My Lady Ludlow eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 293 pages of information about My Lady Ludlow.

My Lady Ludlow eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 293 pages of information about My Lady Ludlow.
Mam’selle Cannes.  And yet—­and yet—­Babette saw that in his eye and look which made her more and more reluctant to confide in him.  By-and-by he tried threats.  She should leave the conciergerie, and find employment where she liked.  Still silence.  Then he grew angry, and swore that he would inform against her at the bureau of the Directory, for harbouring an aristocrat; an aristocrat he knew Mademoiselle was, whatever her real name might be.  His aunt should have a domiciliary visit, and see how she liked that.  The officers of the Government were the people for finding out secrets.  In vain she reminded him that, by so doing, he would expose to imminent danger the lady whom he had professed to love.  He told her, with a sullen relapse into silence after his vehement outpouring of passion, never to trouble herself about that.  At last he wearied out the old woman, and, frightened alike of herself and of him, she told him all,—­that Mam’selle Cannes was Mademoiselle Virginie de Crequy, daughter of the Count of that name.  Who was the Count?  Younger brother of the Marquis.  Where was the Marquis?  Dead long ago, leaving a widow and child.  A son? (eagerly).  Yes, a son.  Where was he?  Parbleu! how should she know?—­for her courage returned a little as the talk went away from the only person of the De Crequy family that she cared about.  But, by dint of some small glasses out of a bottle of Antoine Meyer’s, she told him more about the De Crequys than she liked afterwards to remember.  For the exhilaration of the brandy lasted but a very short time, and she came home, as I have said, depressed, with a presentiment of coming evil.  She would not answer Pierre, but cuffed him about in a manner to which the spoilt boy was quite unaccustomed.  His cousin’s short, angry words, and sudden withdrawal of confidence,—­his mother’s unwonted crossness and fault-finding, all made Virginie’s kind, gentle treatment, more than ever charming to the lad.  He half resolved to tell her how he had been acting as a spy upon her actions, and at whose desire he had done it.  But he was afraid of Morin, and of the vengeance which he was sure would fall upon him for any breach of confidence.  Towards half-past eight that evening—­Pierre, watching, saw Virginie arrange several little things—­she was in the inner room, but he sat where he could see her through the glazed partition.  His mother sat—­apparently sleeping—­in the great easy-chair; Virginie moved about softly, for fear of disturbing her.  She made up one or two little parcels of the few things she could call her own:  one packet she concealed about herself—­the others she directed, and left on the shelf.  ‘She is going,’ thought Pierre, and (as he said in giving me the account) his heart gave a spring, to think that he should never see her again.  If either his mother or his cousin had been more kind to him, he might have endeavoured to intercept her; but as it was, he held his breath, and when she came
Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
My Lady Ludlow from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.