic enough to laugh, although death was in her heart, and although the nails of her clinched hands were embedded deep in her quivering flesh. âAnd you believed him, monsieur?â she exclaimed. âReally, this is too absurd! Iâyour mother! Why, look at meâââ
He was doing nothing else, he was watching her with all the powers of penetration he possessed. Madame dâArgelesâs laugh had an unnatural ring that awakened his suspicions. All Coralthâs recommendations buzzed confusedly in his ears, and he judged that the moment had come âto do the sentimental,â as he would have expressed it. So he lowered his head, and in an aggrieved tone, exclaimed: âAh! you think it very amusing, I donât. Do you realize how wretched it makes one to live as utterly alone as a leper, without a soul to love or care for you? Other young men have a mother, sisters, relatives. I have no one! Ah! ifââ But I only have friends while my money lasts.â He wiped his eyes, dry as they were, with his handkerchief, and in a still more pathetic tone, resumed: âNot that I want for anything; I receive a very handsome allowance. But when my relatives have given me the wherewithal to keep me from starving, they imagine their duty is fulfilled. I think this very hard. I didnât come into the world at my own request, did I? I didnât ask to be born. If I was such an annoyance to them when I came into existence, why didnât they throw me into the river? Then they would have been well rid of me, and I should be out of my misery!â
He stopped short, struck dumb with amazement, for Madame dâArgeles had thrown herself on her knees at his feet. âHave mercy!â she faltered; âWilkie; my son, forgive me!â Alas! the unfortunate woman had failed in playing a part which was too difficult for a motherâs heart. âYou have suffered cruelly, my son,â she continued; âbut IâIâAh! you canât conceive the frightful agony it costs a mother to separate from her child! But you were not deserted, Wilkie; donât say that. Have you not felt my love in the air around you? YOU forgotten? Know, then, that for years and years I have seen you every day, and that all my thoughts and all my hopes are centered in you alone! Wilkie!â
She dragged herself toward him with her hands clasped in an agony of supplication, while he recoiled, frightened by this outburst of passion, and utterly amazed by his easily won victory. The poor woman misunderstood this movement. âGreat God!â she exclaimed, âhe spurns me; he loathes me. Ah! I knew it would be so. Oh! why did you come? What infamous wretch sent you here? Name him, Wilkie! Do you understand, now, why I concealed myself from you? I dreaded the day when I should blush before you, before my own son. And yet it was for your sake. Death would have been a rest, a welcome release for me. But your breath was ebbing away, your poor little arms no longer had strength to clasp me round the neck. And then I cried: âPerish my soul and body, if only my child can be saved!â I believed such a sacrifice permissible in a mother. I am punished for it as if it were a crime. I thought you would be happy, my Wilkie. I said to myself that you, my pride and joy, would move freely and proudly far above me and my shame. I accepted ignominy, so that your honor might be preserved intact. I knew the horrors of abject poverty, and I wished to save my son from it. I would have licked up the very mire in your pathway to save you from a stain. I renounced all hope for myself, and I consecrated all that was noble and generous in my nature to you. Oh! I will discover the vile coward who sent you here, who betrayed my secret. I will discover him and I will have my revenge! You were never to know this, Wilkie. In parting from you, I took a solemn oath never to see you again, and to die without the supreme consolation of feeling your lips upon my forehead.â
She could not continue; sobs choked her utterance. And for more than a minute the silence
Comments (0)