A Love Episode eBook

Émile Gaboriau
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 433 pages of information about A Love Episode.

A Love Episode eBook

Émile Gaboriau
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 433 pages of information about A Love Episode.

“Oh, the flowers! the flowers!” murmured Helene, powerless to say another word.

She pressed her handkerchief to her lips, and her eyes filled with tears.  Jeanne must be warm, she thought, and with this idea a wave of emotion rose in her bosom; she felt very grateful to those who had enveloped her child in flowers.  She wished to go forward, and Monsieur Rambaud made no effort to hold her back.  How sweet was the scene beneath the cloud of drapery!  Perfumes were wafted upwards; the air was warm and still.  Helene stooped down and chose one rose only, that she might place it in her bosom.  But suddenly she commenced to tremble, and Monsieur Rambaud became uneasy.

“Don’t stay here,” he said, as he drew her away.  “You promised not to make yourself unwell.”

He was attempting to lead her into the pavilion when the door of the drawing-room was thrown open.  Pauline was the first to appear.  She had undertaken the duty of arranging the funeral procession.  One by one, the little girls stepped into the garden.  Their coming seemed like some sudden outburst of bloom, a miraculous flowering of May.  In the open air the white skirts expanded, streaked moire-like by the sunshine with shades of the utmost delicacy.  An apple-tree above was raining down its blossoms; gossamer-threads were floating to and fro; the dresses were instinct with all the purity of spring.  And their number still increased; they already surrounded the lawn; they yet lightly descended the steps, sailing on like downy balls suddenly expanding beneath the open sky.

The garden was now a snowy mass, and as Helene gazed on the crowd of little girls, a memory awoke within her.  She remembered another joyous season, with its ball and the gay twinkling of tiny feet.  She once more saw Marguerite in her milk-girl costume, with her can hanging from her waist; and Sophie, dressed as a waiting-maid, and revolving on the arm of her sister Blanche, whose trappings as Folly gave out a merry tinkle of bells.  She thought, too, of the five Levasseur girls, and of the Red Riding-Hoods, whose number had seemed endless, with their ever-recurring cloaks of poppy-colored satin edged with black velvet; while little Mademoiselle Guiraud, with her Alsatian butterfly bow in her hair, danced as if demented opposite a Harlequin twice as tall as herself.  To-day they were all arrayed in white.  Jeanne, too, was in white, her head laid amongst white flowers on the white satin pillow.  The delicate-faced Japanese maiden, with hair transfixed by long pins, and purple tunic embroidered with birds, was leaving them for ever in a gown of snowy white.

“How tall they have all grown!” exclaimed Helene, as she burst into tears.

They were all there but her daughter; she alone was missing.  Monsieur Rambaud led her to the pavilion; but she remained on the threshold, anxious to see the funeral procession start.  Several of the ladies bowed to her quietly.  The children looked at her, with some astonishment in their blue eyes.  Meanwhile Pauline was hovering round, giving orders.  She lowered her voice for the occasion, but at times forgot herself.

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Project Gutenberg
A Love Episode from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.