life still more
sorrowful; for she now felt the
suffering her uncle
must have endured in witnessing the change of political and religious
opinion in the old house. Sorrow often falls like a
thunderbolt, as it
did on Madame Granson; but in this old maid it slowly spread like a
drop of oil, which never leaves the stuff that slowly imbibes it.
The Chevalier de Valois was the
malicious manipulator who brought
about the crowning
misfortune of Madame du Bousquier's life. His heart
was set on undeceiving her pious
simplicity; for the chevalier, expert
in love, divined du Bousquier, the married man, as he had divined du
Bousquier, the
bachelor. But the wary
republican was difficult of
attack. His salon was, of course, closed to the Chevalier de Valois,
as to all those who, in the early days of his marriage, had slighted
the Cormon
mansion. He was,
moreover, impervious to
ridicule; he
possessed a vast fortune; he reigned in Alencon; he cared as little
for his wife as Richard III. cared for the dead horse which had helped
him win a battle. To please her husband, Madame du Bousquier had
broken off relations with the d'Esgrignon household, where she went no
longer, except that sometimes when her husband left her during his
trips to Paris, she would pay a brief visit to Mademoiselle Armande.
About three years after her marriage, at the time of the Abbe de
Sponde's death, Mademoiselle Armande joined Madame du Bousquier as
they were leaving Saint-Leonard's, where they had gone to hear a
requiem said for him. The
generous demoiselle thought that on this
occasion she owed her
sympathy to the niece in trouble. They walked
together, talking of the dear deceased, until they reached the
forbidden house, into which Mademoiselle Armande enticed Madame du
Bousquier by the charm of her manner and conversation. The poor
desolate woman was glad to talk of her uncle with one whom he truly
loved. Moreover, she wanted to receive the condolences of the old
marquis, whom she had not seen for nearly three years. It was half-
past one o'clock, and she found at the hotel d'Esgrignon the Chevalier
de Valois, who had come to dinner. As he bowed to her, he took her by
the hands.
"Well, dear,
virtuous, and
beloved lady," he said, in a tone of
emotion, "we have lost our sainted friend; we share your grief. Yes,
your loss is as
keenly felt here as in your own home,--more so," he
added, alluding to du Bousquier.
After a few more words of
funeraloration, in which all present spoke
from the heart, the chevalier took Madame du Bousquier's arm, and,
gallantly placing it within his own, pressed it adoringly as he led
her to the
recess of a window.
"Are you happy?" he said in a fatherly voice.
"Yes," she said, dropping her eyes.
Hearing that "Yes," Madame de Troisville, the daughter of the Princess
Scherbellof, and the old Marquise de Casteran came up and joined the
chevalier, together with Mademoiselle Armande. They all went to walk
in the garden until dinner was served, without any
perception on the
part of Madame du Bousquier that a little
conspiracy was afoot. "We
have her! now let us find out the secret of the case," were the words
written in the eyes of all present.
"To make your happiness complete," said Mademoiselle Armande, "you
ought to have children,--a fine lad like my nephew--"
Tears seemed to start in Madame du Bousquier's eyes.
"I have heard it said that you were the one to blame in the matter,
and that you feared the dangers of a pregnancy," said the chevalier.
"I!" she said artlessly. "I would buy a child with a hundred years of
purgatory if I could."
On the question thus started a
discussion arose, conducted by Madame
de Troisville and the old Marquise de Casteran with such
delicacy and
adroitness that the poor
victim revealed, without being aware of it,
the secrets of her house. Mademoiselle Armande had taken the
chevalier's arm, and walked away so as to leave the three women free
to discuss wedlock. Madame du Bousquier was then enlightened on the
various deceptions of her marriage; and as she was still the same
simpleton she had always been, she amused her advisers by delightful
naivetes.
Although at first the deceptive marriage of Mademoiselle Cormon made a
laugh throughout the town, which was soon initiated into the story of
the case, before long Madame du Bousquier won the
esteem and
sympathyof all the women. The fact that Mademoiselle Cormon had flung herself
headlong into marriage without succeeding in being married, made
everybody laugh at her; but when they
learned the
exceptional position
in which the sternness of her religious principles placed her, all the
world admired her. "That poor Madame du Bousquier" took the place of
"That good Mademoiselle Cormon."
Thus the chevalier contrived to render du Bousquier both ridiculous
and
odious for a time; but
ridicule ends by weakening; when all had
said their say about him, the
gossip died out. Besides, at fifty-seven
years of age the dumb
republican seemed to many people to have a right
to
retire. This affair, however, envenomed the
hatred which du
Bousquier already bore to the house of Esgrignon to such a degree that
it made him
pitiless when the day of
vengeance came. [See "The Gallery
of Antiquities."] Madame du Bousquier received orders never again to
set foot into that house. By way of reprisals upon the chevalier for
the trick thus played him, du Bousquier, who had just created the
journal called the "Courrier de l'Orne," caused the following notice
to be inserted in it:--
"Bonds to the
amount of one thousand francs a year will be paid to
any person who can prove the
existence of one Monsieur de
Pombreton before, during, or after the Emigration."
Although her marriage was
essentiallynegative, Madame du Bousquier
saw some advantages in it: was it not better to interest herself in
the most
remarkable man in the town than to live alone? Du Bousquier
was preferable to a dog, or cat, or those canaries that spinsters
love. He showed for his wife a
sentiment more real and less selfish
than that which is felt by servants, confessors, and
hopeful heirs.
Later in life she came to consider her husband as the
instrument of
divine wrath; for she then saw
innumerable sins in her former desires
for marriage; she regarded herself as
justly punished for the sorrow
she had brought on Madame Granson, and for the hastened death of her
uncle. Obedient to that religion which commands us to kiss the rod
with which the
punishment is inflicted, she praised her husband, and
publicly approved him. But in the confessional, or at night, when
praying, she wept often, imploring God's
forgiveness for the apostasy
of the man who thought the
contrary of what he professed, and who
desired the
destruction of the
aristocracy and the Church,--the two
religions of the house of Cormon.
With all her feelings bruised and immolated within her, compelled by
duty to make her husband happy, attached to him by a certain
indefinable
affection, born, perhaps, of habit, her life became one
perpetual
contradiction. She had married a man whose conduct and
opinions she hated, but whom she was bound to care for with dutiful
tenderness. Often she walked with the angels when du Bousquier ate her
preserves or thought the dinner good. She watched to see that his
slightest wish was satisfied. If he tore off the cover of his
newspaper and left it on a table, instead of throwing it away, she
would say:--
"Rene, leave that where it is;
monsieur did not place it there without
intention."
If du Bousquier had a journey to take, she was
anxious about his
trunk, his linen; she took the most minute precautions for his
material benefit. If he went to Prebaudet, she consulted the barometer
the evening before to know if the weather would be fine. She watched
for his will in his eyes, like a dog which hears and sees its master
while
sleeping. When the stout du Bousquier, touched by this
scrupulous love, would take her round the waist and kiss her forehead,
saying, "What a good woman you are!" tears of pleasure would come into
the eyes of the poor creature. It is probably that du Bousquier felt
himself obliged to make certain concessions which
obtained for him the
respect of Rose-Marie-Victoire; for Catholic
virtue does not require a
dissimulation as complete as that of Madame du Bousquier. Often the
good saint sat mutely by and listened to the
hatred of men who
concealed themselves under the cloak of
constitutional royalists. She
shuddered as she foresaw the ruin of the Church. Occasionally she
risked a
stupid word, an
observation which du Bousquier cut short with
a glance.
The worries of such an
existence ended by stupefying Madame du
Bousquier, who found it easier and also more
dignified to concentrate