will manage to have you invited to Rosembray, for the meet will
probably take place in Duc de Verneuil's park.
Pray believe, my dear poet, that I am none the less, for life,
Your friend, Eleonore de M.
"There, Ernest, just look at that!" cried Canalis, tossing the letter
at Ernest's nose across the breakfast-table; "that's the two
thousandth love-letter I have had from that woman, and there isn't
even a 'thou' in it. The
illustrious Eleonore has never compromised
herself more than she does there. Marry, and try your luck! The worst
marriage in the world is better than this sort of
halter. Ah, I am the
greatest Nicodemus that ever tumbled out of the moon! Modeste has
millions, and I've lost her; for we can't get back from the poles,
where we are to-day, to the tropics, where we were three days ago!
Well, I am all the more
anxious for your
triumph over the grand
equerry, because I told the
duchess I came here only for your sake;
and so I shall do my best for you."
"Alas, Melchior, Modeste must needs have so noble, so grand, so well-
balanced a nature to
resist the glories of the Court, and all these
splendors cleverly displayed for her honor and glory by the duke, that
I cannot believe in the
existence of such perfection,--and yet, if she
is still the Modeste of her letters, there might be hope!"
"Well, well, you are a happy fellow, you young Boniface, to see the
world and your
mistress through green spectacles!" cried Canalis,
marching off to pace up and down the garden.
Caught between two lies, the poet was at a loss what to do.
"Play by rule, and you lose!" he cried
presently, sitting down in the
kiosk. "Every man of sense would have acted as I did four days ago,
and got himself out of the net in which I saw myself. At such times
people don't disentangle nets, they break through them! Come, let us
be calm, cold,
dignified, affronted. Honor requires it; English
stiffness is the only way to win her back. After all, if I have to
retire finally, I can always fall back on my old happiness; a fidelity
of ten years can't go unrewarded. Eleonore will arrange me some good
marriage."
CHAPTER XXVI
TRUE LOVE
The hunt was destined to be not only a meet of the hounds, but a
meeting of all the passions excited by the
colonel's millions and
Modeste's beauty; and while it was in
prospect there was truce between
the adversaries. During the days required for the
arrangement of this
forestrial
solemnity, the salon of the villa Mignon presented the
tranquil picture of a united family. Canalis, cut short in his role of
injured love by Modeste's quick perceptions, wished to appear
courteous; he laid aside his pretensions, gave no further specimens of
his
oratory, and became, what all men of
intellect can be when they
renounce affectation,
perfectlycharming. He talked finances with
Gobenheim, and war with the
colonel, Germany with Madame Mignon, and
housekeeping with Madame Latournelle,--endeavoring to bias them all in
favor of La Briere. The Duc d'Herouville left the field to his rivals,
for he was obliged to go to Rosembray to
consult with the Duc de
Verneuil, and see that the orders of the Royal Huntsman, the Prince de
Cadignan, were carried out. And yet the comic element was not
altogether
wanting. Modeste found herself between the depreciatory
hints of Canalis as to the gallantry of the grand equerry, and the
exaggerations of the two Mesdemoiselles d'Herouville, who passed every
evening at the villa. Canalis made Modeste take notice that, instead
of being the
heroine of the hunt, she would be scarcely noticed.
MADAME would be attended by the Duchesse de Maufrigneuse, daughter-in-
law of the Prince de Cadignan, by the Duchesse de Chaulieu, and other
great ladies of the Court, among whom she could produce no sensation;
no doubt the officers in
garrison at Rouen would be invited, etc.
Helene, on the other hand, was
incessantly telling her new friend,
whom she already looked upon as a sister-in-law, that she was to be
presented to MADAME;
undoubtedly the Duc de Verneuil would invite her
father and herself to stay at Rosembray; if the
colonel wished to
obtain a favor of the king,--a peerage, for instance,--the opportunity
was
unique, for there was hope of the king himself being present on
the third day; she would be
delighted with the
charmingwelcome with
which the beauties of the Court, the Duchesses de Chaulieu, de
Maufrigneuse, de Lenoncourt-Chaulieu, and other ladies, were prepared
to meet her. It was in fact an excessively
amusing little warfare,
with its marches and countermarches and stratagems,--all of which were
keenly enjoyed by the Dumays, the Latournelles, Gobenheim, and
Butscha, who, in conclave assembled, said
horrible things of these
noble personages,
cruelly noting and
intelligently studying all their
little meannesses.
The promises on the d'Herouville side were, however, confirmed by the
arrival of an
invitation, couched in
flattering terms, from the Duc de
Verneuil and the Master of the Hunt to Monsieur le Comte de La Bastie
and his daughter, to stay at Rosembray and be present at a grand hunt
on the seventh, eighth, ninth, and tenth, of November following.
La Briere, full of dark presentiments, craved the presence of Modeste
with an
eagerness whose bitter joys are known only to lovers who feel
that they are parted, and parted fatally from those they love. Flashes
of joy came to him intermingled with
melancholy meditations on the one
theme, "I have lost her," and made him all the more interesting to
those who watched him, because his face and his whole person were in
keeping with his
profound feeling. There is nothing more
poetic than a
living elegy,
animated by a pair of eyes, walking about, and sighing
without rhymes.
The Duc d'Herouville arrived at last to arrange for Modeste's
departure; after crossing the Seine she was to be conveyed in the
duke's caleche, accompanied by the Demoiselles d'Herouville. The duke
was
charmingly
courteous, he begged Canalis and La Briere to be of the
party, assuring them, as he did the
colonel, that he had taken
particular care that hunters should be provided for them. The
colonelinvited the three lovers to breakfast on the morning of the start.
Canalis then began to put into
execution a plan that he had been
maturing in his own mind for the last few days;
namely, to quietly
reconquer Modeste, and throw over the
duchess, La Briere, and the
duke. A graduate of
diplomacy could hardly remain stuck in the
position in which he found himself. On the other hand La Briere had
come to the
resolution of bidding Modeste an
eternalfarewell. Each
suitor was
therefore on the watch to slip in a last word, like the
defendant's
counsel to the court before judgment is
pronounced; for
all felt that the three weeks' struggle was approaching its
conclusion. After dinner on the evening before the start was to be
made, the
colonel had taken his daughter by the arm and made her feel
the necessity of deciding.
"Our position with the d'Herouville family will be quite intolerable
at Rosembray," he said to her. "Do you mean to be a
duchess?"
"No, father," she answered.
"Then do you love Canalis?"
"No, papa, a thousand times no!" she exclaimed with the
impatience of
a child.
The
colonel looked at her with a sort of joy.
"Ah, I have not influenced you," cried the true father, "and I will
now
confess that I chose my son-in-law in Paris when, having made him
believe that I had but little fortune, he grasped my hand and told me
I took a weight from his mind--"
"Who is it you mean?" asked Modeste, coloring.
"THE MAN OF FIXED PRINCIPLES AND SOUND MORALITIES," said her father,
slyly, repeating the words which had dissolved poor Modeste's dream on
the day after his return.
"I was not even thinking of him, papa. Please leave me at liberty to
refuse the duke myself; I understand him, and I know how to soothe
him."
"Then your choice is not made?"
"Not yet; there is another
syllable or two in the charade of my
destiny still to be guessed; but after I have had a
glimpse of court