weariness flowed over his fevered cheeks; he was bowed down with
fatigue upon
fatigue, his
throat seemed to be glued by the desert
thirst. The guide
meanwhile stood
motionless, listening to these
complaints with an ironical expression, studying the while, with
the
apparentindifference of an Oriental, the scarcely
perceptible indications in the lie of the sands, which looked
almost black, like burnished gold.
"I have made a mistake," he remarked
coolly. "I could not
make out the track, it is so long since I came this way; we are
surely on it now, but we must push on for two hours."
"The man is right," thought M. de Montriveau.
So he went on again, struggling to follow the
pitiless native.
It seemed as if he were bound to his guide by some thread like
the
invisible tie between the condemned man and the headsman.
But the two hours went by, Montriveau had spent his last drops of
energy, and the skyline was a blank, there were no palm-trees, no
hills. He could neither cry out nor groan, he lay down on the
sand to die, but his eyes would have frightened the boldest;
something in his face seemed to say that he would not die alone.
His guide, like a very fiend, gave him back a cool glance like a
man that knows his power, left him to lie there, and kept at a
safe distance out of reach of his
desperatevictim. At last M.
Montriveau recovered strength enough for a last curse.
The guide came nearer, silenced him with a steady look, and said,
"Was it not your own will to go where I am
taking you, in spite
of us all? You say that I have lied to you. If I had not, you
would not be even here. Do you want the truth? Here it is. WE
HAVE STILL ANOTHER FIVE HOURS' MARCH BEFORE US, AND WE CANNOT GO
BACK. Sound yourself; if you have not courage enough, here is my
dagger."
Startled by this
dreadful knowledge of pain and human strength,
M. de Montriveau would not be behind a
savage; he drew a fresh
stock of courage from his pride as a European, rose to his feet,
and followed his guide. The five hours were at an end, and still
M. de Montriveau saw nothing, he turned his failing eyes upon his
guide; but the Nubian hoisted him on his shoulders, and showed
him a wide pool of water with greenness all about it, and a noble
forest lighted up by the
sunset. It lay only a hundred paces
away; a vast ledge of
granite hid the
gloriouslandscape. It
seemed to Armand that he had taken a new lease of life. His
guide, that giant in courage and
intelligence, finished his work
of
devotion by carrying him across the hot,
slippery, scarcely
discernible track on the
granite. Behind him lay the hell of
burning sand, before him the
earthlyparadise of the most
beautiful oasis in the desert.
The Duchess, struck from the first by the appearance of this
romantic figure, was even more impressed when she
learned that
this was that Marquis de Montriveau of whom she had dreamed
during the night. She had been with him among the hot desert
sands, he had been the
companion of her
nightmare wanderings; for
such a woman was not this a
delightful presage of a new interest
in her life? And never was a man's
exterior a better exponent of
his
character; never were curious glances so well justified. The
principalcharacteristic of his great, square-hewn head was the
thick,
luxuriant black hair which framed his face, and gave him a
strikingly close
resemblance to General Kleber; and the likeness
still held good in the
vigorousforehead, in the outlines of his
face, the quiet fearlessness of his eyes, and a kind of fiery
vehemence expressed by
strongly marked features. He was short,
deep-chested, and
muscular as a lion. There was something of the
despot about him, and an
indescribablesuggestion of the security
of strength in his gait,
bearing, and slightest movements. He
seemed to know that his will was
irresistible, perhaps because he
wished for nothing
unjust. And yet, like all really strong men,
he was mild of speech, simple in his manners, and kindly natured;
although it seemed as if, in the
stress of a great
crisis, all
these finer qualities must disappear, and the man would show
himself implacable, unshaken in his
resolve,
terrific in action.
There was a certain
drawing in of the inner line of the lips
which, to a close
observer, indicated an ironical bent.
The Duchesse de Langeais, realising that a
fleeting glory was to
be won by such a
conquest, made up her mind to gain a lover in
Armand de Montriveau during the brief
interval before the
Duchesse de Maufrigneuse brought him to be introduced. She would
prefer him above the others; she would
attach him to herself,
display all her powers of coquetry for him. It was a fancy, such
a merest Duchess's whim as furnished a Lope or a Calderon with
the plot of the Dog in the Manger. She would not suffer another
woman to
engross him; but she had not the remotest
intention of
being his.
Nature had given the Duchess every
qualification for the part of
coquette, and education had perfected her. Women envied her, and
men fell in love with her, not without reason. Nothing that can
inspire love, justify it, and give it
lasting empire was wanting
in her. Her style of beauty, her manner, her voice, her
bearing,
all combined to give her that
instinctive coquetry which seems to
be the
consciousness of power. Her shape was
graceful; perhaps
there was a trace of self-
consciousness in her changes of
movement, the one affectation that could be laid to her charge;
but everything about her was a part of her
personality, from her
least little
gesture to the
peculiar turn of her phrases, the
demure glance of her eyes. Her great lady's grace, her most
striking
characteristic, had not destroyed the very French quick
mobility of her person. There was an
extraordinary fascination
in her swift,
incessant changes of attitude. She seemed as if
she surely would be a most
delicious mi
stress when her
corset and
the encumbering
costume of her part were laid aside. All the
rapture of love surely was
latent in the freedom of her
expressive glances, in her caressing tones, in the charm of her
words. She gave glimpses of the high-born courtesan within her,
vainly protesting against the creeds of the
duchess.
You might sit near her through an evening, she would be gay and
melancholy in turn, and her
gaiety, like her
sadness, seemed
spontaneous. She could be
gracious, disdainful,
insolent, or
confiding at will. Her
apparent good nature was real; she had no
temptation to
descend to malignity. But at each moment her mood
changed; she was full of confidence or craft; her moving
tenderness would give place to a heart-breaking
hardness and
insensibility. Yet how paint her as she was, without bringing
together all the extremes of
feminine nature? In a word, the
Duchess was anything that she wished to be or to seem. Her face
was
slightly too long. There was a grace in it, and a certain
thinness and
fineness that recalled the portraits of the Middle
Ages. Her skin was white, with a faint rose tint. Everything
about her erred, as it were, by an
excess of delicacy.
M. de Montriveau
willingly consented to be introduced to the
Duchesse de Langeais; and she, after the manner of persons whose
sensitive taste leads them to avoid banalities, refrained from
overwhelming him with questions and compliments. She received
him with a
gracious deference which could not fail to
flatter a
man of more than ordinary powers, for the fact that a man rises
above the ordinary level implies that he possesses something of
that tact which makes women quick to read feeling. If the
Duchess showed any
curiosity, it was by her glances; her
compliments were conveyed in her manner; there was a winning
grace displayed in her words, a subtle
suggestion of a desire to
please which she of all women knew the art of manifesting. Yet
her whole conversation was but, in a manner, the body of the
letter; the
postscript with the
principal thought in it was still
to come. After half an hour spent in ordinary talk, in which the
words gained all their value from her tone and smiles, M. de
Montriveau was about to
retire discreetly, when the Duchess
stopped him with an
expressivegesture.
"I do not know,
monsieur, whether these few minutes during which
I have had the pleasure of talking to you proved so sufficiently
attractive, that I may
venture to ask you to call upon me; I am
afraid that it may be very
selfish of me to wish to have you all
to myself. If I should be so
fortunate as to find that my house
is
agreeable to you, you will always find me at home in the
evening until ten o'clock."
The
invitation was given with such
irresistible grace, that M. de
Montriveau could not refuse to accept it. When he fell back
again among the groups of men gathered at a distance from the
women, his friends congratulated him, half laughingly, half in
earnest, on the
extraordinaryreception vouchsafed him by the