<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.</SPAN><br/> <span class="chapterhead">TAVERNEY AND HIS DAUGHTER.</span></h2>
<p><span class="firstwords">Though</span> forewarned by Gilbert of Baron Taverney's poverty,
Baron Balsamo was not the less astonished by the meanness
of the dwelling which the youth had dubbed the Castle. On
the paltry threshold stood the master in a dressing gown and
holding a candle.</p>
<p>Taverney was a little, old gentleman of five-and-sixty, with
bright eye and high but retreating forehead. His wretched
wig had lost by burning at the candles what the rats had
spared of its curls. In his hands was held a dubiously white
napkin, which proved that he had been disturbed at table.
His spiteful face had a likeness to Voltaire's, and was divided
between politeness to the guest and distaste to being disturbed.
In the flickering light he looked ugly.</p>
<p>"Who was it pointed out my house as a shelter?" queried
the baron, holding up the light to spy the pilot to whom he
was eager to show his gratitude, of course.</p>
<p>"The youth bore the name of Gilbert, I believe."</p>
<p>"Ugh! I might have guessed that. I doubted, though, he
was good enough for that. Gilbert, the idler, the philosopher!"</p>
<p>This flow of epithets, emphasized threateningly, showed
the visitor that little sympathy existed between the lord and
his vassal.</p>
<p>"Be pleased to come in," said the baron, after a short
silence more expressive than his speech.</p>
<p>"Allow me to see to my coach, which contains valuable
property," returned the foreign nobleman.</p>
<p>"Labrie," said Lord Taverney, "put my lord's carriage
under the shed, where it will be less uncovered than in the
open yard, for some shingles stick to the roof. As for the
horses, that is different, for I cannot answer for their supper;
still, as they are not yours, but the post's, I daresay it makes no
odds."</p>
<p>"Believe me, I shall be ever grateful to your lordship——"</p>
<p>"Oh, do not deceive yourself," said the baron, holding up
the candle again to light Labrie executing the work with the<SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27"></SPAN>
aid of the foreign noble; "Taverney is a poor place and a sad
one."</p>
<p>When the vehicle was under cover, after a fashion, the guest
slipped a gold coin into the servant's hand. He thought it a
silver piece, and thanked heaven for the boon.</p>
<p>"Lord forbid I should think the ill of your house that you
speak," said Balsamo, returning and bowing as the baron began
leading him through a broad, damp antechamber, grumbling:</p>
<p>"Nay, nay, I know what I am talking about; my means
are limited. Were you French—though your accent is German,
in spite of your Italian title—but never mind—you
would be reminded of the rich Taverney."</p>
<p>"Philosophy," muttered Balsamo, for he had expected the
speaker would sigh.</p>
<p>The master opened the dining-room door.</p>
<p>"Labrie, serve us as if you were a hundred men in one. I
have no other lackey, and he is bad. But I cannot afford
another. This dolt has lived with me nigh twenty years without
taking a penny of wages, and he is worth it. You will
see he is stupid."</p>
<p>"Heartless," Balsamo continued his studies; "unless he is
putting it on."</p>
<p>The dining-room was the large main room of a farmhouse
which <SPAN name="tn_png_29"></SPAN><!--TN: "has" changed to "had" on Page 27-->had been converted into the manor. It was so plainly
furnished as to seem empty. A small, round table was placed
in the midst, on which reeked one dish, a stew of game and
cabbage. The wine was in a stone jar; the battered, worn
and tarnished plate was composed of three plates, a goblet and
a salt dish; the last, of great weight and exquisite work,
seemed a jewel of price amid the rubbish.</p>
<p>"Ah, you let your gaze linger on my salt dish?" said the
host. "You have good taste to admire it. You notice the
sole object presentable here. No, I have another gem, my
daughter——"</p>
<p>"Mademoiselle Andrea?"</p>
<p>"Yes," said Taverney, astonished at the name being known;
"I shall present you. Come, Andrea, my child, and don't
be alarmed."</p>
<p>"I am not, father," said a sonorous but melodious voice as
a maiden appeared, who seemed a lovely pagan statue animated.</p>
<p>Though of the utmost plainness, her dress was so tasteful
and suitable that a complete outfit from a royal wardrobe
would have appeared less rich and elegant.</p>
<p>"You are right," he whispered to his host, "she is a precious
beauty."</p>
<p>"Do not pay my poor girl too many compliments," said the
old Frenchman carelessly, "for she comes from the nunnery<SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28"></SPAN>
school and may credit them. Not that I fear that she will be
a coquette," he continued; "just the other way, for the dear
girl does not think enough of herself, and I am a good father,
who tries to make her know that coquetry is a woman's first
power."</p>
<p>Andrea cast down her eyes and blushed; whatever her
endeavor she could not but overhear this singular theory.</p>
<p>"Was that told to the lady at convent, and is that a rule in
religious education?" queried the foreigner, laughing.</p>
<p>"My lord, I have my own ideas, as you may have noticed. I
do not imitate those fathers who bid a daughter play the
prude and be inflexible and obtuse; go mad about honor,
delicacy and disinterestedness. Fools! they are like seconds
who lead their champion into the lists with all the armor removed
and pit him against a man armed at all points. No,
my daughter Andrea will not be that sort, though reared in a
rural den at Taverney."</p>
<p>Though agreeing with the master about his place, the baron
deemed it duty to suggest a polite reproof.</p>
<p>"That is all very well, but I know Taverney; still, be that
as it may, and far though we are from the sunshine of
Versailles Palace, my daughter is going to enter the society
where I once flourished. She will enter with a complete
arsenal of weapons forged in my experience and recollections.
But I fear, my lord, that the convent has blunted them.
Just my luck! my daughter is the only pupil who took the
instructions as in earnest and is following the Gospel. Am I
not ill-fated?"</p>
<p>"The young lady is an angel," returned Balsamo, "and
really I am not surprised at what I hear."</p>
<p>Andrea nodded her thanks, and they sat down at table.</p>
<p>"Eat away, if hungry. That is a beastly mess which
Labrie has hashed up."</p>
<p>"Call you partridges so? You slander your feast. Game-birds
in May? Shot on your preserves?"</p>
<p>"Mine? My good father left me some, but I got rid of
them long ago. I have not a yard of land. That lazybones
Gilbert, only good for mooning about, stole a gun somewhere
and done a bit of poaching. He will go to jail for it, and a
good riddance. But Andrea likes game, and so far, I forgive
the boy."</p>
<p>Balsamo contemplated the lovely face without perceiving a
twinge, wrinkle or color, as she helped them to the dish,
cooked by Labrie, furnished by Gilbert, and maligned by the
baron.</p>
<p>"Are you admiring the salt dish again, baron?"</p>
<p>"No, the arm of your daughter."</p>
<p>"Capital! the reply is worthy the gallant Richelieu. That
piece of plate was ordered of Goldsmith Lucas by the Regent of<SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29"></SPAN>
Orleans. Subject: the Amours of the Bacchantes and Satyrs—rather
free."</p>
<p>More than free, obscene—but Balsamo admired the calm
unconcern of Andrea, not blenching as she presented the plate.</p>
<p>"Do eat," said the host; "do not fancy that another dish
is coming, for you will be dreadfully disappointed."</p>
<p>"Excuse me, father," interrupted the girl with habitual
coolness, "but if Nicole has understood me, she will have
made a cake of which I told her the recipe."</p>
<p>"You gave Nicole the recipe of a cake? Your waiting maid
does the cooking now, eh? The next thing will be your doing
it yourself. Do you find duchesses and countesses playing
the kitchen-wench? On the contrary, the king makes
omelets for them. Gracious! that I have lived to see women-cooks
under my roof. Pray excuse my daughter, baron."</p>
<p>"We must eat, father," rebuked Andrea tranquilly.
"Dish up, Legay!" she called out, and the girl brought in a
pancake of appetizing smell.</p>
<p>"I know one who won't touch the stuff," cried Taverney,
furiously dashing his plate to pieces.</p>
<p>"But the gentleman, perhaps, will," said the lady coldly.
"By the way, father, that leaves only seventeen pieces in that
set, which comes to me from my mother."</p>
<p>The guest's spirit of observation found plenty of food in
this corner of life in the country. The salt dish alone revealed
a facet of Taverney's character or rather all its sides.
From curiosity or otherwise, he stared at Andrea with such
perseverance that she tried to frown him down; but finally
she gave way and yielded to his mesmeric influence and command.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the baron was storming, grumbling, snarling
and nipping the arm of Labrie, who happened to get into his
way. He would have done the same to Nicole's when the
baron's gaze fell on her hands.</p>
<p>"Just look at what pretty fingers this lass has," he exclaimed.
"They would be supremely pretty only for her
kitchen work having made corns at the tips. That is right;
perk up, my girl! I can tell you, my dear guest, that Nicole
Legay is not a prude like her mistress and compliments do not
frighten her."</p>
<p>Watching the baron's daughter, Balsamo noticed the highest
disdain on her beauteous face. He harmonized his features
with hers and this pleased her, spite of herself, for she looked
at him with less harshness, or, better, with less disquiet.</p>
<p>"This girl, only think," continued the poor noble, chucking
the girl's chin with the back of his hand, "was at the
nunnery with my daughter and picked up as much schooling.
She does not leave her mistress a moment. This devotion
would rejoice the philosophers, who grant souls to her class."</p>
<SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30"></SPAN>
<p>"Father, Nicole stays with me because I order her to do
so," observed Andrea, discontented.</p>
<p>By the curl of the servant's lip, Balsamo saw that she was not
insensible to the humiliations from her proud superior. But
the expression flitted; and to hide a tear, perhaps, the girl
looked aside to a window on the yard. Everything interested
the visitor, and he perceived a man's face at the panes.</p>
<p>Each in this curious abode had a secret, he thought; "I
hope not to be an hour here without learning Andrea's.
Already I know her father's, and I guess Nicole's."</p>
<p>Taverney perceived his short absence of mind.</p>
<p>"What! are you dreaming?" he questioned. "We are all
at it, here; but you might have waited for bedtime. Reverie
is a catching complaint. My daughter broods; Nicole is wool-gathering;
and I get puzzling about that dawdler who killed
these birds—and dreams when he kills them. Gilbert is a
philosopher, like Labrie. I hope you are not friendly with
them? I forewarn you that philosophers do not go down with
me."</p>
<p>"They are neither friends nor foes to me," replied the visitor;
"I do not have anything to do with them."</p>
<p>"Very good. Zounds, they are scoundrelly vermin, more
venomous than ugly. They will ruin the monarchy with
their maxims, like 'People can hardly be virtuous under a
monarchy;' or, 'Genuine monarchy is an institution devised
to corrupt popular manners, and make slaves;' or yet, 'Royal
authority may come by the grace of God, but so do plagues
and miseries of mankind.' Pretty flummery, all this! What
good would a virtuous people be, I beg? Things are going to
the bad, since his Majesty spoke to Voltaire and read Diderot's
book."</p>
<p>At this Balsamo fancied again to spy the pale face at the
window, but it vanished as soon as he fixed his eyes upon it.</p>
<p>"Is your daughter a philosopher?" he asked, smiling.</p>
<p>"I do not know what philosophy is; I only know that I
like serious matters," was Andrea's reply.</p>
<p>"The most serious thing is to live; stick to that," said her
father.</p>
<p>"But the young lady cannot hate life," said the stranger.</p>
<p>"All depends," she said.</p>
<p>"Another stupid saying," interrupted Taverney. "That is
just the nonsense my son talks. I have the misfortune to
have a son. The Viscount of Taverney is cornet in the dauphin's
horse-guards—a nice boy; another philosopher! The
other day he talked to me about doing away with negro
slavery. 'What are we to do for sugar?' I retorted, for I
like my coffee heavily sweetened, as does Louis XV. 'We
must do without sugar to benefit a suffering race.' 'Suffering
monkeys!' I returned, 'and that is paying them a compli<SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31"></SPAN>ment.'
Whereupon he asserted that all men were brothers!
Madness must be in the air. I, brother of a blackamoor!"</p>
<p>"This is going too far," observed Balsamo.</p>
<p>"Of course. I told you I was in luck. My children are—one
an angel, the other an apostle. Drink, though my wine
is detestable."</p>
<p>"I think it exquisite," said the guest, watching Andrea.</p>
<p>"Then you are a philosopher! In my time we learnt pleasant
things; we played cards, fought duels, though against the
law; and wasted our time on duchesses and money on opera
dancers. That is my story in a nutshell. Taverney went
wholly into the opera-house; which is all I sorrow for, since
a poor noble is nothing of a man. I look aged, do I not? Only
because I am impoverished and dwell in a kennel, with a tattered
wig, and gothic coat; but my friend the marshal duke,
with his house in town and two hundred thousand a year—he
is young, in his new clothes and brushed up perukes—he is
still alert, brisk and pleasure-seeking, though ten years my
senior, my dear sir, ten years."</p>
<p>"I am astonished that, with powerful friends like the Duke
of Richelieu, you quitted the court."</p>
<p>"Only a temporary retreat, and I am going back one day,"
said the lord, darting a strange glance on his daughter, which
the visitor intercepted.</p>
<p>"But, I suppose, the duke befriends your son?"</p>
<p>"He holds the son of his friend in horror, for he is a philosopher,
and he execrates them."</p>
<p>"The feeling is reciprocal," observed Andrea with perfect
calm. "Clear away, Legay!"</p>
<p><SPAN name="tn_png_33"></SPAN><!--TN: Quote removed from before "Startled" on Page 31-->Startled from her vigilant watch on the window, the maid
ran back to the table.</p>
<p>"We used to stay at the board to two <span class="smaller">A. M.</span> We had luxuries
for supper, then, that's why! and we drank when we
could eat no more. But how can one drink vinegar when
there is nothing to eat? Legay, let us have the Maraschino,
provided there is any."</p>
<p>"Liqueurs," said Andrea to the maid, who took her orders
from the baron thus second-hand.</p>
<p>Her master sank back in his armchair and sighed with
grotesque melancholy while keeping his eyes closed.</p>
<p>"Albeit the duke may execrate your son—quite right, too,
as he is a philosopher," said Balsamo, "he ought to preserve
his liking for you, who are nothing of the kind. I presume
you have claims on the king, whom you must have served?"</p>
<p>"Fifteen years in the army. I was the marshal's aid-de-camp,
and we went through the Mahon campaign together.
Our friendship dates from—let me see! the famous siege of
Philipsburg, 1742 to 1743."</p>
<p>"Yes, I was there, and remember you——"</p>
<SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32"></SPAN>
<p>"You remember me at the <SPAN name="tn_png_34"></SPAN><!--TN: Quote removed after "seige?" on Page 32-->siege? Why, what is your
age?"</p>
<p>"Oh, I am no particular age," replied the guest, holding up
his glass to be filled by Andrea's fair hand.</p>
<p>The host interpreted that his guest did not care to tell his
years.</p>
<p>"My lord, allow me to say that you do not seem to have been
a soldier, then, as it is twenty-eight years ago, and you are
hardly over thirty."</p>
<p>Andrea regarded the stranger with the steadfastness of deep
curiosity; he came out in a different light every instant.</p>
<p>"I know what I am talking about the famous siege,
where the Duke of Richelieu killed in a duel his cousin the
Prince of Lixen. The encounter came off on the highway,
by my fay! on our return from the outposts; on the embankment,
to the left, he ran him through the body. I came up
as Prince Deux-ponts held the dying man in his arms. He
was seated on the ditch bank, while Richelieu tranquilly
wiped his steel."</p>
<p>"On my honor, my lord, you astound me. Things passed
as you describe."</p>
<p>"Stay, you wore a captain's uniform then, in the Queen's
Light Horse Guards, so badly cut up at Fontenoy?"</p>
<p>"Were you in that battle, too?" jeered the baron.</p>
<p>"No, I was dead at that time," replied the stranger,
calmly.</p>
<p>The baron stared, Andrea shuddered, and Nicole made the
sign of the cross.</p>
<p>"To resume the subject, I recall you clearly now, as you
held your horse and the duke's while he fought. I went up
to you for an account and you gave it. They called you the
Little Chevalier. Excuse me not remembering before, but
thirty years change a man. To the health of Marshal Richelieu,
my dear baron!"</p>
<p>"But, according to this, you would be upward of fifty."</p>
<p>"I am of the age to have witnessed that affair."</p>
<p>The baron dropped back in the chair so vexed that Nicole
could not help laughing. But Andrea, instead of laughing,
mused with her looks on the mysterious guest. He seemed
to await this chance to dart two or three flaming glances at
her, which thrilled her like an electrical discharge. Her arms
stiffened, her neck bent, she smiled against her will on the
hypnotizer, and closed her eyes. He managed to touch her
arm, and again she quivered.</p>
<p>"Do you think I tell a fib in asserting I was at Philipsburg?"
he demanded.</p>
<p>"No, I believe you," she replied with a great effort.</p>
<p>"I am in my dotage," muttered Taverney, "unless we have
a ghost here."</p>
<SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33"></SPAN>
<p>"Who can tell?" returned Balsamo, with so grave an accent
that he subjugated the lady and made Nicole stare.</p>
<p>"But if you were living at the Siege, you were a child of
four or <SPAN name="tn_png_35"></SPAN><!--TN: Quote added after "five." on Page 33-->five."</p>
<p>"I was over forty."</p>
<p>The baron laughed and Nicole echoed him.</p>
<p>"You do not believe me. It is plain, though, for I was not
the man I am."</p>
<p>"This is a bit of antiquity," said the French noble. "Was
there not a Greek philosopher—these vile philosophers seem to
be of all ages—who would not eat beans because they contained
souls, like the negress, according to my son? What
the deuse was his name?"</p>
<p>"That is the gentleman."</p>
<p>"Why may I not be Pythagoras?"</p>
<p>"Pythagoras," prompted Andrea.</p>
<p>"I do not deny that, but he was not at Philipsburg; or, at
any rate, I did not see him there."</p>
<p>"But you saw Viscount Jean Barreaux, one of the Black
Horse Musketeers?"</p>
<p>"Rather; the musketeers and the light cavalry took turns
in guarding the trenches."</p>
<p>"The day after the Richelieu duel, Barreaux and you were
in the trenches when he asked you for a pinch of snuff, which
you offered in a gold box, ornamented with the portrait of a
belle, but in the act a cannon ball hit him in the throat, as
happened the Duke of Berwick aforetimes, and carried away
his head."</p>
<p>"Gad! just so! poor Barreaux!"</p>
<p>"This proves that we were acquainted there, for I am
Barreaux," said the foreigner.</p>
<p>The host shrank back in fright or stupefaction.</p>
<p>"This is magic," he gasped; "you would have been burnt
at the stake a hundred years ago, my dear guest. I seem to
smell brimstone!"</p>
<p>"My dear baron, note that a true magician is never burnt
or hanged. Only fools are led to the gibbet or pyre. But
here is your daughter sent to sleep by our discussions on
metaphysics and occult sciences, not calculated to interest a
lady."</p>
<p>Indeed, Andrea nodded under irresistible force like a lily
on the stalk. At these words she made an effort to repel the
subtle fluid which overwhelmed her; she shook her head energetically,
rose and tottered out of the room, sustained by
Nicole. At the same time disappeared the face glued so often
to the window glass on the outside, which Balsamo had recognized
as Gilbert's.</p>
<p>"<i>Eureka!</i>" exclaimed Balsamo triumphantly, as she vanished.
"I can say it like Archimedes."</p>
<SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34"></SPAN>
<p>"Who is he?" inquired the baron.</p>
<p>"A very good fellow for a wizard, whom I knew over two
thousand years ago," replied the guest.</p>
<p>Whether the baron thought this boast rather too preposterous,
or he did not hear it, or hearing it, wanted the more to
be rid of his odd guest, he proposed lending him a horse to get
to the nearest posting house.</p>
<p>"What, force me to ride when I am dying to stretch my
legs in bed? Do not exaggerate your mediocrity so as to
make me believe in a personal ill will."</p>
<p>"On the contrary, I treat you as a friend, knowing what
you will incur here. But since you put it this way, remain.
Labrie, is the Red-Room habitable?"</p>
<p>"Certainly, my lord, as it is Master Philip's when he is
<SPAN name="tn_png_36"></SPAN><!--TN: "ere" changed to "here" on Page 34-->here."</p>
<p>"Give it to the gentleman, since he is bent on being disgusted
with Taverney."</p>
<p>"I want to be here to-morrow to testify to my gratitude."</p>
<p>"You can do that easily, as you are so friendly with Old
Nick that you can ask him for the stone which turns all things
to gold."</p>
<p>"If that is what you want, apply to me direct."</p>
<p>"Labrie, you old rogue, get a candle and light the gentleman
to bed," said the baron, beginning to find such a dialogue
dangerous at the late hour.</p>
<p>Labrie ordered Nicole to air the Red Room while he hastened
to obey. Nicole left Andrea alone, the latter eager for the
solitude to nurse her thoughts. Taverney bade the guest
good-night, and went to bed.</p>
<p>Balsamo took out his watch, for he recalled his promise to
awake Althotas after two hours, and it was a half-hour more.
He asked the servant if his coach was still out in the yard,
and Labrie answered in the affirmative—unless it had run
off of its own volition. As for Gilbert, he had been abed
most likely since an hour.</p>
<p>Balsamo went to Althotas after studying the way to the
Red Room. Labrie was tidying up the sordid apartment,
after Nicole had aired it, when the guest returned.</p>
<p>He had paused at Andrea's room to listen at her door to her
playing on the harpsichord to dispel the burden of the influence
the stranger had imposed upon her. In a while he
waved his hands as in throwing a magic spell, and so it was,
for Andrea slowly stopped playing, let her hands drop by
her sides, and turned rigidly and slowly toward the door,
like one who obeys an influence foreign to will.</p>
<p>Balsamo smiled in the darkness as though he could see
through the panels. This was all he wanted to do, for he
groped for the banister rail, and went up stairs to his room.</p>
<p>As he departed, Andrea turned away from the door and<SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35"></SPAN>
resumed playing, so that the mesmerist heard the air again
from where she had been made to leave off.</p>
<p>Entering the Red Room, he dismissed Labrie; but the latter
lingered, feeling in the depths of his pocket till at last he
managed to say:</p>
<p>"My lord, you made a mistake this evening, in giving me
gold for the piece of silver you intended."</p>
<p>Balsamo looked on the old servingman with admiration,
showing that he had not a high opinion of the honesty of
most men.</p>
<p>"'And honest,'" he muttered in the words of Hamlet, as
he took out a second gold coin to place it beside the other
in the old man's hand.</p>
<p>The latter's delight at this splendid generosity may be
imagined, for he had not seen so much gold in twenty years.
He was retiring, bowing to the floor, when the donor checked
him.</p>
<p>"What are the morning habits of the house?" he asked.</p>
<p>"My lord stays abed late, my lord; but Mademoiselle
Andrea is up betimes, about six."</p>
<p>"Who sleeps overhead?"</p>
<p>"I, my lord; but nobody beneath, as the vestibule is under
us."</p>
<p>"Oh, by the way, do not be alarmed if you see a light in
my <SPAN name="tn_png_37"></SPAN><!--TN: "couch" changed to "coach" on Page 35-->coach, as <SPAN name="tn_png_37a"></SPAN><!--TN: "on" changed to "an" on Page 35-->an old impotent servant inhabits it. Ask
Master Gilbert to let me see him in the morning."</p>
<p>"Is my lord going away so soon?"</p>
<p>"It depends," replied Balsamo, with a smile. "I ought to
be at Bar-le-Duc tomorrow evening."</p>
<p>Labrie sighed with resignation, and was about to set fire to
some old papers to warm the room, which was damp and
there was no wood, when Balsamo stayed him.</p>
<p>"No, let them be; I might want to read them, for I may
not sleep."</p>
<p>Balsamo went to the door to listen to the servant's departing
steps making the stairs creak till they sounded overhead;
Labrie was in his own room. Then he went to the
window. In the other wing was a lighted window, with half-drawn
curtains, facing him. Legay was leisurely taking off
her neckerchief, often peeping down into the yard.</p>
<p>"Striking resemblance," muttered the baron.</p>
<p>The light went out though the girl had not gone to rest.
The watcher stood up against the wall. The harpsichord still
sounded, with no other noise. He opened his door, went
down stairs with caution, and opened the door of Andrea's
sitting-room.</p>
<p>Suddenly she stopped in the melancholy strain, although she
had not heard the intruder. As she was trying to recall the
thrill which had mastered her, it came anew. She shivered all<SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36"></SPAN>
over. In the mirror she saw movement. The shadow in the
doorway could only be her father or a servant. Nothing
more natural.</p>
<p>But she saw with spiritual eyes that it was none of these.</p>
<p>"My lord," she faltered, "in heaven's name, what want
you?"</p>
<p>It was the stranger, in the black velvet riding coat, for he
had discarded his silken suit, in which a mesmerist cannot
well work his power.</p>
<p>She tried to rise, but could not; she tried to open her mouth
to scream, but with a pass of both hands Balsamo froze the
sound on her lips.</p>
<p>With no strength or will, Andrea let her head sink on her
shoulder.</p>
<p>At this juncture Balsamo believed he heard a noise at the
window. Quickly turning, he caught sight of a man's face
beyond. He frowned, and, strangely enough, the same impression
flitted across the medium's face.</p>
<p>"Sleep!" he commanded, lowering the hands he had held
above her head with a smooth gesture, and persevering in filling
her with the mesmeric fluid in crushing columns. "I
will you to sleep."</p>
<p>All yielded to this mighty will. Andrea leaned her elbow
on the musical-instrument case, her head on her hand, and
slept.</p>
<p>The mesmerist retired backward, drew the door to, and went
back to his room. As soon as the door closed, the face he had
seen reappeared at the window; it was Gilbert's.</p>
<p>Excluded from the parlor by his inferior position in
Taverney Castle, he had watched all the persons through the
evening whose rank allowed them to figure in it. During the
supper he had noticed Baron Balsamo gesticulate and smile, and
his peculiar attention bestowed on the lady of the house; the
master's unheard-of affability to him, and Labrie's respectful
eagerness.</p>
<p>Later on, when they rose from table, he hid in a clump of
lilacs and snowballs, for fear that Nicole, closing the blinds
or in going to her room, should catch him eavesdropping.</p>
<p>But Gilbert had other designs this evening than spying.
He waited, without clearly knowing for what. When he saw
the light in the maid's window, he crossed the yard on tiptoe
and crouched down in the gloom to peer in at the window at
Andrea playing the harpsichord.</p>
<p>This was the moment when the mesmerist entered the room.</p>
<p>At this sight, Gilbert started and his ardent gaze covered the
magician and his victim.</p>
<p>But he imagined that Balsamo complimented the lady on
her musical talent, to which she replied with her customary
coldness; but he had persisted with a smile so that she sus<SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37"></SPAN>pended
her practice and answered. He admired the grace
with which the visitor retired.</p>
<p>Of all the interview which he fancied he read aright, he
had understood nothing, for what really happened was in the
mind, in silence.</p>
<p>However keen an observer he was, he could not divine a
mystery, where everything had passed quite naturally.</p>
<p>Balsamo gone, Gilbert remained, not watching, but contemplating
Andrea, lovely in her thoughtful pose, till he perceived
with astonishment that she was slumbering. When convinced
of this, he grasped his head between his hands like one
who fears his brain will burst from the overflow of emotions.</p>
<p>"Oh, to kiss her hand!" he murmured, in a gush of fury.
"Oh, Gilbert, let us approach her—I so long to do it."</p>
<p>Hardly had he entered the room than he felt the importance
of his intrusion. The timid if not respectful son of a farmer
to dare to raise his eyes on that proud daughter of the peers.
If he should touch the hem of her dress she would blast him
with a glance.</p>
<p>The floor boards creaked under his wary tread, but she did
not move, though he was bathed in cold perspiration.</p>
<p>"She sleeps—oh, happiness, she sleeps!" he panted, drawing
with irresistible attraction within a yard of the statue, of
which he took the sleeve and kissed it.</p>
<p>Holding his breath, slowly he raised his eyes, seeking hers.
They were wide open, but still saw not. Intoxicated by the
delusion that she expected his visit and her silence was consent,
her quiet a favor, he lifted her hand to his lips and impressed
a long and feverish kiss.</p>
<p>She shuddered and repulsed him.</p>
<p>"I am lost!" he gasped, dropping the hand and beating the
floor with his forehead.</p>
<p>Andrea rose as though moved by a spring under her feet,
passed by Gilbert, crushed by shame and terror and with no
power to crave pardon, and proceeded to the door. With
high-held head and <SPAN name="tn_png_39"></SPAN><!--TN: "oustretched" changed to "outstretched" on Page 37-->outstretched neck, as if drawn by a secret
power toward an invisible goal, she opened the door and
walked out on the landing.</p>
<p>The youth rose partly and watched her take the stairs. He
crawled after her, pale, trembling and astonished.</p>
<p>"She is going to tell the baron and have me scourged out
of the house—no, she goes up to where the guest is lodged.
For she would have rung, or called, if she wanted Labrie."</p>
<p>He clenched his fists at the bare idea that Andrea was going
into the strange gentleman's room. All this seemed monstrous.
And yet that was her end.</p>
<p>That door was ajar. She pushed it open without knocking;
the lamplight streamed on her pure profile and whirled golden
reflections into her wildly open eyes.</p>
<SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38"></SPAN>
<p>In the center of the room Gilbert saw the baron standing,
with fixed gaze and wrinkled brow, and his hand extended
in gesture of command, ere the door swung to.</p>
<p>Gilbert's forces failed him; he wheeled round on the stairs,
clinging to the rail, but slid down, with his eyes fastened to
the last on the cursed panel, behind which was sealed up all
his vanished dream, present happiness and future hope.</p>
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