登陆注册
38720400000017

第17章

IN CONVALESCENCE

Of the week that followed my coming to Lavedan I find some difficulty in writing. It was for me a time very crowded with events - events that appeared to be moulding my character anew and ****** of me a person different, indeed, from that Marcel de Bardelys whom in Paris they called the Magnificent. Yet these events, although significant in their total, were of so vague and slight a nature in their detail, that when I come to write of them I find really little that I may set down.

Rodenard and his companions remained for two days at the chateau, and to me his sojourn there was a source of perpetual anxiety, for I knew not how far the fool might see fit to prolong it. It was well for me that this anxiety of mine was shared by Monsieur de Lavedan, who disliked at such a time the presence of men attached to one who was so notoriously of the King's party. He came at last to consult me as to what measures might be taken to remove them, and I - nothing loath to conspire with him to so desirable end -bade him suggest to Rodenard that perhaps evil had befallen Monsieur de Bardelys, and that, instead of wasting his time at Lavedan, he were better advised to be searching the province for his master.

This counsel the Vicomte adopted, and with such excellent results that that very day - within the hour, in fact - Ganymede, aroused to a sense of his proper duty, set out in quest of me, not a little disturbed in mind - for with all his shortcomings the rascal loved me very faithfully.

That was on the third day of my sojourn at Lavedan. On the morrow I rose, my foot being sufficiently recovered to permit it. I felt a little weak from loss of blood, but Anatole - who, for all his evil countenance, was a kindly and gentle servant was confident that a few days - a week at most - would see me completely restored.

Of leaving Lavedan I said nothing. But the Vicomte, who was one of the most generous and noble hearted men that it has ever been my good fortune to meet, forestalled any mention of my departure by urging that I should remain at the chateau until my recovery were completed, and, for that matter, as long thereafter as should suit my inclinations.

"At Lavedan you will be safe, my friend," he assured me; "for, as Ihave told you, we are under no suspicion. Let me urge you to remain until the King, shall have desisted from further persecuting us."And when I protested and spoke of trespassing, he waived the point with a brusqueness that amounted almost to anger.

"Believe; monsieur, that I am pleased and honoured at serving one who has so stoutly served the Cause and sacrificed so much to it."At that, being not altogether dead to shame, I winced, and told myself that my behaviour was unworthy, and that I was practising a detestable deception. Yet some indulgence I may justly claim in consideration of how far I was victim of circumstance. Did I tell him that I was Bardelys, I was convinced that I should never leave the chateau alive. Very noble-hearted was the Vicomte, and no man have I known more averse to bloodthirstiness, but he had told me much during the days that I had lain abed, and many lives would be jeopardized did I proclaim what I had learned from him. Hence Iargued that any disclosure of my identity must perforce drive him to extreme measures for the sake of the friends he had unwittingly betrayed.

On the day after Rodenard's departure I dined with the family, and met again Mademoiselle de Lavedan, whom I had not seen since the balcony adventure of, some nights ago. The Vicomtesse was also present, a lady of very austere and noble appearance - lean as a pike and with a most formidable nose - but, as I was soon to discover, with a mind inclining overmuch to scandal and the high-seasoned talk of the Courts in which her girlhood had been spent.

>From her lips I heard that day the old, scandalous story of Monseigneur de Richelieu's early passion for Anne of Austria. With much unction did she tell us how the Queen had lured His Eminence to dress himself in the motley of a jester that she might make a mock of him in the eyes of the courtiers she had concealed behind the arras of her chamber.

This anecdote she gave us with much wealth of discreditable detail and scant regard for either her daughter's presence or for the blushes that suffused the poor child's cheeks. In every way she was a pattern of the class of women amongst whom my youth had been spent, a class which had done so much towards shattering my faith and lowering my estimate of her ***. Lavedan had married her and brought her into Languedoc, and here she spent her years lamenting the scenes of her youth, and prone, it would seem, to make them matter for conversation whenever a newcomer chanced to present himself at the chateau.

Looking from her to her daughter, I thanked Heaven that Roxalanne was no reproduction of the mother. She had inherited as little of her character as of her appearance. Both in feature and in soul Mademoiselle de Lavedan was a copy of that noble, gallant gentleman, her father.

One other was present at that meal, of whom I shall have more to say hereafter. This was a young man of good presence, save, perhaps, a too obtrusive foppishness, whom Monsieur de Lavedan presented to me as a distant kinsman of theirs, one Chevalier de Saint-Eustache.

He was very tall - of fully my own height -and of an excellent shape, although extremely young. But his head if anything was too small for his body, and his good-natured mouth was of a weakness that was confirmed by the significance of his chin, whilst his eyes were too closely set to augur frankness.

He was a pleasant fellow, seemingly of that negative pleasantness that lies in inoffensiveness, but otherwise dull and of an untutored mind - rustic, as might be expected in one the greater part of whose life had been spent in his native province, and of a rusticity rendered all the more flagrant by the very efforts he exerted to dissemble it.

同类推荐
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!
  • 中国商业银行风险预警体系的构建

    中国商业银行风险预警体系的构建

    本书结合我国商业银行经营管理的现状,探讨商业银行风险预警体系的构建,以期完善我国商业银行的风险管理,建立一套集事前预警、事中控制和事后补救于一体的商业银行风险管理体系。
  • 杂着

    杂着

    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。
  • 情封远古

    情封远古

    穿越是偶然还是必然?神话时代的神仙都是仙风道骨一本正经的么?神话时代的凡人都是封建死板食古不化的么?
  • 我转生为狼不是给你当坐骑的

    我转生为狼不是给你当坐骑的

    孟婆汤作交杯酒,奈何桥上定来生。错投狼胎初相见,你竟想收我当坐骑???“还想不想出发了!?把你的鞭子收起来,总之就是不行!”“为什么呀?”“我堂堂闪电狼、落雪峰入魂使、狼族月神卫、妖族之光、曙光联盟盟主...”“我有了。”杨雪摸着微微隆起的肚皮打断了云秋的话。“是不是又吃撑了,我不会再上当的!”“这次是真的!!”片刻后...“不错!有进步,比上次稳多了,驾!”“那个字别说出来啊喂!我不要面子的吗?!”云秋哭诉道。时光回转,花果山水帘瀑布前。“云秋盟主,此行欲何?”孙悟空问道。“斩妖皇,震仙佛!”“若一去不回...”“便一去不...大圣您别咒我好吧,我还等着回来和雪儿成亲呢!”云秋一脸幽怨地回道。
  • 这一次,我不会再放开你的手

    这一次,我不会再放开你的手

    大二的风心琪遇见了转学生林冬,一次机缘巧合让他们互有好感,度过了大学最美好的时光。然而毕业后,因为种种原因不得不放开彼此的手,经过了更多的磨砺,这一次,我不会再放开你的手!
  • 我在家里养了只猫妖

    我在家里养了只猫妖

    少时,在家放牛,梦醒,身上多了一只可爱的猫咪,打着盹,呼噜呼噜,甚是可爱,随即带回家...没想到从此之后却走上了一条不平常的路。
  • 兜了一圈,我爱你

    兜了一圈,我爱你

    我拼了命的想靠近你拥抱你,你却像个刺猬,将我狠狠推开,一句话将所有的回忆打入深渊。你说你叫无望,没有期望没有梦想没有回忆,你说你不知活着的意义,你说你被所爱的人抛弃,你说你最大的梦想是得到一份爱情。你很天真很梦幻很真实很飘渺,是如此的矛盾却又不违和,如此的偏执却偏偏让人心疼。片段一一道尘封的大门缓缓被打开,她因一场莫名的事情失去了所有的记忆,这个世界对她来说是陌生的,身边的爱人对她来说是陌生的。“无望,你怎么了?”她身边的男人比她高出很多,眼里似乎带着歉意又包含着心疼,伸出的手想轻碰她的脸颊,却没有勇气的放下了。“我是谁?能信你吗?”片段二这是一家比较有名的心理诊所,坐在椅子上的男人抬头诧异的看着站在他面前手和脚不知道往哪放的无望。“和我说一下你发生了什么事吧,毕竟来到这里的人都很需要一个人来倾听。”男人见他久久不语,微微一笑故作轻松的看着站在眼前的无望。“我…我…我不知……不知……我……”无望艰难的想说出自己的情况,却不知为何突然结巴的不行,怎么也说不出完整的一句话。片段3“我爱你,真心的,你能离婚吗?”陪伴她的三个月里,她的绝望令人动容,明明谁都不记得了……唯独伤她最深的那个人她始终都记得,刻骨铭心。“不…我…不爱你,哪怕……你对我很好,好的让我忘了我有丈夫。”无望带着淡淡的伤感,对着他还是讲不出完整的一句话。片段4两个男人的对决:“你明明不爱她,为什么不离婚?”他深吸了一口气,对于不小心爱上的病人,那个叫无望的女孩,他只有心痛……“离婚?不可能的,我好不容易让她忘了一切,现在一心一意的对她好,怎么会和她离婚?哈哈,顾隐你是不是觉得自己很失败啊?我亲自将人送到你面前她都不会记得你,哪怕你们曾经相爱但那又怎样?我才是她名义上的丈夫,法律认可的,你不过是她的一个心理医生罢了!”无望的丈夫,擦拭着嘴上的血迹,冷冷注视着他。“你不是有另一个女人么?无望对你来说算什么?你对得起丈夫这两个字吗!”顾隐毫不留情狠狠的出拳再一次打了下去……“哼,她是我的妻子!我的战利品!只要我不死,你永远都别想离婚!就算我不爱她,那也轮不到你!”片段5当无望再一次睁开眼睛时,她突然紧紧抱着眼前的男人……“对不起……还是说一声对不起,我什么都没想起来。”她的手紧紧抱着他,手指微微在发抖,哭的波涛汹涌……“没关系……没关系……”顾隐只是仅仅的搂着她,想将她融到骨子里去……她想起来了……只是她不敢认
  • 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!
  • 捕捉儿童敏感期专家教你玩游戏

    捕捉儿童敏感期专家教你玩游戏

    《捕捉儿童敏感期:专家教你玩游戏(0~6岁)》在蒙台梭利九大敏感期的理论基础上,结合各种先进、科学的早教理论,根据每个敏感期孩子的不同行为表现,分别收录了100多个孩子敏感期的真实案例,并由资深早教专家进行深度解析,同时还针对每个敏感期孩子的不同需求,配合案例精心设计了100多个经典益智亲子游戏,并辅以精美的插图,帮助年轻父母把握关键,在了解孩子身心发展的基础上正确引导孩子,为孩子将来的成功打下良好的基础。这些游戏方案别出心裁,其道具容易得到,难易程度适合相应年龄段的孩子,父母还可以根据书中提供的相关知识观察、评测自己的孩子,进一步开发和发展孩子的各项能力。