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an historical mystery-第45部分

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Jena。

Eight days later; they were driving through the faubourg of Troyes;
where they learned that an order of the chief justice; transmitted
through the /procureur imperial/ of Troyes; commanded the release of
the four gentlemen on bail during the Emperor's pleasure。 But Michu's
sentence was confirmed; and the warrant for his execution had been
forwarded from the ministry of police。 These orders had reached Troyes
that very morning。 Laurence went at once to the prison; though it was
two in the morning; and obtained permission to stay with Michu; who
was about to undergo the melancholy ceremony called 〃the toilet。〃 The
good abbe; who had asked permission to accompany him to the scaffold;
had just given absolution to the man; whose only distress in dying was
his uncertainty as to the fate of his young masters。 When Laurence
entered his cell he uttered a cry of joy。

〃I can die now;〃 he said。

〃They are pardoned;〃 she said; 〃I do not know on what conditions; but
they are pardoned。 I did all I could for you; dear friendagainst the
advice of others。 I thought I had saved you; but the Emperor deceived
me with his graciousness。〃

〃It was written above;〃 said Michu; 〃that the watch…dog should be
killed on the spot where his old masters died。〃

The last hour passed rapidly。 Michu; at the moment of parting; asked
to kiss her hand; but Laurence held her cheek to the lips of the noble
victim that he might sacredly kiss it。 Michu refused to mount the
cart。

〃Innocent men should go afoot;〃 he said。

He would not let the abbe give him his arm; resolutely and with
dignity he walked alone to the scaffold。 As he laid his head on the
plank he said to the executioner; after asking him to turn down the
collar of his coat; 〃My clothes belong to you; try not to spot them。〃

*****

The four gentlemen had hardly time to even see Mademoiselle de Cinq…
Cygne。 An orderly of the general commanding the division to which they
were assigned; brought them their commissions as sub…lieutenants in
the same regiment of cavalry; with orders to proceed at once to
Bayonne; the base of supplies for its particular army…corps。 After a
scene of heart…rending farewells; for they all foreboded what the
future should bring forth; Mademoiselle de Cinq…Cygne returned to her
desolate home。

The two brothers were killed together under the eyes of the Emperor at
Sommo…Sierra; the one defending the other; both being already in
command of their troop。 The last words of each were; 〃Laurence; /cy
meurs/!〃

The elder d'Hauteserre died a colonel at the attack on the redoubt at
Moscow; where his brother took his place。

Adrien d'Hauteserre; appointed brigadier…general at the battle of
Dresden; was dangerously wounded there and was sent to Cinq…Cygne for
proper nursing。 While endeavoring to save this relic of the four
gentlemen who for a few brief months had been so happy around her;
Laurence; then thirty…two years of age; married him。 She offered him a
withered heart; but he accepted it; those who truly love doubt nothing
or doubt all。

The Restoration found Laurence without enthusiasm。 The Bourbons
returned too late for her。 Nevertheless; she had no cause for
complaint。 Her husband; made peer of France with the title of Marquis
de Cinq…Cygne; became lieutenant…general in 1816; and was rewarded
with the blue ribbon for the eminent services which he then performed。

Michu's son; of whom Laurence took care as though he were her own
child; was admitted to the bar in 1817。 After practising two years he
was made assistant…judge at the court of Alencon; and from there he
became /procureur…du…roi/ at Arcis in 1827。 Laurence; who had also
taken charge of Michu's property; made over to the young man on the
day of his majority an investment in the public Funds which yielded
him an income of twelve thousand francs a year。 Later; she arranged a
marriage for him with Mademoiselle Girel; an heiress at Troyes。

The Marquis de Cinq…Cygne died in 1829; in the arms of his wife;
surrounded by his father and mother; and his children who adored him。
At the time of his death no one had ever fathomed the mystery of the
senator's abduction。 Louis XVIII。 did not neglect to repair; as far as
possible; the wrongs done by that affair; but he was silent as to the
causes of the disaster。 From that time forth the Marquise de Cinq…
Cygne believed him to have been an accomplice in the catastrophe。



CHAPTER XX

THE MYSTERY SOLVED

The late Marquis de Cinq…Cygne had used his savings; as well as those
of his father and mother; in the purchase of a fine house in the rue
de Faubourg…du…Roule; entailing it on heirs male for the support of
the title。 The sordid economy of the marquis and his parents; which
had often troubled Laurence; was then explained。 After this purchase
the marquise; who lived at Cinq…Cygne and economized on her own
account for her children; spent her winters in Paris;all the more
willingly because her daughter Berthe and her son Paul were now of an
age when their education required the resources of Paris。

Madame de Cinq…Cygne went but little into society。 Her husband could
not be ignorant of the regrets which lay in her tender heart; but he
showed her always the most exquisite delicacy; and died having loved
no other woman。 This noble soul; not fully understood for a period of
time but to which the generous daughter of the Cinq…Cygnes returned in
his last years as true a love as that he gave to her; was completely
happy in his married life。 Laurence lived for the joys of home。 No
woman has ever been more cherished by her friends or more respected。
To be received in her house is an honor。 Gentle; indulgent;
intellectual; above all things simple and natural; she pleases choice
souls and draws them to her in spite of her saddened aspect; each
longs to protect this woman; inwardly so strong; and that sentiment of
secret protection counts for much in the wondrous charm of her
friendship。 Her life; so painful during her youth; is beautiful and
serene towards evening。 Her sufferings are known; and no one asks who
was the original of that portrait by Lefebvre which is the chief and
sacred ornament of her salon。 Her face has the maturity of fruits that
have ripened slowly; a hallowed pride dignifies that long…tried brow。

At the period when the marquise came to Paris to open the new house;
her fortune; increased by the law of indemnities; gave her some two
hundred thousand francs a year; not counting her husband's salary;
besides this; Laurence had inherited the money guarded by Michu for
his young masters。 From that time forth she made a practice of
spending half her income and of laying by the rest for her daughter
Berthe。

Berthe is the living image of her mother; but without her warrior
nerve; she is her mother in delicacy; in intellect;〃more a woman;〃
Laurence says; sadly。 The marquise was not willing to marry her
daughter until she was twenty years of age。 Her savings; judiciously
invested in the Funds by old Monsieur d'Hauteserre at the moment when
consols fell in 1830; gave Berthe a dowry of eighty thousand francs a
year in 1833; when she was twenty。

About that time the Princesse de Cadignan; who was seeking to marry
her son; the Duc de Maufrigneuse; brought him into intimate relations
with Madame de Cinq…Cygne。 Georges de Maufrigneuse dined with the
marquise three times a week; accompanied the mother and daughter to
the Opera; and curvetted in the Bois around their carriage when they
drove out。 It was evident to all the world of the Faubourg Saint…
Germain that Georges loved Berthe。 But no one could discover to a
certainty whether Madame de Cinq…Cygne was desirous of making her
daughter a duchess; to become a princess later; or whether it was only
the princess who coveted for her son the splendid dowry。 Did the
celebrated Diane court the noble provincial house? and was the
daughter of the Cinq…Cygnes frightened by the celebrity of Madame de
Cadignan; her tastes and her ruinous extravagance? In her strong
desire not to injure her son's prospects the princess grew devout;
shut the door on her former life; and spent the summer season at
Geneva in a villa on the lake。

One evening there were present in the salon of the Princesse de
Cadignan; the Marquise d'Espard; and de Marsay; then president of the
Council (on this occasion the princess saw her former lover for the
last time; for he died the following year); Eugene de Rastignac;
under…secretary of State attached to de Marsay's ministry; two
ambassadors; two celebrated orators from the Chamber of Peers; the old
dukes of Lenoncourt and de Navarreins; the Comte de Vandenesse and his
young wife; and d'Arthez;who formed a rather singular circle; the
composition of which can be thus explained。 The princess was anxious
to obtain from the prime minister of the crown a permit for the return
of the Prince de Cadignan。 De Marsay; who did not choose to take upon
himself the responsibility of granting it came to tell the princess
the matter had been entrusted to safe hands; and that a certain
political manager had promised to bring her the result in the course
of that evening。

Madame and Mademoiselle de 

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