登陆注册
5241700000057

第57章 CHAPTER XVII(1)

LA BOULAYE'S PROMISE

La Boulaye remained a moment by the door after Cecile's departure; then he moved away towards his desk, striving to master the tumultuous throbbing of his pulses. His eye alighted on Cecile's roses, and, scarce knowing why he did it, he picked them up and flung them behind a bookcase. It was but done when again the door opened, and his official ushered in Mademoiselle de Bellecour.

Oddly enough, at sight of her, La Boulaye grew master of himself.

He received her with a polite and very formal bow - a trifle over-graceful for a patriot.

"So, Citoyenne," said he, and so cold was his voice that it seemed even tinged with mockery, "you are come at last."

"I could not come before, Monsieur," she answered, trembling. "They would not let me." Then, after a second's pause: "Am I too late, Monsieur?" she asked.

"No," he answered her. "The ci-devant Vicomte d'Ombreval still lies awaiting trial. Will you not be seated?"

"I do not look to remain long."

"As you please, Citoyenne. I have delayed Ombreval's trial thinking that if not my letter why then his might bring you, sooner or later, to his rescue. It may interest you to hear," he continued with an unmistakable note of irony," that that brave but hapless gentleman is much fretted at his incarceration."

A shadow crossed her face, which remained otherwise calm and composed - the beautiful, intrepid face that had more than once been La Boulaye's undoing.

"I am glad that you have waited, Monsieur. In so doing you need have no doubts concerning me. M. d'Ombreval is my betrothed, and the troth I plighted him binds me in honour to succour him now."

La Boulaye looked steadily at her for a moment.

"Upon my soul," he said at last, a note of ineffable sarcasm vibrating in his voice, "I shall never cease to admire the effrontery of your class, and the coolness with which, in despite of dishonourable action, you make high-sounding talk of honour and the things to which it binds you. I have a dim recollection, Citoyenne, of something uncommonly like your troth which you plighted me one night at Boisvert. But so little did that promise bind you that when I sought to enforce your fulfilment of it you broke my head and left me to die in the road."

His words shook her out of her calm. Her bosom rose and fell, her eyes seemed to grow haggard and her hands were clasped convulsively.

"Monsieur," she answered, "when I gave you my promise that night I had every intention of keeping it. I swear it, as Heaven is my witness."

"Your actions more than proved it," he said dryly.

"Be generous, Monsieur," she begged. "It was my mother prevailed upon me to alter my determination. She urged that I should be dishonoured if I did not."

"That word again!" he cried. "What part it plays in the life of the noblesse. All that it suits you to do, you do because honour bids you, all to which you have bound yourselves, but which is distasteful, you discover that honour forbids, and that you would be dishonoured did you persist. But I am interrupting you, Citoyenne. Did your mother advance any arguments?"

"The strongest argument of all lay here, in my heart, Monsieur," she answered him, roused and hardened by his scorn. "You must see that it had become with me a matter of choosing the lesser of two evils. Upon reflection I discovered that I was bound to two men, and it behoved me to keep the more binding of my pledges."

"Which you discovered to be your word to Ombreval," he said, and his voice grew unconsciously softer, for he began to realise the quandary in which she had found herself.

She inclined her head assentingly.

"To him I had given the earlier promise, and then, again, he was of my own class whilst you - "

"Spare me, Citoyenne," he cried. "I know what you would say. I am of the rabble, and of little more account in a matter of honour than a, beast of the field. It is thus that you reason, and yet, mon Dieu! I had thought that ere now such notions had died out with you, and that, stupid enough though your class has proved itself, it would at least have displayed the intelligence to perceive that its day is ended, its sun set." He turned and paced the apartment as he spoke. "The Lilies of France have been shorn from their stems, they have withered by the roadside, and they have been trampled into the dust by the men of the new regime, and yet it seems that you others of the noblesse have not learnt your lesson. You have not yet discovered that here in France the man who was born a tiller of the soil is still a man, and, by his manhood, the equal of a king, who, after all, can be no more than a man, and is sometimes less.

Enfin!" he ended brusquely. "This is not the National Assembly, and I talk to ears untutored in such things. Let us deal rather with the business upon which you are come."

She eyed him out of a pale face, with eyes that seemed fascinated.

That short burst of the fiery eloquence that had made him famous revealed him to her in a new light: the light of a strength and capacity above and beyond that which, already, she had perceived was his.

"Will you believe, Monsieur, that it cost me many tears to use you as I did? If you but knew - " And there she paused abruptly. She had all but told him of the kiss that she had left upon his unconscious lips that evening on the road to Liege. "Mon Dieu how I hated myself!" And she shuddered as she spoke.

He observed all this, and with a brusqueness that was partly assumed he hastened to her rescue.

"What is done is done, Citoyenne. Come, let us leave reminiscences.

You are here to atone, I take it."

At that she started. His words reminded her of those of his letter.

"Monsieur La Boulaye - "

"If it is all one to you, Citoyenne, I should prefer that you call me citizen."

"Citizen, then," she amended. "I have brought with me the gems which I told you would constitute my dowry. In his letter to me the Vicomte suggested that - " She paused.

"That some Republican blackguard might be bribed," he concluded, very gently.

同类推荐
  • 人海潮

    人海潮

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 莅蒙平政录

    莅蒙平政录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 度大庾岭

    度大庾岭

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 太上洞真凝神修行经诀

    太上洞真凝神修行经诀

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 同治甲戌日兵侵台始末

    同治甲戌日兵侵台始末

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 每天读一点气场心理学

    每天读一点气场心理学

    《每天读一点气场心理学》揭开了心理学和气场之间的关系,即心理是强化气场的内在源泉,气场是影响心理的无形因素。《每天读一点气场心理学》告诉读者,要想成为一个成功的人,就要学会用心理提升自己的气场。《每天读一点气场心理学》通俗易懂,经典实用,是读者提升气场的引路者。《每天读一点气场心理学》能够帮助读者摆脱心理负气场,迅速提升正气场!
  • 卑鄙的圣人:曹操4

    卑鄙的圣人:曹操4

    历史上的大奸大忠都差不多,只有曹操大不同!曹操的计谋,奸诈程度往往将对手整得头昏脑涨、找不着北,卑鄙程度也屡屡突破道德底线,但他却是一个心怀天下、体恤众生的圣人;而且他还是一个柔情万丈、天才横溢的诗人;最后他还是一个敏感、自卑、内心孤独的普通男人。
  • 我与式神的情谊

    我与式神的情谊

    穿越到异界,发现这个世界的人都可以修炼功法,可以用灵兽来进行战斗。但自己不能训服灵兽,却可以召唤出式神来帮忙。二口女:“哎?食物怎么都不见了?”茨木:“挚友啊,出来和我战斗吧!”金鱼姬:“让我带你们去征服世界!”妖狐:“小生只是来散步的。”看着这一群呆萌的式神,苏墨既无奈,又满足。“果然式神还是用来卖萌比较好。”
  • 三神聚一

    三神聚一

    500年前的武神天昊被众人击杀,本以为自己回陨落,但灵魂却随着吞噬经残篇穿越到了一个小位面的世界里,又偶然获得远古丹神和器神的传承和记忆,又偶然获得万千世界只出现过一次的吞噬体质,又偶然获得传说级别武魂,远古级别不存在的武魂。这一世他不仅要变强,还要迈入那传说的境界
  • 混迹在新明朝

    混迹在新明朝

    张彦发现自己穿越了,并且来到了一个假的大明朝!历史还是那个历史,但拐了个弯儿,众多名人的命运轨迹也随之发生了改变……他进一步发现,自己居然还是个穿二代。可惜高堂早逝,空顶着个穿二代的光环,却没机会享受到拼爹为他带来的安逸生活。张彦觉得自己应该做些什么,至少不能被活活饿死。封侯拜相太难,建功立业太累,开疆拓土不现实,青史留名不靠谱,权倾朝野忒荒唐……倒不如混混日子,考个功名,做个小官,发一点小财,纳两房小妾,抱几条大腿来得逍遥自在!然而……他混着混着,混了个金榜题名。混着混着,混了个万民称颂!混着混着,混成了大明首辅……
  • 推逢寤语 医林琐语

    推逢寤语 医林琐语

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 中原客的诗等

    中原客的诗等

    诗日记。……把摸索到的那盏灯拧亮。那人的身体里原来漆黑一团。仿佛倒扣于风雨中的一口大钟。阴晦、死寂!铜——或者铁已锈得近乎不成样子。突然的灯光,突然抱住了书生千年的隐痛。夏夜。黑云压城!喘息被压得更低——闪电:一束被痛楚击中的神经。从随后的一阵阵怪叫来看。天神也不是我们想象中的硬汉。暴雨,让人进而联想到了哭泣。好在很快就收住了,跟没事儿一样。
  • 别让直性子害了你

    别让直性子害了你

    一个人情绪控制的能力,决定了他事业有为的大小。在关键时刻、关键场合,能够沉住气,妥善应对各种复杂局势的人,才能处理好各种关系、化解掉潜在的危机,日后成就非凡的业绩。因此,有意识地锻炼自己的控制力,修炼成好心性,自然容易换来好心情,赢得好局面。在人际交往中,一定要确定什么事可以不认真,什么事需要认真,在非原则性的事情上装一下糊涂,既不会破坏和他人之间的友谊,又体现了良好的素养,这样才会拥有越来越多的朋友。不因直性子破坏来之不易的关系,不仅是维系关系和睦的基础,也是成大事者的基本素养。
  • 第一横

    第一横

    一不小心就成了三大祸害之首,又一不小心受重伤女剑仙托付,肩负起除害重任,原来我才是天下第一横,你是要我除掉自己吗?
  • 岚斋集

    岚斋集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。