De Guiche, who did not comprehend a word of Madame’s dumb language, but he remarked that she pretended not to look at him, and he attributed the pardon which had been conferred upon him to the princess’s kindness of heart. The king seemed only pleased with every one present. Monsieur was the only one who did not understand anything about the matter. The ballet began; the effect was more than beautiful. When the music, by its bursts of melody, carried away these illustrious dancers, when the simple, untutored pantomime of that period, only the more natural on account of the very indifferent acting of the august actors, had reached its culminating point of triumph, the theater shook with tumultuous applause.
De Guiche shone like a sun, but like a courtly sun, that is resigned to fill a subordinate part. Disdainful of a success of which Madame showed no acknowledgement, he thought of nothing but boldly regaining the marked preference of the princess. She, however, did not bestow a single glance upon him. By degrees all his happiness, all his brilliancy, subsided into regret and uneasiness; so that his limbs lost their power, his arms hung heavily by his sides, and his head drooped as though he was stupefied. The king, who had from this moment become in reality the principal dancer in the quadrille, cast a look upon his vanquished rival. De Guiche soon ceased to sustain even the character of the courtier; without applause, he danced indifferently, and very soon could not dance at all, by which accident the triumph of the king and of Madame was assured.
Chapter XL:
The Nymphs of the Park of Fontainebleau.
The king remained for a moment to enjoy a triumph as complete as it could possibly be. He then turned towards Madame, for the purpose of admiring her also a little in her turn. Young persons love with more vivacity, perhaps with greater ardor and deeper passion, than others more advanced in years; but all the other feelings are at the same time developed in proportion to their youth and vigor: so that vanity being with them almost always the equivalent of love, the latter feeling, according to the laws of equipoise, never attains that degree of perfection which it acquires in men and women from thirty to five and thirty years of age. Louis thought of Madame, but only after he had studiously thought of himself; and Madame carefully thought of herself, without bestowing a single thought upon the king. The victim, however, of all these royal affections and affectations, was poor De Guiche. Every one could observe his agitation and prostration – a prostration which was, indeed, the more remarkable since people were not accustomed to see him with his arms hanging listlessly by his side, his head bewildered, and his eyes with all their bright intelligence bedimmed. It rarely happened that any uneasiness was excited on his account, whenever a question of elegance or taste was under discussion; and De Guiche’s defeat was accordingly attributed by the greater number present to his courtier-like tact and ability. But there were others – keen-sighted observers are always to be met with at court – who remarked his paleness and his altered looks; which he could neither feign nor conceal, and their conclusion was that De Guiche was not acting the part of a flatterer. All these sufferings, successes, and remarks were blended, confounded, and lost in the uproar of applause. When, however, the queens expressed their satisfaction and the spectators their enthusiasm, when the king had retired to his dressing-room to change his costume, and whilst Monsieur, dressed as a woman, as he delighted to be, was in his turn dancing about, De Guiche, who had now recovered himself, approached Madame, who, seated at the back of the theater, was waiting for the second part, and had quitted the others for the purpose of creating a sort of solitude for herself in the midst of the crowd, to meditate, as it were, beforehand, upon chorographic effects; and it will be perfectly understood that, absorbed in deep meditation, she did not see, or rather pretended not to notice, anything that was passing around her. De Guiche, observing that she was alone, near a thicket constructed of painted cloth, approached her. Two of her maids of honor, dressed as hamadryads, seeing De Guiche advance, drew back out of respect., whereupon De Guiche proceeded towards the middle of the circle and saluted her royal highness; but, whether she did or did not observe his salutations, the princess did not even turn her head. A cold shiver passed through poor De Guiche; he was unprepared for such utter indifference, for he had neither seen nor been told of anything that had taken place, and consequently could guess nothing. Remarking, therefore, that his obeisance obtained him no acknowledgement, he advanced one step further, and in a voice which he tried, though vainly, to render calm, said: “I have the honor to present my most humble respects to your royal highness.”
Upon this Madame deigned to turn her eyes languishingly towards the comte, observing. “Ah! M. de Guiche, is that you? good day!”
The comte’s patience almost forsook him, as he continued, – “Your royal highness danced just now most charmingly.”
“Do you think so?” she replied with indifference.
“Yes; the character which your royal highness assumed is in perfect harmony with your own.”
Madame again turned round, and, looking De Guiche full in the face with a bright and steady gaze, said, – “Why so?”
“Oh! there can be no doubt of it.”
“Explain yourself?”
“You represented a divinity, beautiful, disdainful, inconstant.”
“You mean Pomona, comte?”
“I allude to the goddess.”
Madame remained silent for a moment, with her lips compressed, and then observed, – “But, comte, you, too, are an excellent dancer.”
“Nay, Madame, I am only one of those who are never noticed, or who are soon forgotten if they ever happen to be noticed.”
With this remark, accompanied by one of those deep sighs which affect the remotest fibers of one’s being, his heart burdened with sorrow and throbbing fast, his head on fire, and his gaze wandering, he bowed breathlessly, and withdrew behind the thicket. The only reply Madame condescended to make was by slightly raising her shoulders, and, as her ladies of honor had discreetly retired while the conversation lasted, she recalled them by a look. The ladies were Mademoiselle de Tonnay-Charente and Mademoiselle de Montalais.
“Did you hear what the Comte de Guiche said?” the princess inquired.
“No.”
“It really is very singular,” she continued, in a compassionate tone, “how exile has affected poor M. de Guiche’s wit.” And then, in a louder voice, fearful lest her unhappy victim might lose a syllable, she said, – “In the first place he danced badly, and afterwards his remarks were very silly.”
She then rose, humming the air to which she was presently going to dance. De Guiche had overheard everything. The arrow pierced his heart and wounded him mortally. Then, at the risk of interrupting the progress of the _fete_ by his annoyance, he fled from the scene, tearing his beautiful costume of Autumn in pieces, and scattering, as he went along, the branches of vines, mulberry and almond trees, with all the other artificial attributes of his assumed divinity. A quarter of an hour afterwards he returned to the theater; but it will be readily believed that it was only a powerful effort of reason over his great excitement that enabled him to go back; or perhaps, for love is thus strangely constituted, he found it impossible even to remain much longer separated from the presence of one who had broken his heart. Madame was finishing her figure. She saw, but did not look at De Guiche, who, irritated and revengeful, turned his back upon her as she passed him, escorted by her nymphs, and followed by a hundred flatterers. During this time, at the other end of the theater, near the lake, a young woman was seated, with her eyes fixed upon one of the windows of the theater, from which were issuing streams of light – the window in question being that of the royal box. As De Guiche quitted the theater for the purpose of getting into the fresh air he so much needed, he passed close to this figure and saluted her. When she perceived the young man, she rose, like a woman surprised in the midst of ideas she was desirous of concealing from herself. De Guiche stopped as he recognized her, and said hurriedly, – “Good evening, Mademoiselle de la Valliere; I am indeed fortunate in meeting you.”
“I, also, M. de Guiche, am glad of this accidental meeting,” said the young girl, as she was about to withdraw.
“Pray do not leave me,” said De Guiche, stretching out his hand towards her, “for you would be contradicting the kind words you have just pronounced. Remain, I implore you: the evening is most lovely. You wish to escape from the merry tumult, and prefer your own society. Well, I can understand it; all women who are possessed of any feeling do, and one never finds them dull or lonely when removed from the giddy vortex of these exciting amusements. Oh! Heaven!” he exclaimed, suddenly.
“What is the matter, monsieur le comte?” inquired La Valliere, with some anxiety. “You seem agitated.”
“I! oh, no!”
“Will you allow me, M. de Guiche, to return you the thanks I had proposed to offer you on the very first opportunity? It is to your recommendation, I am aware, that I owe my admission among the number of Madame’s maids of honor.”
“Indeed! Ah! I remember now, and I congratulate myself. Do you love any one?”
“I!” exclaimed La Valliere.
“Forgive me, I hardly know what I am saying; a thousand times forgive me; Madame was right, quite right, this brutal exile has completely turned my brain.”
“And yet it seemed to me that the king received you with kindness.”
“Do you think so? Received me with kindness – perhaps so – yes – “
“There cannot be a doubt he received you kindly, for, in fact, you returned without his permission.”
“Quite true, and I believe you are right. But have you not seen M. de Bragelonne here?”
La Valliere started at the name. “Why do you ask?” she inquired.
“Have I offended you again?” said De Guiche. “In that case I am indeed unhappy, and greatly to be pitied.”
“Yes, very unhappy, and very much to be pitied, Monsieur de Guiche, for you seem to be suffering terribly.”
“Oh! mademoiselle, why have I not a devoted sister, or a true friend, such as yourself?”
“You have friends, Monsieur de Guiche, and the Vicomte de Bragelonne, of whom you spoke just now, is, I believe, one of the most devoted.”
“Yes, yes, you are right, he is one of my best friends. Farewell, Mademoiselle de la Valliere, farewell.” And he fled, like one possessed, along the banks of the lake. His dark shadow glided, lengthening as it disappeared, among the illumined yews and glittering undulations of the water. La Valliere looked after him, saying, – “Yes, yes, he, too, is suffering, and I begin to understand why.”
She had hardly finished when her companions, Mademoiselle de Montalais and Mademoiselle de Tonnay-Charente, ran forward. They were released from their attendance, and had changed their costumes of nymphs; delighted with the beautiful night, and the success of the evening, they returned to look after their companion.
“What, already here!” they said to her. “We thought we should be first at the rendezvous.”
“I have been here this quarter of an hour,” replied La Valliere.
“Did not the dancing amuse you?”
“No.”
“But surely the enchanting spectacle?”
“No more than the dancing. As far as beauty is concerned, I much prefer that which these dark woods present, in whose depths can be seen, now in one direction and again in another, a light passing by, as though it were an eye, in color like a midnight rainbow, sometimes open, at others closed.”
“La Valliere is quite a poetess,” said Tonnay-Charente.
“In other words,” said Montalais, “she is insupportable. Whenever there is a question of laughing a little or of amusing ourselves, La Valliere begins to cry; whenever we girls have reason to cry, because, perhaps, we have mislaid our dresses, or because our vanity as been wounded, or our costume fails to produce an effect, La Valliere laughs.”
“As far as I am concerned, that is not my character,” said Mademoiselle de Tonnay-Charente. “I am a woman; and there are few like me; whoever loves me, flatters me; whoever flatters me, pleases me; and whoever pleases – “
“Well!” said Montalais, “you do not finish.”
“It is too difficult,” replied Mademoiselle de Tonnay-Charente, laughing loudly. “Do you, who are so clever, finish for me.”
“And you, Louise?” said Montalais, “does any one please you?”
“That is a matter that concerns no one but myself,” replied the young girl, rising from the mossy bank on which she had been reclining during the whole time the ballet lasted. “Now, mesdemoiselles, we have agreed to amuse ourselves to-night without any one to overlook us, and without any escort. We are three in number, we like one another, and the night is lovely. Look yonder, do you not see the moon slowly rising, silvering the topmost branches of the chestnuts and the oaks. Oh, beautiful walk! sweet liberty! exquisite soft turf of the woods, the happiness which your friendship confers upon me! let us walk arm in arm towards those large trees. Out yonder all are at this moment seated at table and fully occupied, or preparing to adorn themselves for a set and formal promenade; horses are being saddled, or harnessed to the carriages – the queen’s mules or Madame’s four white ponies. As for ourselves, we shall soon reach some retired spot where no eyes can see us and no step follow ours. Do you not remember, Montalais, the woods of Cheverny and of Chambord, the innumerable rustling poplars of Blois, where we exchanged our mutual hopes?”
“And confidences too?”
“Yes.”
“Well,” said Mademoiselle de Tonnay-Charente, “I also think a good deal; but I take care – “
“To say nothing,” said Montalais, “so that when Mademoiselle de Tonnay- Charente thinks, Athenais is the only one who knows it.”
“Hush!” said Mademoiselle de Tonnay-Charente, “I hear steps approaching from this side.”
“Quick, quick, then, among the high reed-grass,” said Montalais; “stoop, Athenais, you are so tall.”
Mademoiselle de Tonnay-Charente stooped as she was told, and, almost at the same moment, they saw two gentlemen approaching, their heads bent down, walking arm in arm, on the fine gravel walk running parallel with the bank. The young girls had, indeed, made themselves small – indeed invisible.
“It is Monsieur de Guiche,” whispered Montalais in Mademoiselle de Tonnay- Charente’s ear.
“It is Monsieur de Bragelonne,” whispered the latter to La Valliere.
The two young men approached still closer, conversing in animated tones. “She was here just now,” said the count. “If I had only seen her, I should have declared it to be a vision, but I spoke to her.”
“You are positive, then?”
“Yes; but perhaps I frightened her.”
“In what way?”
“Oh! I was still half crazy at you know what; so that she could hardly have understood what I was saying, and must have grown alarmed.”
“Oh!” said Bragelonne, “do not make yourself uneasy: she is all kindness, and will excuse you; she is clear-sighted, and will understand.”
“Yes, but if she should have understood, and understood too well, she may talk.”
“You do not know Louise, count,” said Raoul. “Louise possesses every virtue, and has not a single fault.” And the two young men passed on, and, as they proceeded, their voices were soon lost in the distance.
“How is it, La Valliere,” said Mademoiselle de Tonnay-Charente, “that the Vicomte de Bragelonne spoke of you as Louise?”
“We were brought up together,” replied Louise, blushing; “M. de Bragelonne has honored me by asking my hand in marriage, but – “
“Well?”
“It seems the king will not consent to it.”
“Eh! Why the king? and what has the king to do with it?” exclaimed Aure, sharply. “Good gracious! has the king any right to interfere in matters of that kind? Politics are politics, as M. de Mazarin used to say; but love is love. If, therefore, you love M. de Bragelonne, marry him. _I_ give _my_ consent.”
Athenais began to laugh.
“Oh! I am speaking seriously,” replied Montalais, “and my opinion in this case is quite as good as the king’s, I suppose; is it not, Louise?”
“Come,” said La Valliere, “these gentlemen have passed; let us take advantage of our being alone to cross the open ground and so take refuge in the woods.”
“So much the better,” said Athenais, “because I see the torches setting out from the chateau and the theater, and they seem as if they were preceding some person of distinction.”
“Let us run, then,” said all three. And, gracefully lifting up the long skirts of their silk dresses, they lightly ran across the open space between the lake and the thickest covert of the park. Montalais agile as a deer, Athenais eager as a young wolf, bounded through the dry grass, and, now and then, some bold Acteon might, by the aid of the faint light, have perceived their straight and well-formed limbs somewhat displayed beneath the heavy folds of their satin petticoats. La Valliere, more refined and more bashful, allowed her dress to flow around her; retarded also by the lameness of her foot, it was not long before she called out to her companions to halt, and, left behind, she obliged them both to wait for her. At this moment, a man, concealed in a dry ditch planted with young willow saplings, scrambled quickly up its shelving side, and ran off in the direction of the chateau. The three young girls, on their side, reached the outskirts of the park, every path of which they well knew. The ditches were bordered by high hedges full of flowers, which on that side protected the foot-passengers from being intruded upon by the horses and carriages. In fact, the sound of Madame’s and the queen’s carriages could be heard in the distance upon the hard dry ground of the roads, followed by the mounted cavaliers. Distant music reached them in response, and when the soft notes died away, the nightingale, with throat of pride, poured forth his melodious chants, and his most complicated, learned, and sweetest compositions to those who had met beneath the thick covert of the woods. Near the songster, in the dark background of the large trees, could be seen the glistening eyes of an owl, attracted by the harmony. In this way the _fete_ of the whole court was a _fete_ also for the mysterious inhabitants of the forest; for certainly the deer in the brake, the pheasant on the branch, the fox in its hole, were all listening. One could realize the life led by this nocturnal and invisible population from the restless movements that suddenly took place among the leaves. Our sylvan nymphs uttered a slight cry, but, reassured immediately afterwards, they laughed, and resumed their walk. In this manner they reached the royal oak, the venerable relic of a tree which in its prime has listened to the sighs of Henry II. for the beautiful Diana of Poitiers, and later still to those of Henry IV. for the lovely Gabrielle d’Estrees. Beneath this oak the gardeners had piled up the moss and turf in such a manner that never had a seat more luxuriously rested the wearied limbs of man or monarch. The trunk, somewhat rough to recline against, was sufficiently large to accommodate the three young girls, whose voices were lost among the branches, which stretched upwards to the sky.
Chapter XLI:
What Was Said under the Royal Oak.
The softness of the air, the stillness of the foliage, tacitly imposed upon these young girls an engagement to change immediately their giddy conversation for one of a more serious character. She, indeed, whose disposition was the most lively, – Montalais, for instance, – was the first to yield to the influence; and she began by heaving a deep sigh, and saying: – “What happiness to be here alone, and at liberty, with every right to be frank, especially towards one another.”
“Yes,” said Mademoiselle de Tonnay-Charente; “for the court, however brilliant it may be, has always some falsehood concealed beneath the folds of its velvet robes, or the glitter of its diamonds.”
“I,” replied La Valliere, “I never tell a falsehood; when I cannot speak the truth, I remain silent.”
“You will not long remain in favor,” said Montalais; “it is not here as it was at Blois, where we told the dowager Madame all our little annoyances, and all our longings. There were certain days when Madame remembered that she herself had been young, and, on those days, whoever talked with her found in her a sincere friend. She related to us her flirtations with Monsieur, and we told her of the flirtations she had had with others, or, at least, the rumors of them that had spread abroad. Poor woman, so simple-minded! she laughed at them, as we did. Where is she now?”
“Ah, Montalais, – laughter-loving Montalais!” cried La Valliere; “you see you are sighing again; the woods inspire you, and you are almost reasonable this evening.”
“You ought not, either of you,” said Athenais, “to regret the court at Blois so much, unless you do not feel happy with us. A court is a place where men and women resort to talk of matters which mothers, guardians, and especially confessors, severely denounce.”
“Oh, Athenais!” said Louise, blushing.
“Athenais is frank to-night,” said Montalais; “let us avail ourselves of it.”
“Yes, let us take advantage of it, for this evening I could divulge the softest secrets of my heart.”
“Ah, if M. Montespan were here!” said Montalais.
“Do you think that I care for M. de Montespan?” murmured the beautiful young girl.
“He is handsome, I believe?”
“Yes. And that is no small advantage in my eyes.”
“There now, you see – “
“I will go further, and say, that of all the men whom one sees here, he is the handsomest, and the most – “
“What was that?” said La Valliere, starting suddenly from the mossy bank.
“A deer hurrying by, perhaps.”
“I am only afraid of men,” said Athenais.
“When they do not resemble M. de Montespan.”
“A truce to raillery. M. de Montespan is attentive to me, but that does not commit me in any way. Is not M. de Guiche here, he who is so devoted to Madame?”
“Poor fellow!” said La Valliere.
“Why to be pitied? Madame is sufficiently beautiful, and of high enough rank, I suppose.”
La Valliere shook her head sorrowfully, saying, “When one loves, it is neither beauty nor rank; – when one loves it should be the heart, or the eyes only, of him, or of her whom one loves.”
Montalais began to laugh loudly. “Heart, eyes,” she said; “oh, sugar- plums!”
“I speak for myself;” replied La Valliere.
“Noble sentiments,” said Athenais, with an air of protection, but with indifference.
“Are they not your own?” asked Louise.
“Perfectly so; but to continue: how can one pity a man who bestows his attentions upon such a woman as Madame? If any disproportion exists, it is on the count’s side.”
“Oh! no, no,” returned La Valliere; “it is on Madame’s side.”
“Explain yourself.”
“I will. Madame has not even a wish to know what love is. She diverts herself with the feeling, as children do with fireworks, form which a spark might set a palace on fire. It makes a display, and that is all she cares about. Besides, pleasure forms the tissue of which she wishes her life to be woven. M. de Guiche loves this illustrious personage, but she will never love him.”
Athenais laughed disdainfully. “Do people really ever love?” she said. “Where are the noble sentiments you just now uttered? Does not a woman’s virtue consist in the uncompromising refusal of every intrigue that might compromise her? A properly regulated woman, endowed with a natural heart, ought to look at men, make herself loved – adored, even, by them, and say at the very utmost but once in her life, ‘I begin to think that I ought not to have been what I am, – I should have detested this one less than others.'”
“Therefore,” exclaimed La Valliere, “that is what M. de Montespan has to expect.”
“Certainly; he, as well as every one else. What! have I not said that I admit he possesses a certain superiority, and would not that be enough? My dear child, a woman is a queen during the entire period nature permits her to enjoy sovereign power – from fifteen to thirty-five years of age. After that, we are free to have a heart, when we only have that left – “
“Oh, oh!” murmured La Valliere.
“Excellent,” cried Montalais; “a very masterly woman; Athenais, you will make your way in the world.”
“Do you not approve of what I say?”
“Completely,” replied her laughing companion.
“You are not serious, Montalais?” said Louise.
“Yes, yes; I approve everything Athenais has just said; only – “
“Only _what?_”
“Well, I cannot carry it out. I have the firmest principles; I form resolutions beside which the laws of the Stadtholder and of the King of Spain are child’s play; but when the moment arrives to put them into execution, nothing comes of them.”
“Your courage fails?” said Athenais, scornfully.
“Miserably so.”
“Great weakness of nature,” returned Athenais. “But at least you make a choice.”
“Why, no. It pleases fate to disappoint me in everything; I dream of emperors, and I find only – “
“Aure, Aure!” exclaimed La Valliere, “for pity’s sake, do not, for the pleasure of saying something witty, sacrifice those who love you with such devoted affection.”
“Oh, I do not trouble myself much about that; those who love me are sufficiently happy that I do not dismiss them altogether. So much the worse for myself if I have a weakness for any one, but so much the worse for others if I revenge myself upon them for it.”
“You are right,” said Athenais, “and, perhaps, you too will reach the goal. In other words, young ladies, that is termed being a coquette. Men, who are very silly in most things, are particularly so in confounding, under the term of coquetry, a woman’s pride, and love of changing her sentiments as she does her dress. I, for instance, am proud; that is to say, impregnable. I treat my admirers harshly, but without any pretention to retain them. Men call me a coquette, because they are vain enough to think I care for them. Other women – Montalais, for instance – have allowed themselves to be influenced by flattery; they would be lost were it not for that most fortunate principle of instinct which urges them to change suddenly, and punish the man whose devotion they so recently accepted.”
“A very learned dissertation,” said Montalais, in the tone of thorough enjoyment.
“It is odious!” murmured Louise.
“Thanks to that sort of coquetry, for, indeed, that is genuine coquetry,” continued Mademoiselle de Tonnay-Charente; “the lover who, a little while since, was puffed up with pride, in a minute afterwards is suffering at every pore of his vanity and self-esteem. He was, perhaps, already beginning to assume the airs of a conqueror, but now he retreats defeated; he was about to assume an air of protection towards us, but he is obliged to prostrate himself once more. The result of all this is, that, instead of having a husband who is jealous and troublesome, free from restraint in his conduct towards us, we have a lover always trembling in our presence, always fascinated by our attractions, always submissive; and for this simple reason, that he finds the same woman never twice of the same mind. Be convinced, therefore, of the advantages of coquetry. Possessing that, one reigns a queen among women in cases where Providence has withheld that precious faculty of holding one’s heart and mind in check.”
“How clever you are,” said Montalais, “and how well you understand the duty women owe themselves!”
“I am only settling a case of individual happiness,” said Athenais modestly; “and defending myself, like all weak, loving dispositions, against the oppressions of the stronger.”
“La Valliere does not say a word.”
“Does she not approve of what we are saying?”
“Nay; only I do not understand it,” said Louise. “You talk like people not called upon to live in this world of ours.”
“And very pretty your world is,” said Montalais.
“A world,” returned Athenais, “in which men worship a woman until she has fallen, – and insult her when she has fallen.”
“Who spoke to you of falling?” said Louise.
“Yours is a new theory, then; will you tell us how you intend to resist yielding to temptation, if you allow yourself to be hurried away by feelings of affection?”
“Oh!” exclaimed the young girl, raising towards the dark heavens her beautiful large eyes filled with tears, “if you did but know what a heart is, I would explain, and convince you; a loving heart is stronger than all your coquetry, more powerful than all your pride. A woman is never truly loved, I believe; a man never loves with idolatry, unless he feels sure he is loved in return. Let old men, whom we read of in comedies, fancy themselves adored by coquettes. A young man is conscious of, and knows them; if he has a fancy, or a strong desire, and an absorbing passion, for a coquette, he cannot mistake her; a coquette may drive him out of his senses, but will never make him fall in love. Love, such as I conceive it to be, is an incessant, complete, and perfect sacrifice; but it is not the sacrifice of one only of the two persons thus united. It is the perfect abnegation of two who are desirous of blending their beings into one. If ever I love, I shall implore my lover to leave me free and pure; I will tell him, and he will understand, that my heart was torn by my refusal, and he, in his love for me, aware of the magnitude of my sacrifice, – he, in his turn, I say, will store his devotion for me, – will respect me, and will not seek my ruin, to insult me when I shall have fallen, as you said just now, whilst uttering your blasphemies against love, such as I understand it. That is my idea of love. And now you will tell me, perhaps, that my love will despise me; I defy him to do so, unless he be the vilest of men, and my heart assures me that it is not such a man I would choose. A look from me will repay him for the sacrifices he makes, or will inspire him with the virtues which he would never think he possessed.”
“But, Louise,” exclaimed Montalais, “you tell us this, and do not carry it into practice.”
“What do you mean?”
“You are adored by Raoul de Bragelonne, who worships you on both knees. The poor fellow is made the victim of your virtue, just as he would be nay, more than he would be, even – of my coquetry, or Athenais’s pride.”
“All this is simply a different shade of coquetry,” said Athenais; “and Louise, I perceive, is a coquette without knowing it.”
“Oh!” said La Valliere.
“Yes, you may call it instinct, if you please, keenest sensibility, exquisite refinement of feeling, perpetual play of restrained outbreaks of affection, which end in smoke. It is very artful too, and very effective. I should even, now that I reflect upon it, have preferred this system of tactics to my own pride, for waging war on members of the other sex, because it offers the advantage sometimes of thoroughly convincing them; but, at the present moment, without utterly condemning myself, I declare it to be superior to the non-complex coquetry of Montalais.” And the two young girls began to laugh.
La Valliere alone preserved silence, and quietly shook her head. Then, a moment after, she added, “If you were to tell me, in the presence of a man, but a fourth part of what you have just said, or even if I were assured that you think it, I should die of shame and grief where I am now.”
“Very well; die, poor tender little darling,” replied Mademoiselle de Tonnay-Charente; “for if there are no men here, there are at least two women, your own friends, who declare you to be attained and convicted of being a coquette from instinct; in other words, the most dangerous kind of coquette the world possesses.”
“Oh! mesdemoiselles,” replied La Valliere, blushing, and almost ready to weep. Her two companions again burst out laughing.
“Very well! I will ask Bragelonne to tell me.”
“Bragelonne?” said Athenais.
“Yes! Bragelonne, who is as courageous as Caesar, and as clever and witty as M. Fouquet. Poor fellow! for twelve years he has known you, loved you, and yet – one can hardly believe it – he has never even kissed the tips of your fingers.”
“Tell us the reason of this cruelty, you who are all heart,” said Athenais to La Valliere.
“Let me explain it by a single word – virtue. You will perhaps deny the existence of virtue?”
“Come, Louise, tell us the truth,” said Aure, taking her by the hand.
“What do you wish me to tell you?” cried La Valliere.
“Whatever you like; but it will be useless for you to say anything, for I persist in my opinion of you. A coquette from instinct; in other words, as I have already said, and I say it again, the most dangerous of all coquettes.”
“Oh! no, no; for pity’s sake do not believe that!”
“What! twelve years of extreme severity.”
“How can that be, since twelve years ago I was only five years old? The frivolity of the child cannot surely be placed to the young girl’s account.”
“Well! you are now seventeen; three years instead of twelve. During those three years you have remained constantly and unchangeably cruel. Against you are arrayed the silent shades of Blois, the meetings when you diligently conned the stars together, the evening wanderings beneath the plantain-trees, his impassioned twenty years speaking to your fourteen summers, the fire of his glances addressed to yourself.”
“Yes, yes; but so it is!”
“Impossible!”
“But why impossible?”
“Tell us something credible and we will believe you.”
“Yet, if you were to suppose one thing.”
“What is that?”
“Suppose that I thought I was in love, and that I am not.”
“What! not in love!”
“Well, then! if I have acted in a different manner to what others do when they are in love, it is because I do not love; and because my hour has not yet come.”
“Louise, Louise,” said Montalais, “take care or I will remind you of the remark you made just now. Raoul is not here; do not overwhelm him while he is absent; be charitable, and if, on closer inspection, you think you do not love him, tell him so, poor fellow!” and she began to laugh.
“Louise pitied M. de Guiche just now,” said Athenais; “would it be possible to detect an explanation of her indifference for the one in this compassion for the other?”
“Say what you please,” said La Valliere, sadly; “upbraid me as you like, since you do not understand me.”
“Oh! oh!” replied Montalais, “temper, sorrow, tears; we are jesting, Louise, and are not, I assure you, quite the monsters you suppose. Look at the proud Athenais, as she is called; she does not love M. de Montespan, it is true, but she would be in despair if M. de Montespan did not continue to love her. Look at me; I laugh at M. Malicorne, but the poor fellow whom I laugh at knows precisely when he will be permitted to press his lips upon my hand. And yet the eldest of us is not twenty yet. What a future before us!”
“Silly, silly girls!” murmured Louise.
“You are quite right,” said Montalais; “and you alone have spoken words of wisdom.”
“Certainly.”
“I do not dispute it,” replied Athenais. “And so it is clear you do not love poor M. de Bragelonne?”
“Perhaps she does,” said Montalais; “she is not yet quite certain of it. But, in any case, listen, Athenais; if M. de Bragelonne is ever free, I will give you a little friendly advice.”
“What is that?”
“To look at him well before you decide in favor of M. de Montespan.”
“Oh! in that way of considering the subject, M. de Bragelonne is not the only one whom one could look at with pleasure; M. de Guiche, for instance, has his value also.”
“He did not distinguish himself this evening,” said Montalais; “and I know from very good authority that Madame thought him insupportable.”
“M. de Saint-Aignan produced a most brilliant effect, and I am sure that more than one person who saw him dance this evening will not soon forget him. Do you not think so, La Valliere?”
“Why do you ask me? I did not see him, nor do I know him.”
“What! you did not see M. de Saint-Aignan? Don’t you know him?”
“No.”
“Come, come, do not affect a virtue more extravagantly excessive than our vanity! – you have eyes, I suppose?”
“Excellent.”
“Then you must have seen all those who danced this evening.”
“Yes, nearly all.”
“That is a very impertinent ‘nearly all’ for somebody.”
“You must take it for what it is worth.”
“Very well; now, among all those gentlemen whom you saw, which do you prefer?”
“Yes,” said Montalais, “is it M. de Saint-Aignan, or M. de Guiche, or M. – “
“I prefer no one; I thought them all about the same.”
“Do you mean, then, that among that brilliant assembly, the first court in the world, no one pleased you?”
“I do not say that.”
“Tell us, then, who your ideal is?”
“It is not an ideal being.”
“He exists, then?”
“In very truth,” exclaimed La Valliere, aroused and excited; “I cannot understand you at all. What! you who have a heart as I have, eyes as I have, and yet you speak of M. de Guiche, of M. de Saint-Aignan, when the king was there.” These words, uttered in a precipitate manner, and in an agitated, fervid tone of voice, made her two companions, between whom she was seated, exclaim in a manner that terrified her, “_The king!_”
La Valliere buried her face in her hands. “Yes,” she murmured; “the king! the king! Have you ever seen any one to be compared to the king?”
“You were right just now in saying you had excellent eyes, Louise, for you see a great distance; too far, indeed. Alas! the king is not one upon whom our poor eyes have a right to hinge themselves.”
“That is too true,” cried La Valliere; “it is not the privilege of all eyes to gaze upon the sun; but I will look upon him, even were I to be blinded in doing so.” At this moment, and as though caused by the words which had just escaped La Valliere’s lips, a rustling of leaves, and of what sounded like some silken material, was heard behind the adjoining bushes. The young girls hastily rose, almost terrified out of their senses. They distinctly saw the leaves move, without being able to see what it was that stirred them.
“It is a wolf or a wild boar,” cried Montalais; “fly! fly!” The three girls, in the extremity of terror, fled by the first path that presented itself, and did not stop until they had reached the verge of the wood. There, breathless, leaning against each other, feeling their hearts throb wildly, they endeavored to collect their senses, but could only succeed in doing so after the lapse of some minutes. Perceiving at last the lights from the windows of the chateau, they decided to walk towards them. La Valliere was exhausted with fatigue, and Aure and Athenais were obliged to support her.
“We have escaped well,” said Montalais.
“I am greatly afraid,” said La Valliere, “that it was something worse than a wolf. For my part, and I speak as I think, I should have preferred to have run the risk of being devoured alive by some wild animal than to have been listened to and overheard. Fool, fool that I am! How could I have thought, how could I have said what I did?” And saying this her head bowed like the water tossed plume of a bulrush; she felt her limbs fail, and her strength abandoning her, and, gliding almost inanimate from the arms of her companions, sank down upon the turf.
Chapter XLII:
The King’s Uneasiness.
Let us leave poor La Valliere, who had fainted in the arms of her two companions, and return to the precincts of the royal oak. The young girls had hardly run twenty paces, when the sound which had so much alarmed them was renewed among the branches. A man’s figure might indistinctly be perceived, and putting the branches of the bushes aside, he appeared upon the verge of the wood, and perceiving that the place was empty, burst out into a peal of laughter. It is almost superfluous to add that the form in question was that of a young and handsome cavalier, who immediately made a sign to another, who thereupon made his appearance.
“What, sire,” said the second figure, advancing timidly, “has your majesty put our young sentimentalists to flight?”
“It seems so,” said the king, “and you can show yourself without fear.”
“Take care, sire, you will be recognized.”
“But I tell you they are flown.”
“This is a most fortunate meeting, sire; and, if I dared offer an opinion to your majesty, we ought to follow them.”
“They are far enough away by this time.”
“They would quickly allow themselves to be overtaken, especially if they knew who were following them.”
“What do you mean by that, coxcomb that you are?”
“Why, one of them seems to have taken a fancy to me, and another compared you to the sun.”
“The greater reason why we should not show ourselves, Saint-Aignan. The sun never shows itself in the night-time.”
“Upon my word, sire, your majesty seems to have very little curiosity. In your place, I should like to know who are the two nymphs, the two dryads, the two hamadryads, who have so good an opinion of us.”
“I shall know them again very well, I assure you, without running after them.”
“By what means?”
“By their voices, of course. They belong to the court, and the one who spoke of me had a remarkably sweet voice.”
“Ah! your majesty permits yourself to be influenced by flattery.”
“No one will ever say it is a means _you_ make use of.”
“Forgive my stupidity, sire.”
“Come; let us go and look where I told you.”
“Is the passion, then, which your majesty confided to me, already forgotten?”
“Oh! no, indeed. How is it possible to forget such beautiful eyes as Mademoiselle de la Valliere has?”
“Yet the other one has a beautiful voice.”
“Which one?”
“The lady who has fallen in love with the sun.”
“M. de Saint-Aignan!”
“Forgive me, sire.”
“Well, I am not sorry you should believe me to be an admirer of sweet voices as well as of beautiful eyes. I know you to be a terrible talker, and to-morrow I shall have to pay for the confidence I have shown you.”
“What do you mean, sire?”
“That to-morrow every one will know that I have designs upon this little La Valliere; but he careful, Saint-Aignan, I have confided my secret to no one but you, and if any one should speak to me about it, I shall know who has betrayed my secret.”
“You are angry, sire.”
“No; but you understand I do not wish to compromise the poor girl.”
“Do not be afraid, sire.”
“You promise me, then?”
“I give you my word of honor.”
“Excellent,” thought the king, laughing to himself; “now every one will know to-morrow that I have been running about after La Valliere to- night.”
Then, endeavoring to see where he was, he said: “Why we have lost ourselves.”
“Not quite so bad as that, sire.”
“Where does that gate lead to?”
“To Rond-Point, sire.”
“Where were we going when we heard the sound of women’s voices?”
“Yes, sire, and the termination of a conversation in which I had the honor of hearing my own name pronounced by the side of your majesty’s.”
“You return to that subject too frequently, Saint-Aignan.”
“Your majesty will forgive me, but I am delighted to know that a woman exists whose thoughts are occupied about me, without my knowledge, and without my having done anything to deserve it. Your majesty cannot comprehend this satisfaction, for your rank and merit attract attention, and compel regard.”
“No, no, Saint-Aignan, believe me or not, as you like,” said the king, leaning familiarly upon Saint-Aignan’s arm and taking the path he thought would lead them to the chateau; “but this candid confession, this perfectly disinterested preference of one who will, perhaps, never attract my attention – in one word, the mystery of this adventure excites me, and the truth is, that if I were not so taken with La Valliere – “
“Do not let that interfere with your majesty’s intentions: you have time enough before you.”
“What do you mean?”
“La Valliere is said to be very strict in her ideas.”
“You excite my curiosity and I am anxious to see her again. Come, let us walk on.”
The king spoke untruly, for nothing, on the contrary, could make him less anxious, but he had a part to play, and so he walked on hurriedly. Saint- Aignan followed him at a short distance. Suddenly the king stopped; the courtier followed his example.
“Saint-Aignan,” he said, “do you not hear some one moaning?”
“Yes, sire, and weeping, too, it seems.”
“It is in this direction,” said the king. “It sounds like the tears and sobs of a woman.”
“Run,” said the king; and, following a by-path, they ran across the grass. As they approached, the cries were more distinctly heard.
“Help, help,” exclaimed two voices. The king and his companion redoubled their speed, and, as they approached nearer, the sighs they had heard were changed into loud sobs. The cry of “Help! help!” was again repeated; at the sound of which, the king and Saint-Aignan increased the rapidity of their pace. Suddenly at the other side of a ditch, under the branches of a willow, they perceived a woman on her knees, holding another in her arms who seemed to have fainted. A few paces from them, a third, standing in the middle of the path, was calling for assistance. Perceiving the two gentlemen, whose rank she could not tell, her cries for assistance were redoubled. The king, who was in advance of his companion, leaped across the ditch, and reached the group at the very moment when, from the end of the path which led to the chateau, a dozen persons were approaching, who had been drawn to the spot by the same cries that had attracted the attention of the king and M. de Saint-Aignan.
“What is the matter, young ladies?” said Louis.
“The king!” exclaimed Mademoiselle de Montalais, in her astonishment, letting La Valliere’s head fall upon the ground.
“Yes, it is the king; but that is no reason why you should abandon your companion. Who is she?”
“It is Mademoiselle de la Valliere, sire.”
“Mademoiselle de la Valliere!”
“Yes, sire, she has just fainted.”
“Poor child!” said the king. “Quick, quick, fetch a surgeon.” But however great the anxiety with which the king had pronounced these words may have seemed to others, he had not so carefully schooled himself but that they appeared, as well as the gesture which accompanied them, somewhat cold to Saint-Aignan, to whom the king had confided the sudden love with which she had inspired him.
“Saint-Aignan,” continued the king, “watch over Mademoiselle de la Valliere, I beg. Send for a surgeon. I will hasten forward and inform Madame of the accident which has befallen one of her maids of honor.” And, in fact, while M. de Saint-Aignan was busily engaged in making preparations for carrying Mademoiselle de la Valliere to the chateau, the king hurried forward, happy to have an opportunity of approaching Madame, and of speaking to her under a colorable pretext. Fortunately, a carriage was passing; the coachman was told to stop, and the persons who were inside, having been informed of the accident, eagerly gave up their seats to Mademoiselle de la Valliere. The current of fresh air produced by the rapid motion of the carriage soon recalled her to her senses. Having reached the chateau, she was able, though very weak, to alight from the carriage, and, with the assistance of Athenais and of Montalais, to reach the inner apartments. They made her sit down in one of the rooms of the ground floor. After a while, as the accident had not produced much effect upon those who had been walking, the promenade was resumed. During this time, the king had found Madame beneath a tree with overhanging branches, and had seated himself by her side.
“Take care, sire,” said Henrietta to him, in a low tone, “you do not show yourself as indifferent as you ought to be.”
“Alas!” replied the king, in the same tone, “I much fear we have entered into an agreement above our strength to keep.” He then added aloud, “You have heard of the accident, I suppose?”
“What accident?”
“Oh! in seeing you I forgot I hurried here expressly to tell you of it. I am, however, painfully affected by it; one of your maids of honor, Mademoiselle de la Valliere, has just fainted.”
“Indeed! poor girl,” said the princess, quietly, “what was the cause of it?”
She then added in an undertone, “You forget, sire, that you wish others to believe in your passion for this girl, and yet you remain here while she is almost dying, perhaps, elsewhere.”
“Ah! Madame,” said the king, sighing, “how much more perfect you are in your part than I am, and how actively you think of everything.”
He then rose, saying loud enough for every one to hear him, “Permit me to leave you, Madame; my uneasiness is very great, and I wish to be quite certain, myself, that proper attention has been given to Mademoiselle de la Valliere.” And the king left again to return to La Valliere, while those who had been present commented upon the king’s remark: – “My uneasiness is very great.”
Chapter XLIII:
The King’s Secret.
On his way Louis met the Comte de Saint-Aignan. “Well, Saint-Aignan,” he inquired, with affected interest, “how is the invalid.”
“Really, sire,” stammered Saint-Aignan, “to my shame, I confess I do not know.”
“What! you do not know?” said the king, pretending to take in a serious manner this want of attention for the object of his predilection.
“Will your majesty pardon me; but I have just met one of our three loquacious wood-nymphs, and I confess that my attention has been taken away from other matters.”
“Ah!” said the king, eagerly, “you have found, then – “
“The one who deigned to speak of me in such advantageous terms; and, having found mine, I was searching for yours, sire, when I had the happiness to meet your majesty.”
“Very well; but Mademoiselle de la Valliere before everything else,” said the king, faithful to the character he had assumed.”
“Oh! our charming invalid!” said Saint-Aignan; “how fortunately her fainting fit came on, since your majesty had already occupied yourself about her.”
“What is the name of your fair lady, Saint-Aignan? Is it a secret?”
“It ought to be a secret, and a very great one, even; but your majesty is well aware that no secret can possibly exist for you.”
“Well, what is her name?”
“Mademoiselle de Tonnay-Charente.”
“Is she pretty?”
“Exceedingly, sire; and I recognized the voice which pronounced my name in such tender accents. I accosted her, questioned her as well as I was able to do, in the midst of the crowd; and she told me, without suspecting anything, that a little while ago she was under the great oak, with her two friends, when the sound of a wolf or a robber had terrified them, and made them run away.”
“But,” inquired the king, anxiously, “what are the names of these two friends?”
“Sire,” said Saint-Aignan, “will your majesty send me forthwith to the Bastile?”
“What for?”
“Because I am an egotist and a fool. My surprise was so great at such a conquest, and at so fortunate a discovery, that I went no further in my inquiries. Besides, I did not think that your majesty would attach any very great importance to what you heard, knowing how much your attention was taken up by Mademoiselle de la Valliere; and then, Mademoiselle de Tonnay-Charente left me precipitately, to return to Mademoiselle de la Valliere.”
“Let us hope, then, that I shall be as fortunate as yourself. Come, Saint-Aignan.”
“Your majesty is ambitions, I perceive, and does not wish to allow any conquest to escape you. Well, I assure you that I will conscientiously set about my inquiries; and, moreover, from one or the other of those Three Graces we shall learn the names of the rest, and by the names their secrets.”
“I, too,” said the king, “only require to hear her voice to know it again. Come, let us say no more about it, but show me where poor La Valliere is.”
“Well,” thought Saint-Aignan, “the king’s regard is beginning to display itself, and for that girl too. It is extraordinary; I should never have believed it.” And with this thought passing through his mind, he showed the king the room to which La Valliere had been carried; the king entered, followed by Saint-Aignan. In a low chamber, near a large window looking out upon the gardens, La Valliere, reclining in a large armchair, was inhaling deep draughts of the perfumed evening breeze. From the loosened body of her dress, the lace fell in tumbled folds, mingling with the tresses of her beautiful fair hair, which lay scattered upon her shoulders. Her languishing eyes were filled with tears; she seemed as lifeless as those beautiful visions of our dreams, that pass before the mental eye of the sleeper, half-opening their wings without moving them, unclosing their lips without a sound escaping them. The pearl-like pallor of La Valliere possessed a charm it would be impossible to describe. Mental and bodily suffering had produced upon her features a soft and noble expression of grief; from the perfect passiveness of her arms and bust, she more resembled one whose soul had passed away, than a living being; she seemed not to hear either of the whisperings which arose from the court. She seemed to be communing within herself; and her beautiful, delicate hands trembled from time to time as though at the contact of some invisible touch. She was so completely absorbed in her reverie, that the king entered without her perceiving him. At a distance he gazed upon her lovely face, upon which the moon shed its pure silvery light.
“Good Heavens!” he exclaimed, with a terror he could not control, “she is dead.”
“No, sire,” said Montalais, in a low voice; “on the contrary, she is better. Are you not better, Louise?”
But Louise did not answer. “Louise,” continued Montalais, “the king has deigned to express his uneasiness on your account.”
“The king!” exclaimed Louise, starting up abruptly, as if a stream of fire had started through her frame to her heart; “the king uneasy about me?”
“Yes,” said Montalais.
“The king is here, then?” said La Valliere, not venturing to look round her.
“That voice! that voice!” whispered Louis, eagerly, to Saint-Aignan.
“Yes, it is so,” replied Saint-Aignan; “your majesty is right; it is she who declared her love for the sun.”
“Hush!” said the king. And then approaching La Valliere, he said, “You are not well, Mademoiselle de la Valliere? Just now, indeed, in the park, I saw that you had fainted. How were you attacked?”
“Sire,” stammered out the poor child, pale and trembling, “I really do not know.”
“You have been walking too far,” said the king; “and fatigue, perhaps – “
“No, sire,” said Montalais, eagerly, answering for her friend, “it could not be from fatigue, for we passed most of the evening seated beneath the royal oak.”
“Under the royal oak?” returned the king, starting. “I was not deceived; it is as I thought.” And he directed a look of intelligence at the comte.
“Yes,” said Saint-Aignan, “under the royal oak, with Mademoiselle de Tonnay-Charente.”
“How do you know that?” inquired Montalais.
“In a very simple way. Mademoiselle de Tonnay-Charente told me so.”
“In that case, she probably told you the cause of Mademoiselle de la Valliere’s fainting?”
“Why, yes; she told me something about a wolf or a robber. I forget precisely which.” La Valliere listened, her eyes fixed, her bosom heaving, as if, gifted with an acuteness of perception, she foresaw a portion of the truth. Louis imagined this attitude and agitation to be the consequence of a terror only partially reassured. “Nay, fear nothing,” he said, with a rising emotion which he could not conceal; “the wolf which terrified you so much was simply a wolf with two legs.”
“It was a man, then!” said Louise; “it was a man who was listening?”
“Suppose it was so, mademoiselle, what great harm was there in his having listened? Is it likely that, even in your own opinion, you would have said anything which could not have been listened to?”
La Valliere wrung her hands, and hid her face in them, as if to hide her blushes. “In Heaven’s name,” she said, “who was concealed there? Who was listening?”
The king advanced towards her, to take hold of one of her hands. “It was I,” he said, bowing with marked respect. “Is it likely I could have frightened you?” La Valliere uttered a loud cry; for the second time her strength forsook her; and moaning in utter despair, she again fell lifeless in her chair. The king had just time to hold out his arm; so that she was partially supported by him. Mademoiselle de Tonnay-Charente and Montalais, who stood a few paces from the king and La Valliere, motionless and almost petrified at the recollection of their conversation with La Valliere, did not even think of offering their assistance, feeling restrained by the presence of the king, who, with one knee on the ground, held La Valliere round the waist with his arm.
“You heard, sire!” murmured Athenais. But the king did not reply; he remained with his eyes fixed upon La Valliere’s half-closed eyes, and held her quiescent hand in his own.
“Of course,” replied Saint-Aignan, who, on his side, hoping that Mademoiselle de Tonnay-Charente, too, would faint, advancing towards her, holding his arms extended, – “of course; we did not even lose a single word.” But the haughty Athenais was not a woman to faint easily; she darted a terrible look at Saint-Aignan, and fled. Montalais, with more courage, advanced hurriedly towards Louise, and received her from the king’s hands, who was already fast losing his presence of mind, as he felt his face covered by the perfumed tresses of the seemingly dying girl. “Excellent,” whispered Saint-Aignan. “This is indeed an adventure; and it will be my own fault if I am not the first to relate it.”
The king approached him, and, with a trembling voice and a passionate gesture, said, “Not a syllable, comte.”
The poor king forgot that, only an hour before, he had given him a similar recommendation, but with the very opposite intention; namely, that the comte should be indiscreet. It followed, as a matter of course, that he latter recommendation was quite as unnecessary as the former. Half an hour afterwards, everybody in Fontainebleau knew that Mademoiselle de la Valliere had had a conversation under the royal oak with Montalais and Tonnay-Charente, and that in this conversation she had confessed her affection for the king. It was known, also, that the king, after having manifested the uneasiness with which Mademoiselle de la Valliere’s health had inspired him, had turned pale, and trembled very much as he received the beautiful girl fainting into his arms; so that it was quite agreed among the courtiers, that the greatest event of the period had just been revealed; that his majesty loved Mademoiselle de la Valliere, and that, consequently, Monsieur could now sleep in perfect tranquillity. It was this, even, that the queen-mother, as surprised as the others by the sudden change, hastened to tell the young queen and Philip d’Orleans. Only she set to work in a different manner, by attacking them in the following way: – To her daughter-in-law she said, “See, now, Therese, how very wrong you were to accuse the king; now it is said he is devoted to some other person; why should there be any greater truth in the report of to-day than in that of yesterday, or in that of yesterday than in that of to-day?” To Monsieur, in relating to him the adventure of the royal oak, she said, “Are you not very absurd in your jealousies, my dear Philip? It is asserted that the king is madly in love with that little La Valliere. Say nothing of it to your wife; for the queen will know all about it very soon.” This latter confidential communication had an immediate result. Monsieur, who had regained his composure, went triumphantly to look after his wife, and it was not yet midnight and the _fete_ was to continue until two in the morning, he offered her his hand for a promenade. At the end of a few paces, however, the first thing he did was to disobey his mother’s injunctions.
“Do not tell any one, the queen least of all,” he said mysteriously, “what people say about the king.”
“What do they say about him?” inquired Madame.
“That my brother has suddenly fallen in love.”
“With whom?”
“With Mademoiselle de la Valliere.”
As it was dark, Madame could smile at her ease.
“Ah!” she said, “and how long is it since this has been the case?”
“For some days, it seems. But that was nothing but nonsense; it is only this evening that he has revealed his passion.”
“The king shows his good taste,” said Madame; “in my opinion she is a very charming girl.”
“I verily believe you are jesting.”
“I! in what way?”
“In any case this passion will make some one very happy, even if it be only La Valliere herself.”
“Really,” continued the princess, “you speak as if you had read into the inmost recesses of La Valliere’s heart. Who has told you that she agrees to return the king’s affection?”
“And who has told you that she will not return it?”
“She loves the Vicomte de Bragelonne.”
“You think so?”
“She is even affianced to him.”
“She was so.”
“What do you mean?”
“When they went to ask the king’s permission to arrange the marriage, he refused his permission.”
“Refused?”
“Yes, although the request was preferred by the Comte de la Fere himself, for whom the king has the greatest regard, on account of the part he took in your royal brother’s restoration, and in other events, also, which happened a long time ago.”
“Well! the poor lovers must wait until the king is pleased to change his opinion; they are young, and there is time enough.”
“But, dear me,” said Philip, laughing, “I perceive you do not know the best part of the affair.”
“No!”
“That by which the king was most deeply touched.”
“The king, do you say, has been deeply touched?”
“To the very quick of his heart.”
“But how? – in what manner? – tell me directly.”
“By an adventure, the romance of which cannot be equalled.”
“You know how I love to hear of such adventures, and yet you keep me waiting,” said the princess, impatiently.
“Well, then – ” and Monsieur paused.
“I am listening.”
“Under the royal oak – you know where the royal oak is?”
“What can that matter? Under the royal oak, you were saying?”
“Well! Mademoiselle de la Valliere, fancying herself to be alone with her two friends, revealed to them her affection for the king.”
“Ah!” said Madame, beginning to be uneasy, “her affection for the king?”
“Yes.”
“When was this?”
“About an hour ago.”
Madame started, and then said, “And no one knew of this affection?”
“No one.”
“Not even his majesty?”
“Not even his majesty. The artful little puss kept her secret strictly to herself, when suddenly it proved stronger than herself, and so escaped her.”
“And from whom did you get this absurd tale?”
“Why, as everybody else did, from La Valliere herself, who confessed her love to Montalais and Tonnay-Charente, who were her companions.”
Madame stopped suddenly, and by a hasty movement let go her husband’s hand.
“Did you say it was an hour ago she made this confession?” Madame inquired.
“About that time.”
“Is the king aware of it?”
“Why, that is the very thing which constitutes the perfect romance of the affair, for the king was behind the royal oak with Saint-Aignan, and heard the whole of the interesting conversation without losing a single word of it.”
Madame felt struck to the heart, saying incautiously, “But I have seen the king since, and he never told me a word about it.”
“Of course,” said Monsieur; “he took care not to speak of it to you himself, since he recommended every one not to say a word about it.”
“What do you mean?” said Madame, growing angry.
“I mean that they wished to keep you in ignorance of the affair altogether.”
“But why should they wish to conceal it from me?”
“From the fear that your friendship for the young queen might induce you to say something about it to her, nothing more.”
Madame hung down her head; her feelings were grievously wounded. She could not enjoy a moment’s repose until she had met the king. As a king is, most naturally, the very last person in his kingdom who knows what is said about him, in the same way that a lover is the only one who is kept in ignorance of what is said about his mistress, therefore, when the king perceived Madame, who was looking for him, he approached her in some perturbation, but still gracious and attentive in his manner. Madame waited for him to speak about La Valliere first; but as he did not speak of her, she said, “And the poor girl?”
“What poor girl?” said the king.
“La Valliere. Did you not tell me, sire, that she had fainted?”
“She is still very ill,” said the king, affecting the greatest indifference.
“But surely that will prejudicially affect the rumor you were going to spread, sire?”
“What rumor?”
“That your attention was taken up by her.”
“Oh!” said the king, carelessly, “I trust it will be reported all the same.”
Madame still waited; she wished to know if the king would speak to her of the adventure of the royal oak. But the king did not say a word about it. Madame, on her side, did not open her lips about it; so that the king took leave of her without having reposed the slightest confidence in her. Hardly had she watched the king move away, than she set out in search of Saint-Aignan. Saint-Aignan was never very difficult to find; he was like the smaller vessels that always follow in the wake of, and as tenders to, the larger ships. Saint-Aignan was the very man whom Madame needed in her then state of mind. And as for him, he only looked for worthier ears than others he had found to have an opportunity of recounting the event in all its details. And so he did not spare Madame a single word of the whole affair. When he had finished, Madame said to him, “Confess, now, that is his all a charming invention.”
“Invention, no; a true story, yes.”
“Confess, whether invention or true story, that it was told to you as you have told it to me, but that you were not there.”
“Upon my honor, Madame, I was there.”
“And you think that these confessions may have made an impression on the king?”
“Certainly, as those of Mademoiselle de Tonnay-Charente did upon me,” replied Saint-Aignan; “do not forget, Madame, that Mademoiselle de la Valliere compared the king to the sun; that was flattering enough.”
“The king does not permit himself to be influenced by such flatteries.”
“Madame, the king is just as much Adonis as Apollo; and I saw plain enough just now when La Valliere fell into his arms.”
“La Valliere fell into the king’s arms!”
“Oh! it was the most graceful picture possible; just imagine, La Valliere had fallen back fainting, and – “
“Well! what did you see? – tell me – speak!”
“I saw what ten other people saw at the same time as myself; I saw that when La Valliere fell into his arms, the king almost fainted himself.”
Madame smothered a subdued cry, the only indication of her smothered anger.
“Thank you,” she said, laughing in a convulsive manner, “you relate stories delightfully, M. de Saint-Aignan.” And she hurried away, alone, and almost suffocated by painful emotion, towards the chateau.
Chapter XLIV:
Courses de Nuit.
Monsieur quitted the princess in the best possible humor, and feeling greatly fatigued, retired to his apartments, leaving every one to finish the night as he chose. When in his room, Monsieur began to dress for the night with careful attention, which displayed itself from time to time in paroxysms of satisfaction. While his attendants were engaged in curling his hair, he sang the principal airs of the ballet which the violins had played, and to which the king had danced. He then summoned his tailors, inspected his costumes for the next day, and, in token of his extreme satisfaction, distributed various presents among them. As, however, the Chevalier de Lorraine, who had seen the prince return to the chateau, entered the room, Monsieur overwhelmed him with kindness. The former, after having saluted the prince, remained silent for a moment, like a sharpshooter who deliberates before deciding in what direction he will renew his fire; then, seeming to make up his mind, he said, “Have you remarked a very singular coincidence, monseigneur?”
“No; what is it?”
“The bad reception which his majesty, in appearance, gave the Comte de Guiche.”
“In appearance?”
“Yes, certainly; since, in reality, he has restored him to favor.”
“I did not notice it,” said the prince.
“What, did you not remark, that, instead of ordering him to go away again into exile, as was natural, he encouraged him in his opposition by permitting him to resume his place in the ballet?”
“And you think the king was wrong, chevalier?” said the prince.
“Are you not of my opinion, prince?”
“Not altogether so, my dear chevalier; and I think the king was quite right not to have made a disturbance against a poor fellow whose want of judgment is more to be complained of than his intention.”
“Really,” said the chevalier, “as far as I am concerned, I confess that this magnanimity astonishes me to the highest degree.”
“Why so?” inquired Philip.
“Because I should have thought the king had been more jealous,” replied the chevalier, spitefully. During the last few minutes Monsieur had felt there was something of an irritating nature concealed under his favorite’s remarks; this last word, however, ignited the powder.
“Jealous!” exclaimed the prince. “Jealous! what do you mean? Jealous of what, if you please – or jealous of whom?”
The chevalier perceived that he had allowed an excessively mischievous remark to escape him, as he was in the habit of doing. He endeavored, therefore, apparently to recall it while it was still possible to do so. “Jealous of his authority,” he said, with an assumed frankness; “of what else would you have the king jealous?”
“Ah!” said the prince, “that’s very proper.”
“Did your royal highness,” continued the chevalier, “solicit dear De Guiche’s pardon?”
“No, indeed,” said Monsieur. “De Guiche is an excellent fellow, and full of courage; but as I do not approve of his conduct with Madame, I wish him neither harm nor good.”
The chevalier had assumed a bitterness with regard to De Guiche, as he had attempted to do with regard to the king; but he thought he perceived that the time for indulgence, and even for the utmost indifference, had arrived, and that, in order to throw some light on the question, it might be necessary for him to put the lamp, as the saying is, beneath the husband’s very nose.
“Very well, very well,” said the chevalier to himself, “I must wait for De Wardes; he will do more in one day than I in a month; for I verily believe he is even more envious than I. Then, again, it is not De Wardes I require so much as that some event or another should happen; and in the whole of this affair I see none. That De Guiche returned after he had been sent away is certainly serious enough, but all its seriousness disappears when I learn that De Guiche has returned at the very moment Madame troubles herself no longer about him. Madame, in fact, is occupied with the king, that is clear; but she will not be so much longer if, as it is asserted, the king has ceased to trouble his head about her. The moral of the whole matter is, to remain perfectly neutral, and await the arrival of some new caprice and let that decide the whole affair.” And the chevalier thereupon settled himself resignedly in the armchair in which Monsieur permitted him to seat himself in his presence, and, having no more spiteful or malicious remarks to make, the consequence was that De Lorraine’s wit seemed to have deserted him. Most fortunately Monsieur was in high good-humor, and he had enough for two, until the time arrived for dismissing his servants and gentlemen of the chamber, and he passed into his sleeping-apartment. As he withdrew, he desired the chevalier to present his compliments to Madame, and say that, as the night was cool, Monsieur, who was afraid of the toothache, would not venture out again into the park during the remainder of the evening. The chevalier entered the princess’s apartments at the very moment she came in herself. He acquitted himself faithfully of the commission intrusted to him, and, in the first place, remarked all the indifference and annoyance with which Madame received her husband’s communication – a circumstance which appeared to him fraught with something fresh. If Madame had been about to leave her apartments with that strangeness of manner, he would have followed her; but she was returning to them; there was nothing to be done, therefore he turned upon his heel like an unemployed heron, appearing to question earth, air, and water about it; shook his head, and walked away mechanically in the direction of the gardens. He had hardly gone a hundred paces when he met two young men, walking arm in arm, with their heads bent down, and idly kicking the small stones out of their path as they walked on, plunged in thought. It was De Guiche and De Bragelonne, the sight of whom, as it always did, produced upon the chevalier, instinctively, a feeling of repugnance. He did not, however, the less, on that account, salute them with a very low bow, which they returned with interest. Then, observing that the park was nearly deserted, that the illuminations began to burn out, and that the morning breeze was setting in, he turned to the left, and entered the chateau again, by one of the smaller courtyards. The others turned aside to the right, and continued on their way towards the large park. As the chevalier was ascending the side staircase, which led to the private entrance, he saw a woman, followed by another, make her appearance under the arcade which led from the small to the large courtyard. The two women walked so fast that the rustling of their dresses could be distinguished through the silence of the night. The style of their mantles, their graceful figures, a mysterious yet haughty carriage which distinguished them both, especially the one who walked first, struck the chevalier.
“I certainly know those two,” he said to himself, pausing upon the top step of the small staircase. Then, as with the instinct of a bloodhound he was about to follow them, one of the servants who had been running after him arrested his attention.
“Monsieur,” he said, “the courier has arrived.”
“Very well,” said the chevalier, “there is time enough; to-morrow will do.”
“There are some urgent letters which you would be glad to see, perhaps.”
“Where from?” inquired the chevalier.
“One from England, and the other from Calais; the latter arrived by express, and seems of great importance.”
“From Calais! Who the deuce can have to write to me from Calais?”
“I think I recognize the handwriting of Monsieur le Comte de Wardes.”
“Oh!” cried the chevalier, forgetting his intention of acting the spy, “in that case I will come up at once.” This he did, while the two unknown beings disappeared at the end of the court opposite to the one by which they had just entered. We shall now follow them, and leave the chevalier undisturbed to his correspondence. When they had arrived at the grove of trees, the foremost of the two halted, somewhat out of breath, and, cautiously raising her hood, said, “Are we still far from the tree?”
“Yes, Madame, more than five hundred paces; but pray rest awhile, you will not be able to walk much longer at this rate.”
“You are right,” said the princes, for it was she; and she leaned against a tree. “And now,” she resumed, after having recovered her breath, “tell me the whole truth, and conceal nothing from me.”
“Oh, Madame,” cried the young girl, “you are already angry with me.”
“No, my dear Athenais, reassure yourself, I am in no way angry with you. After all, these things do not concern me personally. You are anxious about what you may have said under the oak; you are afraid of having offended the king, and I wish to tranquillize you by ascertaining myself if it were possible you could have been overheard.”
“Oh, yes, Madame, the king was close to us.”
“Still, you were not speaking so loud that some of your remarks may not have been lost.”
“We thought we were quite alone, Madame.”
“There were three of you, you say?”
“Yes; La Valliere, Montalais, and myself.”
“And _you_, individually, spoke in a light manner of the king?”
“I am afraid so. Should such be the case, will your highness have the kindness to make my peace with his majesty?”
“If there should be any occasion for it, I promise you I will do so. However, as I have already told you, it will be better not to anticipate evil. The night is now very dark, and the darkness is still greater under the trees. It is not likely you were recognized by the king. To inform him of it, by being the first to speak, is to denounce yourself.”
“Oh, Madame, Madame! if Mademoiselle de la Valliere were recognized, I must have been recognized also. Besides, M. de Saint-Aignan left no doubt on the subject.”
“Did you, then, say anything very disrespectful of the king?”
“Not at all; it was one of the others who made some very flattering speeches about the king; and my remarks must have been much in contrast with hers.”
“Montalais is such a giddy girl,” said Madame.
“It was not Montalais. Montalais said nothing; it was La Valliere.”
Madame started as if she had not known it perfectly well already. “No, no,” she said, “the king cannot have heard. Besides, we will now try the experiment for which we came out. Show me the oak. Do you know where it is?” she continued.
“Alas! Madame, yes.”
“And you can find it again?”
“With my eyes shut.”
“Very well; sit down on the bank where you were, where La Valliere was, and speak in the same tone and to the same effect as you did before; I will conceal myself in the thicket, and if I can hear you, I will tell you so.”
“Yes, Madame.”
“If, therefore, you really spoke loud enough for the king to have heard you, in that case – “
Athenais seemed to await the conclusion of the sentence with some anxiety.
“In that case,” said Madame, in a suffocated voice, arising doubtless from her hurried progress, “in that case, I forbid you – ” And Madame again increased her pace. Suddenly, however, she stopped. “An idea occurs to me,” she said.
“A good idea, no doubt, Madame,” replied Mademoiselle de Tonnay-Charente.
“Montalais must be as much embarrassed as La Valliere and yourself.”
“Less so, for she is less compromised, having said less.”
“That does not matter; she will help you, I dare say, by deviating a little from the exact truth.”
“Especially if she knows that your highness is kind enough to interest yourself about me.”
“Very well, I think I have discovered what it is best for you all to pretend.”
“How delightful.”
“You had better say that all three of you were perfectly well aware that the king was behind the tree, or behind the thicket, whichever it might have been; and that you knew M. de Saint-Aignan was there too.”
“Yes, Madame.”
“For you cannot disguise it from yourself, Athenais, Saint-Aignan takes advantage of some very flattering remarks you made about him.”
“Well, Madame, you see very clearly that one can be overheard,” cried Athenais, “since M. de Saint-Aignan overheard us.”
Madame bit her lips, for she had thoughtlessly committed herself. “Oh, you know Saint-Aignan’s character very well,” she said, “the favor the king shows him almost turns his brain, and he talks at random; not only so, he very often invents. That is not the question; the fact remains, did or did not the king overhear?”
“Oh, yes, Madame, he certainly did,” said Athenais, in despair.
“In that case, do what I said: maintain boldly that all three of you knew – mind, all three of you, for if there is a doubt about any one of you, there will be a doubt about all, – persist, I say, that you knew that the king and M. de Saint-Aignan were there, and that you wished to amuse yourself at the expense of those who were listening.”
“Oh, Madame, at the _king’s_ expense; we shall never dare say that!”
“It is a simple jest; an innocent deception readily permitted in young girls whom men wish to take by surprise. In this manner everything explains itself. What Montalais said of Malicorne, a mere jest; what you said of M. de Saint-Aignan, a mere jest too; and what La Valliere might have said of – “
“And which she would have given anything to recall.”
“Are you sure of that?”
“Perfectly.”
“Very well, an additional reason. Say the whole affair was a mere joke. M. de Malicorne will have no occasion to get out of temper; M. de Saint- Aignan will be completely put out of countenance; _he_ will be laughed at instead of you; and lastly, the king will be punished for a curiosity unworthy of his rank. Let people laugh a little at the king in this affair, and I do not think he will complain of it.”
“Oh, Madame, you are indeed an angel of goodness and sense!”
“It is to my own advantage.”
“In what way?”
“How can you ask me why it is to my advantage to spare my maids of honor the remarks, annoyances, perhaps even calumnies, that might follow? Alas! you well know that the court has no indulgence for this sort of peccadillo. But we have now been walking for some time, shall we be long before we reach it?”
“About fifty or sixty paces further; turn to the left, Madame, if you please.”
“And you are sure of Montalais?” said Madame.
“Oh, certainly.”
“Will she do what you ask her?”
“Everything. She will be delighted.”
“And La Valliere – ” ventured the princess.
“Ah, there will be some difficulty with her, Madame; she would scorn to tell a falsehood.”
“Yet, when it is in her interest to do so – “
“I am afraid that that would not make the slightest difference in her ideas.”
“Yes, yes,” said Madame. “I have been already told that; she is one of those overnice and affectedly particular people who place heaven in the foreground in order to conceal themselves behind it. But if she refuses to tell a falsehood, – as she will expose herself to the jests of the whole court, as she will have annoyed the king by a confession as ridiculous as it was immodest, – Mademoiselle la Baume le Blanc de la Valliere will think it but proper I should send her back again to her pigeons in the country, in order that, in Touraine yonder, or in Le Blaisois, – I know not where it may be, – she may at her ease study sentiment and pastoral life combined.”
These words were uttered with a vehemence and harshness that terrified Mademoiselle de Tonnay-Charente; and the consequence was, that, as far as she was concerned, she promised to tell as many falsehoods as might be necessary. It was in this frame of mind that Madame and her companion reached the precincts of the royal oak.
“Here we are,” said Tonnay-Charente.
“We shall soon learn if one can overhear,” replied Madame.
“Hush!” whispered the young girl, holding Madame back with a hurried gesture, entirely forgetful of her companion’s rank. Madame stopped.
“You see that you can hear,” said Athenais.
“How?”
“Listen.”
Madame held her breath; and, in fact, the following words pronounced by a gentle and melancholy voice, floated towards them:
“I tell you, vicomte, I tell you I love her madly; I tell you I love her to distraction.”
Madame started at the voice; and, beneath her hood, a bright joyous smile illumined her features. It was she who now held back her companion, and with a light step leading her some twenty paces away, that is to say, out of the reach of the voice, she said, “Remain here, my dear Athenais, and let no one surprise us. I think it must be you they are conversing about.”
“Me, Madame?”
“Yes, you – or rather your adventure. I will go and listen; if we were both there, we should be discovered. Or, stay! – go and fetch Montalais, and then return and wait for me with her at the entrance of the forest.” And then, as Athenais hesitated, she again said “Go!” in a voice which did not admit of reply. Athenais thereupon arranged her dress so as to prevent its rustling being heard; and, by a path beyond the group of trees, she regained the flower-garden. As for Madame, she concealed herself in the thicket, leaning her back against a gigantic chestnut- tree, one of the branches of which had been cut in such a manner as to form a seat, and waited there, full of anxiety and apprehension. “Now,” she said, “since one can hear from this place, let us listen to what M. de Bragelonne and that other madly-in-love fool, the Comte de Guiche, have to say about me.”
Chapter XLV:
In Which Madame Acquires a Proof that Listeners Hear What Is Said.
There was a moment’s silence, as if the mysterious sounds of night were hushed to listen, at the same time as Madame, to the youthful passionate disclosures of De Guiche.
Raoul was about to speak. He leaned indolently against the trunk of the large oak, and replied in his sweet and musical voice, “Alas, my dear De Guiche, it is a great misfortune.”
“Yes,” cried the latter, “great indeed.”
“You do not understand me, De Guiche. I say that it is a great misfortune for you, not merely loving, but not knowing how to conceal your love.”
“What do you mean?” said De Guiche.
“Yes, you do not perceive one thing; namely, that it is no longer to the only friend you have, – in other words, – to a man who would rather die than betray you; you do not perceive, I say, that it is no longer to your only friend that you confide your passion, but to the first person that approaches you.”
“Are you mad, Bragelonne,” exclaimed De Guiche, “to say such a thing to me?”
“The fact stands thus, however.”
“Impossible! How, in what manner can I have ever been indiscreet to such an extent?”
“I mean, that your eyes, your looks, your sighs, proclaim, in spite of yourself, that exaggerated feeling which leads and hurries a man beyond his own control. In such a case he ceases to be master of himself; he is a prey to a mad passion, that makes him confide his grief to the trees, or to the air, from the very moment he has no longer any living being in reach of his voice. Besides, remember this: it very rarely happens that there is not always some one present to hear, especially the very things which ought _not_ to be heard.” De Guiche uttered a deep sigh. “Nay,” continued Bragelonne, “you distress me; since your return here, you have