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well, Paujol, my friend; thou shalt be well rewarded. Madame dreams not
then of my return?”
“She does not, your excellency. I heard her tell M. Dynely only to-day
that your highness would not return to Paris for another week.”
A smile curled the thin lips.
“It is well. And so safe in my absence, not dreaming that her chasseur
and femme de chambre are my paid and devoted spies, she takes as her
lover this pretty-faced English boy, and all Paris laughs at me! It is
well, I say. But I am not the husband yet, and the English say those
laugh best who laugh last. And so they assist at the bal d’opera
to-night? Ah, what hour does madame propose returning, Paujol?”
“An hour after midnight, M. le Prince. She quits early that she and M.
Dynely may start early for Asni�res, where they spend to-morrow.”
Again that threatening flash leaps from the eyes of the prince.
“What does madame wear?” he demands.
“A domino noir, with a knot of yellow ribbon on the left shoulder.”
“And Monsieur?”
“Monsieur goes in full evening dress, with a yellow rose in his
button-hole, and lemon gloves.”
Di Venturini takes out his watch.
“Half-past eleven—ample time. A million thanks, friend Paujol! As I
say, your fidelity shall be well rewarded. Is your report made? If so,
you may depart.”
“One moment, monseigneur. My report is not finished—the most important
part is yet to come. Is your excellency aware that madame has a
daughter?”
“What!”
“That madame has a daughter—a tall English mam’selle of sixteen years,
at present stopping with madame?”
The yellow complexion of the Neapolitan fades to a greenish white. He
sits and stares.
“Paujol! A daughter! What is it you say?”
“The truth, M. le Prince. A daughter and a husband. The daughter is with
her now, as I tell you; the husband divorced her many years ago. The
daughter was brought to the house late one night by an English
gentleman, a friend of M. Dynely, Monsieur Dennison,”—Paujol pronounces
the English names with perfect correctness—“and has remained ever
since. Before you return, however, madame proposes sending her away. The
husband came once, and once only. The interview was brief. Here is his
card.”
He draws it out and places it before him. “Gordon Caryll,” Di Venturini
reads. For a moment he is at a loss, for a moment his memory refuses to
place him. Then it all comes upon him like lightning. The picture “How
the Night Fell,” the mysterious resemblance of the woman’s face to
Felicia, her determination to have it at any price, and the name of the
artist—Gordon Locksley, then—Gordon Caryll afterwards. In common with
the rest of the world he has heard Gordon Caryll’s story—the mad
marriage of his youth, the scandal, the divorce, the prolonged exile
from home and country, and now—and now Paujol stands before him with
an immovable face, and tells him gravely that Felicia, the woman he has
honored with the offer of his hand, is that fatal divorced wife.
He sits for a moment, petrified, and in that moment he believes. Paujol
never makes mistakes, never hazards rumors without proof. She had lied
to him then from the beginning, duped him from first to last, and Prince
Di Venturini could better endure anything than the thought that he has
been fooled and laughed at by the woman he has loved.
“So!” he says between his teeth, “this must be seen to! Proceed,
Paujol—you are indeed a treasure beyond price.”
Thus encouraged, M. Paujol, still with a gravely immovable face,
proceeds. In detail he narrates how Dennison brought to madame at
midnight this waif of the streets, how madame at once received her, how
Pauline faithfully did her part, overheard every word of the
conversation that passed between mother and daughter, and faithfully
repeated that conversation to him. He had taken it down in writing from
her lips on the spot, and would read it aloud to monseigneur now.
He unfolded the document as he spoke, and slowly read it over, that
momentous conversation, in which “Donny” had claimed Felicia as her
mother, and Felicia had acknowledged her as her child—the pledge of
secrecy between them, and the compact by which madame was to pass her
off as a distant relative. In his cold, steady, monotonous voice, Paujol
read it, then folded, and handed it respectfully to his superior officer
and master. Di Venturini, his yellow face still sickly, greenish white,
waited for more.
“The girl—she is still there?” he asked.
“She is still there, M. le Prince. She is to be sent away in two days.
She and madame have had a quarrel.”
“Ah! a quarrel! What about?”
“About M’sieu Dennison. M. Dennison came yesterday, came the day before,
and both times asked to see the young lady he had picked up on the
streets. Madame put him off with a falsehood. Mam’selle was ailing and
had declined to see him. This Pauline repeated to mam’selle, who, it
would appear, is most anxious to meet again with the gentleman who
rescued her. Mam’selle flew into a violent passion, sought out madame
and taxed her with duplicity. Madame is not accustomed to being
arraigned for her actions, and possesses, as monseigneur doubtless is
aware, a fine, high temper of her own. Before five minutes madame was
boxing mam’selle’s ears. Mam’selle became perfectly beside herself with
fury, and tried to rush out of the house, but was captured and brought
back by Pauline, who was, as usual, on the watch. Madame then informed
Pauline that mam’selle was mad, quite mad, that her madness consisted in
fancying her her mother, that she had run away from her friends under
that delusion, and that now she was under the necessity of locking her
up, for a day or two, until she could send her safely back to those
friends. The passion of mam’selle was frightful to behold, so Pauline
says, but she was brought back and safely locked up, and so continues
locked up at this present moment. She refuses to speak or eat, and lies
like a stone. Madame has made arrangements to have her removed the day
after to-morrow—where, Pauline has not as yet discovered.”
Paujol pauses. Di Venturini, his face still green, his lips still set,
his eyes still gleaming, looks up.
“And the conversation between madame and M. Gordon Caryll—did Pauline
also overhear that?”
“Pauline overheard every word, monseigneur, and, as before, repeated it
to me. As before, I took it down in writing upon the spot, and have it
here. Shall I read it aloud, M. le Prince?”
By a gesture Di Venturini gives assent. Immovably Paujol stands and
reads this second report; immovably his master sits and listens. It
leaves no room for doubt—Felicia has deceived him, as thoroughly and
utterly as ever woman deceived man. A husband—a daughter—a lover! and
he the laughingstock of Paris! His face for an instant is distorted
with passionate fury, as Paujol places this second paper before him.
“This is all?” he hoarsely asks.
“This is all, M. le Prince.”
“The girl is still locked up, you say, in madame’s rooms, and madame
will not return from the opera ball until one o’clock? Wait, Paujol,
wait!”
He leans his forehead on his hand and thinks for an instant intently.
Then he looks up.
“I will go with you, Paujol, first to see this girl, then to the
Gymnase. I have no words with which to commend the admirable manner you
and Pauline have done your duty. Go and call a fiacre at once.”
Paujol bows low and obeys. Di Venturini sits alone. He does not for one
second doubt the truth of all this he has heard. His two emissaries are
fidelity itself—their loyalty has been long ago proven. He has long
doubted the woman he has asked to marry him. To-night has but made
conviction doubly sure; and C�sare Di Venturini is not a man to let man
or woman, friend or foe, betray him with impunity. His face looks leaden
in the lamplight, his black eyes gleam with a fury that is simply
murderous.
“A husband who divorced her—a child whom she has hidden—a lover for
whom I am betrayed!” he repeats through his set teeth, “and all Paris
laughing at me. To-night at the bal d’opera, to-morrow at Asni�res, and
M. le Prince safely absent for another week. Diavolo! it is like the
plot of her own plays.”
He laughs, a laugh not pleasant to hear, rises and makes ready for his
drive. The fiacre is already at the door, he enters and is rapidly
driven away to the lodgings of madame.
CHAPTER XII.
AT THE BAL D’OPERA.
“I hate her! I wish she were dead! Oh, why, why, why did I ever leave
Scotland and come to this horrible place—to her? I will starve myself
and die if I cannot get my freedom in any other way! Oh, I wish I had
died before I ever came here!”
It was the burden of the moan “Mademoiselle Donny” had been making to
herself for the last two days. To Pauline, who brought her her meals,
she scorned to speak at all. She lay like a stone, asking no questions,
answering none, scarcely touching the food. Then again at times the
fierce passions inherited honestly enough from those who had given her
life would assert themselves, and her piercing cries would ring through
the rooms. She would beat on the locked door and barred window until her
hands bled and she sank exhausted and breathless upon the floor. It was
known to all madame’s household that the poor child, raving so madly in
that bolted and barred upper room, was hopelessly insane, and in another
day or two would be safely shut up in a maison de santďż˝.
She lies now prostrate on the floor, her head resting against the side
of the bed. All day long at intervals, her wild cries have rung out, the
little dark childish hands have beaten against the unyielding door.
Madame’s nerves have not been disturbed thereby. Madame has spent the
long sunny day amid the wooded slopes and sunlit glades of St. Cloud
with her cavalier servante, Lord Viscount Dynely, and the pallid
curate’s widow. Now it is past eleven at night, and she grovels prone
here, spent, white, exhausted, her dusk eyes gleaming weirdly in her
pallid child’s face, her elfish black hair all tossed and dishevelled
over her shoulders.
“If he were here,” she thinks with a great sobbing sigh, “he would
save me. Oh, if I had only stayed with him that night, and never come
here! He was good, he was kind; I would have been happy with him.”
The face of Terry Dennison rises before her—the honest eyes, the frank
smile, the man’s strength and woman’s gentleness, and her heart cries
out for him now in her trouble, as though he had been the friend of her
whole life.
“He asked for me,” she thinks, with another long shuddering sob. “Twice
he asked for me, and each time she told him a lie—told him I was sick
and did not want to see him. And she struck me in the face. Oh, I hate
her! I hate her!”
Her folded arms rest on the bed—her face drops on them, and so poor
illused, ill-tempered, passionate Donny lies still. She falls into a
sort of lethargy that is not sleep, but the natural result of so much
fierce excitement, and in that half-doze dreams—dreams Terry Dennison
is coming to her rescue once more, the
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