'So,' resumed the soldier, without answering his son, 'they told you in plain terms, that we must not think of obtaining legally the release of Rose and Blanche this evening or even to-morrow morning?'
'Yes, father. In the eyes of the law, there is no special urgency. The question may not be decided for two or three days.'
'That is all I wished to know,' said Dagobert, rising and walking up and down the room.
'And yet,' resumed his son, 'I did not consider myself beaten. In despair, but believing that justice could not remain deaf to such equitable claims, I ran to the Palais de Justice, hoping to find there a judge, a magistrate who would receive my complaint, and act upon it.'
'Well?' said the soldier, stopping him.
'I was told that the courts shut every day at five o'clock, and do not open again til ten in the morning. Thinking of your despair, and of the position of poor Mdlle. de Cardoville, I determined to make one more attempt. I entered a guard-house of troops of the line, commanded by a lieutenant. I told him all. He saw that I was so much moved, and I spoke with such warmth and conviction, that he became interested.—'Lieutenant,' said I to him, 'grant me one favor; let a petty officer and two soldiers go to the convent to obtain a legal entrance. Let them ask to see the daughters of Marshal Simon, and learn whether it is their choice to remain, or return to my father, who brought them from Russia. You will then see if they are not detained against their will—''
'And what answer did he give you, Agricola?' asked Mother Bunch, while Dagobert shrugged his shoulders, and continued to walk up and down.
''My good fellow,' said he, 'what you ask me is impossible. I understand your motives, but I cannot take upon myself so serious a measure. I should be broke were I to enter a convent by force.—'Then, sir, what am I to do? It is enough to turn one's head.'—'Faith, I don't know,' said the lieutenant; 'it will be safest, I think, to wait.'—Then, believing I had done all that was possible, father, I resolved to come back, in the hope that you might have been more fortunate than I—but, alas! I was deceived!'
So saying, the smith sank upon a chair, for he was worn out with anxiety and fatigue. There was a moment of profound silence after these words of Agricola, which destroyed the last hopes of the three, mute and crushed beneath the strokes of inexorable fatality.
A new incident came to deepen the sad and painful character of this scene.
CHAPTER XI. DISCOVERIES.
The door which Agricola had not thought of fastening opened, as it were, timidly, and Frances Baudoin, Dagobert's wife, pale, sinking, hardly able to support herself, appeared on the threshold.
The soldier, Agricola, and Mother Bunch, were plunged in such deep dejection, that neither of them at first perceived the entrance. Frances advanced two steps into the room, fell upon her knees, clasped her hands together, and said in a weak and humble voice; 'My poor husband—pardon!'
At these words, Agricola and the work-girl—whose backs were towards the door—turned round suddenly, and Dagobert hastily raised his head.
'My mother!' cried Agricola, running to Frances.
'My wife!' cried Dagobert, as he also rose, and advanced to meet the unfortunate woman.
'On your knees, dear mother!' said Agricola, stooping down to embrace her affectionately. 'Get up, I entreat you!'
'No, my child,' said Frances, in her mild, firm accents, 'I will not rise, till your father has forgiven me. I have wronged him much—now I know it.'
'Forgive you, my poor wife?' said the soldier, as he drew near with emotion. 'Have I ever accused you, except in my first transport of despair? No, no; it was the bad priests that I accused, and there I was right. Well! I have you again,' added he, assisting his son to raise Frances; 'one grief the less. They have then restored you to liberty? Yesterday, I could not even learn in what prison they had put you. I have so many cares that I could not think of you only. But come, dear wife: sit down!'
'How feeble you are, dear mother!—how cold—how pale!' said Agricola with anguish, his eyes filling with tears.
'Why did you not let us know?' added he. 'We would have gone to fetch you. But how you tremble! Your hands are frozen!' continued the smith, as he knelt down before Frances. Then, turning towards Mother Bunch: 'Pray, make a little fire directly.'
'I thought of it, as soon as your father came in, Agricola, but there is no wood nor charcoal left.'
'Then pray borrow some of Father Loriot, my dear sister. He is too good a fellow to refuse. My poor mother trembles so—she might fall ill.'
Hardly had he said the words, than Mother Bunch went out. The smith rose from the ground, took the blanket from the bed, and carefully wrapped it about the knees and feet of his mother. Then, again kneeling down, he said to her: 'Your hands, dear mother!' and, taking those feeble palms in his own, he tried to warm them with his breath.
Nothing could be more touching than this picture: the robust young man, with his energetic and resolute countenance, expressing by his looks the greatest tenderness, and paying the most delicate attentions to his poor, pale, trembling old mother.
Dagobert, kind-hearted as his son, went to fetch a pillow, and brought it to his wife, saying: 'Lean forward a little, and I will put this pillow behind you; you will be more comfortable and warmer.'
'How you both spoil me!' said Frances, trying to smile. 'And you to be so kind, after all the ill I have done!' added she to Dagobert, as, disengaging one of her hands from those of her son, she took the soldier's hand and pressed it to her tearful eyes. 'In prison,' said she in a low voice, 'I had time to repent.'
Agricola's heart was near breaking at the thought that his pious and good mother, with her angelic purity, should for a moment have been confined in prison with so many miserable creatures. He would have made some attempt to console her on the subject of the painful past, but he feared to give a new shock to Dagobert, and was silent.
'Where is Gabriel, dear mother?' inquired he. 'How is he? As you have seen him, tell us all about him.'
'I have seen Gabriel,' said Frances, drying her tears; 'he is confined at home. His superiors have rigorously forbidden his going out. Luckily, they did not prevent his receiving me, for his words and counsels have opened my eyes to many things. It is from him that I learned how guilty I had been to you, my poor husband.'
'How so?' asked Dagobert.
'Why, you know that if I caused you so much grief, it was not from wickedness. When I saw you in such despair, I suffered almost as much myself; but I durst not tell you so, for fear of breaking my oath. I had resolved to keep it, believing that I did well, believing that it was my duty. And yet something told me that it could not be my duty to cause you so much pain. 'Alas, my God! enlighten me!' I exclaimed in my prison, as I knelt down and prayed, in spite of the mockeries of the other women. 'Why should a just and pious work, commanded by my confessor, the most respectable of men, overwhelm me and mine with so much misery? 'Have mercy on me, my God, and teach me if I have done wrong without knowing it!' As I prayed with fervor, God heard me, and inspired me with the idea of applying to Gabriel. 'I thank Thee, Father! I will obey!' said I within myself. 'Gabriel is like my own child; but he is also a priest, a martyr—almost a saint. If any one in the world imitates the charity of our blessed Saviour, it is surely he. When I leave this prison, I will go and consult him and he will clear up my doubts.''
'You are right, dear mother,' cried Agricola; 'it was a thought from heaven. Gabriel is an angel of purity, courage, nobleness—the type of the true and good priest!'
'Ah, poor wife!' said Dagobert, with bitterness; 'if you had never had any confessor but Gabriel!'
'I thought of it before he went on his journey,' said Frances, with simplicity. 'I should have liked to confess to the dear boy—but I fancied Abbe Dubois would be offended, and that Gabriel would be too indulgent with regard to my sins.
'Your sins, poor dear mother?' said Agricola. 'As if you ever committed any!'
'And what did Gabriel tell you?' asked the soldier.
'Alas, my dear! had I but had such an interview with him sooner! What I told him of Abbe Dubois roused his suspicions, and he questioned me, dear child, as to many things of which he had never spoken to me before. Then I opened to him my whole heart, and he did the same to me, and we both made sad discoveries with regard to persons whom we had always thought very respectable, and who yet had deceived each of us, unknown to the
