Celia stirred guiltily.
“She had no faith in you, Célie. It made me angry, dear. She said that you invented your own tests. She sneered at them. A string across a cupboard! A child, she said, could manage that; much more, then, a clever young lady. Oh, she admitted that you were clever! Indeed, she urged that you were far too clever to submit to the tests of someone you did not know. I replied that you would. I was right, Célie, was I not?”
And again the appeal sounded rather piteously in Mme. Dauvray’s voice.
“Tests!” said Celia, with a contemptuous laugh. And, in truth, she was not afraid of them. Mme. Dauvray’s voice at once took courage.
“There!” she cried triumphantly. “I was sure. I told her so. Célie, I arranged with her that next Tuesday—”
And Celia interrupted quickly.
“No! Oh, no!”
Again there was silence; and then Mme. Dauvray said gently, but very seriously:
“Célie, you are not kind.”
Celia was moved by the reproach.
“Oh, madame!” she cried eagerly. “Please don’t think that. How could I be anything else to you who are so kind to me?”
“Then prove it, Célie. On Tuesday I have asked Mme. Rossignol to come; and—” The old woman’s voice became tremulous with excitement. “And perhaps—who knows?—perhaps she will appear to us.”
Celia had no doubt who “she” was. She was Mme. de Montespan.
“Oh, no, madame!” she stammered. “Here, at Aix, we are not in the spirit for such things.”
And then, in a voice of dread, Mme. Dauvray asked: “Is it true, then, what Adèle said?”
And Celia started violently. Mme. Dauvray doubted.
“I believe it would break my heart, my dear, if I were to think that; if I were to know that you had tricked me,” she said, with a trembling voice.
Celia covered her face with her hands. It would be true. She had no doubt of it. Mme. Dauvray would never forgive herself—would never forgive Celia. Her infatuation had grown so to engross her that the rest of her life would surely be embittered. It was not merely a passion—it was a creed as well. Celia shrank from the renewal of these séances. Every fibre in her was in revolt. They were so unworthy—so unworthy of Harry Wethermill, and of herself as she now herself wished to be. But she had to pay now; the moment for payment had come.
“Célie,” said Mme. Dauvray, “it isn’t true! Surely it isn’t true?”
Celia drew her hands away from her face.
“Let Mme. Rossignol come on Tuesday!” she cried, and the old woman caught the girl’s hand and pressed it with affection.
“Oh, thank you! thank you!” she cried. “Adèle Rossignol laughs tonight; we shall convince her on Tuesday, Célie! Célie, I am so glad!” And her voice sank into a solemn whisper, pathetically ludicrous. “It is not right that she should laugh! To bring people back through the gates of the spirit-world—that is wonderful.”
To Celia the sound of the jargon learnt from her own lips, used by herself so thoughtlessly in past times, was odious. “For the last time,” she pleaded to herself. All her life was going to change; though no word had yet been spoken by Harry Wethermill, she was sure of it. Just for this one last time, then, so that she might leave Mme. Dauvray the colours of her belief, she would hold a séance at the Villa Rose.
Mme. Dauvray told the news to Hélène Vauquier when they reached the villa.
“You will be present, Hélène,” she cried excitedly. “It will be Tuesday. There will be the three of us.”
“Certainly, if madame wishes,” said Hélène submissively. She looked round the room. “Mlle. Célie can be placed on a chair in that recess and the curtains drawn, whilst we—madame and madame’s friend and I—can sit round this table under the side windows.”
“Yes,” said Celia, “that will do very well.”
It was Madame Dauvray’s habit when she was particularly pleased with Celia to dismiss her maid quickly, and to send her to brush the girl’s hair at night; and in a little while on this night Hélène went to Celia’s room. While she brushed Celia’s hair she told her that Servettaz’s parents lived at Chambéry, and that he would like to see them.
“But the poor man is afraid to ask for a day,” she said. “He has been so short a time with madame.”
“Of course madame will give him a holiday if he asks,” replied Celia with a smile. “I will speak to her myself tomorrow.”
“It would be kind of mademoiselle,” said Hélène Vauquier. “But perhaps—” She stopped.
“Well,” said Celia.
“Perhaps mademoiselle would do better still to speak to Servettaz himself and encourage him to ask with his own lips. Madame has her moods, is it not so? She does not always like it to be forgotten that she is the mistress.”
On the next day accordingly Celia did speak to Servettaz, and Servettaz asked for his holiday.
“But of course,” Mme. Dauvray at once replied. “We must decide upon a day.”
It was then that Hélène Vauquier ventured humbly upon a suggestion.
“Since madame has a friend coming here on Tuesday, perhaps that would be the best day for him to go. Madame would not be likely to take a long drive that afternoon.”
“No, indeed,” replied Mme. Dauvray. “We shall all three dine together early in Aix and return here.”
“Then I will tell him he may go tomorrow,” said Celia.
For this conversation took place on the Monday, and in the evening Mme. Dauvray and Celia went as usual to the Villa des Fleurs and dined there.
“I was in a bad mind,” said Celia, when asked by the Juge d’instruction to explain that attack of nerves in the garden which Ricardo had witnessed. “I hated more and more the thought of the séance which was to take place on the morrow.
