and darted at him one of his rapid, cold, and piercing glances—and then the livid eyelid again covered the dull eye of that corpse-like face.
'Not having the disadvantage of being an old wolf, and still less an old thief,' said Rodin, quietly, 'you will permit me, sir, to take no account of the pursuit of hunters and police. As for the reproaches made me, I have a very simple method of answering—I do not say of justifying myself—I never justify myself—'
'You don't say!' said the count.
'Never,' resumed Rodin coolly; 'my acts are sufficient for that. I will then simply answer that seeing the deep, violent, almost fearful impression made by this lady on the prince—'
'Let this assurance which you give me of the prince's love,' said Adrienne interrupting Rodin with an enchanting smile, 'absolve you of all the evil you wished to do me. The sight of our happiness be your only punishment!'
'It may be that I need neither absolution nor punishment, for, as I have already had the honor to observe to the count, my dear young lady, the future will justify my acts. Yes; it was my duty to tell the prince that you loved another than himself, and to tell you that he loved another than yourself—all in your mutual interest. That my attachment for you may have misled me, is possible—I am not infallible; but, after my past conduct towards you, my dear young lady, I have, perhaps, some right to be astonished at seeing myself thus treated. This is not a complaint. If I never justify myself, I never complain either.'
'Now really, there is something heroic in all this, my good sir,' said the count. 'You do not condescend to complain or justify yourself, with regard to the evil you have done.'
'The evil I have done?' said Rodin, looking fixedly at the count. 'Are we playing at enigmas?'
'What, sir!' cried the count, with indignation: 'is it nothing, by your falsehoods, to have plunged the prince into so frightful a state of despair, that he has twice attempted his life? Is it nothing, by similar falsehoods, to have induced this lady to believe so cruel and complete an error, that but for the resolution I have to-day taken, it might have led to the most fatal consequences?'
'And will you do me the honor to tell me, sir, what interest I could have in all this despair and error, admitting even that I had wished to produce them?'
'Some great interest no doubt,' said the count, bluntly; 'the more dangerous that it is concealed. You are one of those, I see, to whom the woes of others are pleasure and profit.'
'That is really too much, sir,' said Rodin, bowing; 'I should be quite contented with the profit.'
'Your impudent coolness will not deceive me; this is a serious matter,' said the count. 'It is impossible that so perfidious a piece of roguery can be an isolated act. Who knows but this may still be one of the fruits of Madame de Saint-Dizier's hatred for Mdlle. de Cardoville?'
Adrienne had listened to the preceding discussion with deep attention. Suddenly she started, as if struck by a sudden revelation.
After a moment's silence, she said to Rodin, without anger, without bitterness, but with an expression of gentle and serene calmness: 'We are told, sir, that happy love works miracles. I should be tempted to believe it; for, after some minutes' reflection, and when I recall certain circumstances, your conduct appears to me in quite a new light.'
'And what may this new perspective be, my dear young lady?'
'That you may see it from my point of view, sir, allow me to remind you of a few facts. That sewing-girl was generously devoted to me; she had given me unquestionable proofs of her attachment. Her mind was equal to her noble heart; but she had an invincible dislike to you. All on a sudden she disappears mysteriously from my house, and you do your best to cast upon her odious suspicions. M. de Montbron has a paternal affection for me; but, as I must confess, little sympathy for you; and you have always tried to produce a coldness between us. Finally, Prince Djalma has a deep affection for me, and you employ the most perfidious treachery to kill that sentiment within him. For what end do you act thus? I do not know; but certainly with some hostile design.'
'It appears to me, madame,' said Rodin, severely, 'that you have forgotten services performed.'
'I do not deny, sir, that you took me from the house of Dr. Baleinier; but, a few days sooner or later, I must infallibly have been released by M. de Montbron.'
'You are right, my dear child,' said the count; 'it may be that your enemies wished to claim the merit of what must necessarily have happened through the exertions of your friends.'
'You are drowning, and I save you—it is all a mistake to feel grateful,' said Rodin, bitterly; 'some one else would no doubt have saved you a little later.'
'The comparison is wanting in exactness,' said Adrienne, with a smile; 'a lunatic asylum is not a river, and though, from what I see, I think you quite capable of diving, you have had no occasion to swim on this occasion. You merely opened a door for me, which would have opened of itself a little later.'
'Very good, my dear child!' said the count, laughing heartily at Adrienne's reply.
'I know, sir, that your care did not extend to me only. The daughters of Marshal Simon were brought back by you; but we may imagine that the claim of the Duke de Ligny to the possession of his daughters would not have been in vain. You returned to an old soldier his imperial cross, which he held to be a sacred relic; it is a very touching incident. Finally, you unmasked the Abbe d'Aigrigny and Dr. Baleinier: but I had already made up my mind to unmask then. However, all this proves that you are a very clever man—'
'Oh, madame!' said Rodin, humbly.
'Full of resources and invention—'
'Oh, madame!'
'It is not my fault if, in our long interview at Dr. Baleinier's, you betrayed that superiority of mind which struck me so forcibly, and which seems to embarrass you so much at present. What would you have, sir?—great minds like yours find it difficult to maintain their incognito. Yet, as by different ways—oh! very different,' added the young lady, maliciously, 'we are tending to the same end (still keeping in view our conversation at Dr. Baleinier's), I wish, for the sake of our future communion, as you call it, to give you a piece of advice, and speak frankly to you.'
Rodin had listened to Mdlle. de Cardoville with apparent impassibility, holding his hat under his arm, and twirling his thumbs, whilst his hands were crossed upon his waistcoat. The only external mark of the intense agitation into which he was thrown by the calm words of Adrienne, was that the livid eyelids of the Jesuit, which had been hypocritically closed, became gradually red, as the blood flowed into them. Nevertheless, he answered Mdlle. de Cardoville in a firm voice, and with a low bow: 'Good advice and frankness are always excellent things.'
'You see, sir,' resumed Adrienne, with some excitement, 'happy love bestows such penetration, such energy, such courage, as enables one to laugh at perils, to detect stratagems, and to defy hatred. Believe me, the divine light which surrounds two loving hearts will be sufficient to disperse all darkness, and reveal every snare. You see, in India—excuse my weakness, but I like to talk of India,' added the young girl, with a smile of indescribable grace and meaning—'in India, when travellers sleep at night, they kindle great fires round their ajoupa (excuse this touch of local coloring), and far as extends the luminous circle, it puts to flight by its mere brilliancy, all the impure and venomous reptiles that shun the day and live only in darkness.'
'The meaning of this comparison has quite escaped me,' said Rodin, continuing to twirl his thumbs, and half raising his eyelids, which were getting redder and redder.
'I will speak more plainly,' said Adrienne, with a smile. 'Suppose, sir, that the last is a service which you have rendered me and the prince—for you only proceed by way of services—that, I acknowledge, is novel and ingenious.'
'Bravo, my dear child!' said the count, joyfully. 'The execution will be complete.'
'Oh! this is meant for an execution?' said Rodin, still impassible.
'No, sir,' answered Adrienne, with a smile; 'it is a simple conversation between a poor young girl and an old philosopher, the friend of humanity. Suppose, then, that these frequent services that you have rendered to me and mine have suddenly opened my eyes; or, rather,' added the young girl, in a serious tone, 'suppose that heaven, who gives to the mother the instinct to defend her child, has given me, along with happiness, the instinct to preserve my happiness, and that a vague presentiment, by throwing light on a thousand circumstances until now obscure, has suddenly revealed to me that, instead of being the friend, you are perhaps, the most dangerous enemy of myself and family.'
'So we pass from the execution to suppositions,' said Rodin, still immovable.
'And from suppositions, sir, if you must have it, to certainty,' resumed Adrienne, with dignified firmness; 'yes,
