sweet—'
'Come, come, do not exaggerate,' said Rodin; 'say a good sort of old fellow; nothing more, my dear child. But see how things fall out, sometimes! Who could have told me, when I heard you knock at my door—which, I must say, vexed me a great deal—that it was a pretty little neighbor of mine, who under the pretext of playing off a joke, was to put me in the way of doing a good action? Go and comfort your friend; this evening she will receive some assistance; and let us have hope and confidence. Thanks be, there are still some good people in the world!'
'Oh, sir! you prove it yourself.'
'Not at all! The happiness of the old is to see the young happy.'
This was said by Rodin with so much apparent kindness, that Rose-Pompon felt the tears well up to her eyes, and answered with much emotion: 'Sir, Cephyse and me are only poor girls; there are many more virtuous in the world; but I venture to say, we have good hearts. Now, if ever you should be ill, only send for us; there are no Sisters of Charity that will take better care of you. It is all that we can offer you, without reckoning Philemon, who shall go through fire and water for you, I give you my word for it—and Cephyse, I am sure, will answer for Jacques also, that he will be yours in life and death.'
'You see, my dear child, that I was right in saying—a fitful head and a good heart. Adieu, till we meet again.'
Thereupon Rodin, taking up the basket, which he had placed on the ground by the side of his umbrella, prepared to descend the stairs.
'First of all, you must give me this basket; it will be in your way going down,' said Rose-Pompon, taking the basket from the hands of Rodin, notwithstanding his resistance. Then she added: 'Lean upon my arm. The stairs are so dark. You might slip.'
'I will accept your offer, my dear child, for I am not very courageous.' Leaning paternally on the right arm of Rose-Pompon, who held the basket in her left hand, Rodin descended the stairs, and crossed the court-yard.
'Up there, on the third story, do you see that big face close to the window-frame?' said Rose-Pompon suddenly to Rodin, stopping in the centre of the little court. 'That is my Ninny Moulin. Do you know him? Is he the same as yours?'
'The same as mine,' said Rodin, raising his head, and waving his hand very affectionately to Jacques Dumoulin, who, stupefied thereat, retired abruptly from the window.
'The poor fellow! I am sure he is afraid of me since his foolish joke,' said Rodin, smiling. 'He is very wrong.'
And he accompanied these last words with a sinister nipping of the lips, not perceived by Rose-Pompon.
'And now, my dear child,' said he, as they both entered the passage, 'I no longer need you assistance; return to your friend, and tell her the good news you have heard.'
'Yes, sir, you are right. I burn with impatience to tell her what a good man you are.' And Rose-Pompon sprung towards the stairs.
'Stop, stop! how about my basket that the little madcap carries off with her?' said Rodin.
'Oh true! I beg your pardon, sir. Poor Cephyse! how pleased she will be. Adieu, sir!' And Rose-Pompon's pretty figure disappeared in the darkness of the staircase, which she mounted with an alert and impatient step.
Rodin issued from the entry. 'Here is your basket, my good lady,' said he, stopping at the threshold of Mother Arsene's shop. 'I give you my humble thanks for your kindness.'
'For nothing, my dear sir, for nothing. It is all at your service. Well, was the radish good?'
'Succulent, my dear madame, and excellent.'
'Oh! I am glad of it. Shall we soon see you again?'
'I hope so. But could you tell me where is the nearest post-office?'
'Turn to the left, the third house, at the grocer's.'
'A thousand thanks.'
'I wager it's a love letter for your sweetheart,' said Mother Arsene, enlivened probably by Rose Pompon's and Ninny Moulin's proximity.
'Ha! ha! ha! the good lady!' said Rodin, with a titter. Then, suddenly resuming his serious aspect, he made a low bow to the greengrocer, adding: 'Your most obedient humble servant!' and walked out into the street.
We now usher the reader into Dr. Baleinier's asylum, in which Mdlle. de Cardoville was confined.
CHAPTER XXXII. THE ADVICE.
Adrienne de Cardoville had been still more strictly confined in Dr. Baleinier's house, since the double nocturnal attempt of Agricola and Dagobert, in which the soldier, though severely wounded, had succeeded, thanks to the intrepid devotion of his son, seconded by the heroic Spoil sport, in gaining the little garden gate of the convent, and escaping by way of the boulevard, along with the young smith. Four o'clock had just struck. Adrienne, since the previous day, had been removed to a chamber on the second story of the asylum. The grated window, with closed shutters, only admitted a faint light to this apartment. The young lady, since her interview with Mother Bunch, expected to be delivered any day by the intervention of her friends. But she felt painful uneasiness on the subject of Agricola and Dagobert, being absolutely ignorant of the issue of the struggle in which her intended liberators had been engaged with the people of the asylum and convent. She had in vain questioned her keepers on the subject; they had remained perfectly mute. These new incidents had augmented the bitter resentment of Adrienne against the Princess de Saint Dizier, Father d'Aigrigny, and their creatures. The slight paleness of Mdlle. de Cardoville's charming face, and her fine eyes a little drooping, betrayed her recent sufferings; seated before a little table, with her forehead resting upon one of her hands, half veiled by the long curls of her golden hair, she was turning over the leaves of a book. Suddenly, the door opened, and M. Baleinier entered. The doctor, a Jesuit, in lay attire, a docile and passive instrument of the will of his Order, was only half in the confidence of Father d'Aigrigny and the Princess de Saint-Dizier. He was ignorant of the object of the imprisonment of Mdlle. de Cardoville; he was ignorant also of the sudden change which had taken place in the relative position of Father d'Aigrigny and Rodin, after the reading of the testament of Marius de Rennepont. The doctor had, only the day before, received orders from Father d'Aigrigny (now acting under the directions of Rodin) to confine Mdlle. de Cardoville still more strictly, to act towards her with redoubled severity, and to endeavor to force her, it will be seen by what expedients, to renounce the judicial proceedings, which she promised herself to take hereafter against her persecutors. At sight of the doctor, Mdlle. de Cardoville could not hide the aversion and disdain with which this man inspired her. M. Baleinier, on the contrary, always smiling, always courteous, approached Adrienne with perfect ease and confidence, stopped a few steps from her, as if to study her features more attentively, and then added like a man who is satisfied with the observations he had made: 'Come! the unfortunate events of the night before last have had a less injurious influence than I feared. There is some improvement; the complexion is less flushed, the look calmer, the eyes still somewhat too bright, but no longer shining with such unnatural fire. You are getting on so well! Now the cure must be prolonged—for this unfortunate night affair threw you into a state of excitement, that was only the more dangerous from your not being conscious of it. Happily, with care, your recovery will not, I hope, be very much delayed.' Accustomed though she was to the audacity of this tool of the Congregation, Mdlle. de Cardoville could not forbear saying to him, with a smile of bitter disdain: 'What impudence, sir, there is in your probity! What effrontery in your zeal to earn your hire! Never for a moment do you lay aside your mask; craft and falsehood are ever on your lips. Really, if this shameful comedy causes you as much fatigue as it does me disgust and contempt, they can never pay you enough.'
'Alas!' said the doctor, in a sorrowful tone; 'always this unfortunate delusion, that you are not in want of our care!—that I am playing a part, when I talk to you of the sad state in which you were when we were obliged to bring you hither by stratagem. Still, with the exception of this little sign of rebellious insanity, your condition has marvellously improved. You are on the high-road to a complete cure. By-and-by, your excellent heart will render me the justice that is due to me; and, one day, I shall be judged as I deserve.'
'I, believe it, sir; the day approaches, in which you will be judged as you deserve,' said Adrienne, laying great stress upon the two words.
'Always that other fixed idea,' said the doctor with a sort of commiseration. 'Come, be reasonable. Do not think of this childishness.'
'What! renounce my intention to demand at the hands of justice reparation for myself, and disgrace for you and your accomplices? Never, sir—never!'
