登陆注册
37377400000486

第486章

"Rely upon me, my child, answered Adrienne, forced to dissemble her painful embarrassment; "you know I am interested in all that interests you.But tell me," added Mdlle.de Cardoville, in a voice of emotion, "before taking this desperate resolution, did you not write to me?"

"Yes, lady."

"Alas!" resumed Adrienne, sorrowfully; "and when you received no answer--

how cruel, how ungrateful you must have thought me!"

"Oh! never, lady, did I accuse you of such feelings; my poor sister will tell you so.You had my gratitude to the last."

"I believe you--for I knew your heart.But how then did you explain my silence?"

"I had justly offended you by my sudden departure, lady."

"Offended!--Alas! I never received your letter."

"And yet you know that I wrote to you, lady."

"Yes, my poor girl; I know, also, that you wrote to me at my porter's lodge.Unfortunately, he delivered your letter to one of my women, named Florine, telling her it came from you."

"Florine! the young woman that was so kind to me!"

"Florine deceived me shamefully; she was sold to my enemies, and acted as a spy on my actions."

"She!--Good Heavens!" cried Mother Bunch."Is it possible?"

"She herself," answered Adrienne, bitterly; "but, after all, we must pity as well as blame her.She was forced to obey by a terrible necessity, and her confession and repentance secured my pardon before her death."

"Then she is dead--so young! so fair!"

"In spite of her faults, I was greatly moved by her end.She confessed what she had done, with such heart-rending regrets.Amongst her avowals, she told me she had intercepted a letter, in which you asked for an interview that might save your sister's life."

"It is true, lady; such were the terms of my letter.What interest had they to keep it from you?"

"They feared to see you return to me, my good guardian angel.You loved me so tenderly, and my enemies dreaded your faithful affection, so wonderfully aided by the admirable instinct of your heart.Ah! I shall never forget how well-deserved was the horror with which you were inspired by a wretch whom I defended against your suspicions."

"M.Rodin?" said Mother Bunch, with a shudder.

"Yes," replied Adrienne; "but we will not talk of these people now.

Their odious remembrance would spoil the joy I feel in seeing you restored to life--for your voice is less feeble, your cheeks are beginning to regain a little color.Thank God! I am so happy to have found you once more;--if you knew all that I hope, all that I expect from our reunion--for we will not part again--promise me that, in the name of our friendship."

"I--your friend!" said Mother Bunch, timidly casting down her eyes.

"A few days before your departure from my house, did I not call you my friend, my sister? What is there changed? Nothing, nothing," added Mdlle.de Cardoville, with deep emotion."One might say, on the contrary, that a fatal resemblance in our positions renders your friendship even dearer to me.And I shall have it, shall I not.Oh, do not refuse it me--I am so much in want of a friend!"

"You, lady? you in want of the friendship of a poor creature like me?"

"Yes," answered Adrienne, as she gazed on the other with an expression of intense grief; "nay, more, you are perhaps the only person, to whom I could venture to confide my bitter sorrows." So saying, Mdlle.de Cardoville colored deeply.

"And how do I deserve such marks of confidence?" asked Mother Bunch, more and more surprised.

"You deserve it by the delicacy of your heart, by the steadiness of your character," answered Adrienne, with some hesitation; "then--you are a woman--and I am certain you will understand what I suffer, and pity me."

"Pity you, lady?" said the other, whose astonishment continued to increase."You, a great lady, and so much envied--I, so humble and despised, pity you?"

"Tell me, my poor friend," resumed Adrienne, after some moments of silence, "are not the worst griefs those which we dare not avow to any one, for fear of raillery and contempt? How can we venture to ask interest or pity, for sufferings that we hardly dare avow to ourselves, because they make us blush?"

The sewing-girl could hardly believe what she heard.Had her benefactress felt, like her, the effects of an unfortunate passion, she could not have held any other language.But the sempstress could not admit such a supposition; so, attributing to some other cause the sorrows of Adrienne, she answered mournfully, whilst she thought of her own fatal love for Agricola, "Oh! yes, lady.A secret grief, of which we are ashamed, must be frightful--very frightful!"

"But then what happiness to meet, not only a heart noble enough to inspire complete confidence, but one which has itself been tried by a thousand sorrows, and is capable of affording you pity, support and counsel!--Tell me, my dear child," added Mdlle.de Cardoville, as she looked attentively at Mother Bunch, "if you were weighed down by one of those sorrows, at which one blushes, would you not be happy, very happy, to find a kindred soul, to whom you might entrust your griefs, and half relieve them by entire and merited confidence?"

For the first time in her life, Mother Bunch regarded Mdlle.de Cardoville with a feeling of suspicion and sadness.

The last words of the young lady seemed to her full of meaning "Doubtless, she knows my secret," said Mother Bunch to herself;

"doubtless, my journal has fallen into her hands.--She knows my love for Agricola, or at least suspects it.What she has been saying to me is intended to provoke my confidence, and to assure herself if she has been rightly informed."

These thoughts excited in the workgirl's mind no bitter or ungrateful feeling towards her benefactress; but the heart of the unfortunate girl was so delicately susceptible on the subject of her fatal passion, that, in spite of her deep and tender affection for Mdlle.de Cardoville, she suffered cruelly at the thought of Adrienne's being mistress of her secret.

同类推荐
  • 评金刚錍

    评金刚錍

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 蟹谱

    蟹谱

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 辟邪集

    辟邪集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Locrine-Mucedorus

    Locrine-Mucedorus

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 邵氏闻见录

    邵氏闻见录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 我变成了异星狼人

    我变成了异星狼人

    2xx5年,地球沦陷于外星文明之手,逃过一劫的地球战士-王鸣,阴差阳错的重生在一个叫MJ的星球上,变成了一个被称为诅咒的半兽体(狼人)。偶然发现自己体内蕴藏着庞大力量,暗暗发誓,定要将本属于人族的地球夺回。从那一刻开始,一个惊天动地的崛起计划由此而生。“仁慈救不回悲惨的地球,也不能令敌人自行放下武器!”“他们打败了我们,他们夺走了我的家园,我会记着这所有的一切,人族所遭受的苦难,我一定会加倍奉还!”
  • 走向深空

    走向深空

    他诞生于地球,是地球上的唯一的“新人类”.他拥有最前沿科技设计的完美基因,他有着美好的未来、但未来……
  • 灰铁

    灰铁

    我,一个克隆人,背叛克隆人帝国的叛逃者,从离开帝国的那一刻就踏上了茫茫没有终点的逃亡之路。美剧的写法,伏笔重重,关系错综复杂,剧情跳跃,隐喻较多,情节跌宕起伏。为了更好的效果,目前小说在重写阶段,新写的部分没有章节名。
  • 靠动漫闯异界

    靠动漫闯异界

    “你的攻击很强,但打不到我,就形同虚设了,神威!”“论道?呵呵,我道家不比你厉害?”“人海战术?跟我比?多重影分身之术!”“想用小怪消耗我?不可能的!看我的霸王色霸气!”“还剩一个月就要大黑暗世界吗?时间不够?你觉得可能吗?burstlink!”“以乐证道?天下哀鸣?潮鸣起,万物泣!”仙界至尊林阳,二十一世纪动漫半宅林阳,十五岁聚气三重境的废物林阳,他们终归于一身。林阳,一体三魂,身怀动漫系统,看他登临武道巅峰!
  • 柯南之黑中有白白中有黑

    柯南之黑中有白白中有黑

    你知道吗?任何事物的获取你都要付出代价。而这个代价在很多时候是不平等的。因为你是索取者,而它是拥有者。------黑不是黑,白不是白。这个世界的黑白并不分明。她从白走向黑,再从黑走向白,最后变成了灰。每个人的心中都有黑白。------琴她,HE。题材小众,望多多支持。
  • 富户三千

    富户三千

    一场穿越,认识了另一种人生,前世孤身一人却渴望温暖,后世家族盛大却希望平静。不过想平静的活着,却不料招惹了别人的人生,破坏了别人的喜乐,成了别人眼中的一抹刺,想要平静而活,却无奈身不由己,命不随心。金钱,权力,爱情,阴谋,交织在一起,谁是谁手中的棋子,谁是谁人生的俘虏,浮沉于世,但求心安罢了。
  • 超神级穿越系统

    超神级穿越系统

    从天上掉下来一个系统,看叶行如何逍遥大千位面,快意恩仇。
  • 锦香亭

    锦香亭

    《锦香亭》以安史之乱作为小说背景,写出战乱给人民带来的无穷苦难,贫苦百姓流离失所。客观上已对耽于酒色的皇帝进行了批判。《锦香亭》以才子佳人加历史演义式的写法新颖、别致。在明未清初小说中占有一席之地。
  • 黑狱魔卡师

    黑狱魔卡师

    黑暗的兽人牢狱中,一名不甘屈服的人族少年,发明魔卡求得生存,最后改变自己命运的故事。