The Count's Millions by Emile Gaboriau (big screen ebook reader .txt) đ
- Author: Emile Gaboriau
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âDo you believe, then, that you have fathomed them?â
âI could almost swear that I had. Didnât you remark a great difference in their manner? Didnât one of them, the marquis, behave with all the calmness and composure which are the result of reflection and calculation? The other, on the contrary, acted most precipitately, as if he had suddenly come to a determination, and formed a plan on the impulse of the moment.â
Mademoiselle Marguerite reflected.
âThatâs true,â she said, âthatâs indeed true. Now I recollect the difference.â
âAnd this is my explanation of it,â resumed the magistrate. ââThe Marquis de Valorsay,â I said to myself, âmust have proofs in his possession that Mademoiselle Marguerite is the countâs daughterâwritten and conclusive proofs, that is certainâprobably a voluntary admission of the fact from the father. Who can prove that M. de Valorsay does not possess this acknowledgment? In fact, he must possess it. He hinted it himself.â Accordingly on hearing of the countâs sudden death, he said to himself, âIf Marguerite was my wife, and if I could prove her to be M. de Chalusseâs daughter, I should obtain several millions.â Whereupon he consulted his legal adviser who assured him that it would be the best course he could pursue; and so he came here. You repulsed him, but he will soon make another assault, you may rest assured of that. And some day or other he will come to you and say, âWhether we marry or not, let us divide.ââ
Mademoiselle Marguerite was amazed. The magistrateâs words seemed to dispel the mist which had hitherto hidden the truth from view. âYes,â she exclaimed, âyes, you are right, monsieur.â
He was silent for a moment, and then he resumed: âI understand M. de Fondegeâs motive less clearly; but still I have some clue. He had not questioned the servants. That is evident from the fact that on his arrival here he believed you to be the sole legatee. He was also aware that M. de Chalusse had taken certain precautions we are ignorant of, but which he is no doubt fully acquainted with. What you told him about your poverty amazed him, and he immediately evinced a desire to atone for the countâs neglect with as much eagerness as if he were the cause of this negligence himself. And, indeed, judging by the agitation he displayed when he was imploring you to become his sonâs wife, one might almost imagine that the sight of your misery awakened a remorse which he was endeavoring to quiet. Now, draw your own conclusions.â
The wretched girl looked questioningly at the magistrate as if she hesitated to trust the thoughts which his words had awakened in her mind. âThen you think, monsieur,â she said, with evident reluctance, âyou think, you suppose, that the General is acquainted with the whereabouts of the missing millions?â
âQuite correct,â answered the magistrate, and then as if he feared that he had gone too far, he added: âbut draw your own conclusions respecting the matter. You have the whole night before you. We will talk it over again to-morrow, and if I can be of service to you in any way, I shall be only too glad.â
âBut, monsieurââ
âOhâto-morrow, to-morrowâI must go to dinner now; besides, my clerk must be getting terribly impatient.â
The clerk was, indeed, out of temper. Not that he had finished taking an inventory of the appurtenances of this immense house, but because he considered that he had done quite enough work for one day. And yet his discontent was sensibly diminished when he calculated the amount he would receive for his pains. During the nine years he had held this office he had never made such an extensive inventory before. He seemed somewhat dazzled, and as he followed his superior out of the house, he remarked: âDo you know, monsieur, that as nearly as I can discover the deceasedâs fortune must amount to more than twenty millionsâan income of a million a year! And to think that the poor young lady shouldnât have a penny of it. I suspect sheâs crying her eyes out.â
But the clerk was mistaken. Mademoiselle Marguerite was then questioning M. Casimir respecting the arrangements which he had made for the funeral, and when this sad duty was concluded, she consented to take a little food standing in front of the sideboard in the dining-room. Then she went to kneel in the countâs room, where four members of the parochial clergy were reciting the prayers for the dead.
She was so exhausted with fatigue that she could scarcely speak, and her eyelids were heavy with sleep. But she had another task to fulfil, a task which she deemed a sacred duty. She sent a servant for a cab, threw a shawl over her shoulders, and left the house accompanied by Madame Leon. The cabman drove as fast as possible to the house where Pascal and his mother resided in the Rue dâUlm; but on arriving there, the front door was found to be closed, and the light in the vestibule was extinguished. Marguerite was obliged to ring five or six times before the concierge made his appearance.
âI wish to see Monsieur Ferailleur,â she quietly said.
The man glanced at her scornfully, and then replied: âHe no longer lives here. The landlord doesnât want any thieves in his house. Heâs sold his rubbish and started for America, with his old witch of a mother.â
So saying he closed the door again, and Marguerite was so overwhelmed by this last and unexpected misfortune, that she could hardly stagger back to the vehicle. âGone!â she murmured; âgone! without a thought of me! Or does he believe me to be like all the rest? But I will find him again. That man Fortunat, who ascertained addresses for M. de Chalusse, will find Pascal for me.â
XIII.
Few people have any idea of the great number of estates which, in default of heirs to claim them, annually revert to the government. The treasury derives large sums from this source every year. And this is easily explained, for nowadays family ties are becoming less and less binding. Brothers cease to meet; their children no longer know each other; and the members of the second generation are as perfect strangers as though they were not united by a bond of consanguinity. The young man whom love of adventure lures to a far-off country, and the young girl who marries against her parentsâ wishes, soon cease to exist for their relatives. No one even inquires what has become of them. Those who remain at home are afraid to ask whether they are prosperous or unfortunate, lest they should be called upon to assist the wanderers. Forgotten themselves, the adventurers in their turn soon forget. If fortune smiles upon them, they are careful not to inform their relatives. Poorâthey have been cast off; wealthyâthey themselves deny their kindred. Having become rich unaided, they find an egotistical satisfaction in spending their money alone in accordance with their own fancies. Now when a man of this class dies what happens? The servants and people around him profit of his loneliness and isolation, and the justice of the peace is only summoned to
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