The Seven Cardinal Sins: Envy and Indolence Part 18
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"No, Frederick, no," replied the poor mother, shuddering.
"I am determined to make myself understood, then," said Frederick, with a frightful smile. "Knowing that M. le marquis would pa.s.s here about nightfall on his way home, I loaded my gun and came and concealed myself behind this tree to kill M. le marquis as he pa.s.sed. Do you understand me now, mother?"
On hearing this terrible confession, Madame Bastien's brain reeled for a moment; then she showed herself to be truly heroic.
Placing one of her hands on her son's shoulder, she laid the other on his forehead, saying in a calm, perfectly calm, voice, and as if talking to herself:
"How hot his poor head is, and he is still delirious with fever! My G.o.d, oh, my G.o.d, how can I induce him to follow me?"
Frederick, amazed by his mother's words and her apparent tranquillity after the terrible confession he had just made, exclaimed:
"I am perfectly sane, I tell you, mother. It is you as much as myself that I wish to avenge, and my hatred, you see--"
"Yes, yes, my child, I know," interrupted Madame Bastien, too much terrified to notice Frederick's last words.
Then, kissing him on the forehead, she said, soothingly:
"Yes, yes, of course you have your senses, so come home with me; for it is getting late and we have been out in these woods a long time."
"The place suits me well enough and I shall come back again," answered Frederick, sullenly.
"Of course we will come back again, my child, but in order to do that we shall first have to go away."
"Don't exasperate me too much, mother."
"Hush, hush, I implore you," whispered Marie, placing her hand upon her son's lips and listening breathlessly. "Don't you hear footsteps? My G.o.d, who is coming?"
Frederick caught up his gun.
"Ah, I know," murmured his mother, recovering from her alarm, after a moment's reflection, "it is Jean Francois. He was to search for you in one side of the grove while I searched in the other."
"Is that you, Jean Francois?" she called out, cautiously.
"Yes, Madame Bastien," replied the worthy farmer, who was not yet visible but who could be distinctly heard forcing his way through the branches. "I did not find M. Frederick."
"My son is here, Jean Francois."
"I am glad of it, Madame Bastien, for I just heard voices over by the lake and think some of the gamekeepers must be making their rounds,"
said the worthy farmer, stepping into the clearing.
Frederick, in spite of the violence of his animosity, dared not repeat the threats he had just uttered before his mother, so, taking his gun under his arm, he silently and gloomily prepared to follow Madame Bastien.
On reaching the farmer's cottage that worthy man insisted upon harnessing his horse to his cart and taking Marie and her son home, and she accepted his offer, being too much overcome with fatigue and emotion to be capable of walking such a distance.
They had reached home about nine o'clock in the evening and Frederick had scarcely entered the house before he tottered and fell unconscious upon the floor. This swoon was followed by a severe nervous spasm which terrified his mother beyond expression, but with old Marguerite's a.s.sistance she did everything she could for her son, who was carried into his own room and put to bed.
During this nervous spasm, though his eyes were closed, Frederick wept bitterly, and when he recovered consciousness and saw his mother leaning over him he held out his arms and pressed her tenderly to his breast.
This crisis over, he seemed much more calm, and, remarking that he chiefly needed rest and quiet now, he turned his face toward the wall and did not utter another word.
With rare presence of mind, Marie had ordered all the outside shutters of her son's room closed before he was taken into it. There was no way of reaching the room except through hers, where she intended to watch all night, with the communicating door slightly ajar.
She was not one of those persons who are paralysed by misfortune.
Terrible as the discovery she had just made was, as soon as she was alone she faced it resolutely, after vainly endeavouring to persuade herself that her son had not been sane when he premeditated such an execrable crime.
"I can no longer doubt that Frederick hates the young marquis with a mortal hatred," she said to herself, "and this long suppressed animosity is undoubtedly the cause of the great change which has taken place in him during the last few months. This hatred has attained such an intensity that my son, after having attempted to kill M. de Pont Brillant, cannot be induced to abandon that horrible idea even now.
These are unquestionably the facts of the case. Now to what mysterious circ.u.mstance am I to impute the origin and the development of such a deadly animosity against a youth of his own age? How is it that my son, who has been so carefully reared, and who has heretofore made me the proudest and happiest of mothers, can have conceived such a horrible idea? All this is of secondary importance, so I will postpone the solution of these questions which puzzle my reason and make me doubt myself until some later day. What I must do now and without delay is to save my son from this terrible temptation, and thus prevent him from committing a murder."
And after having satisfied herself that her son was sleeping quietly, she seated herself at a table and wrote the following letter to her husband:
"TO M. BASTIEN:--I wrote you only a few days ago in relation to Frederick's poor health and to the departure of the tutor you had authorised me to employ.
"My son's condition causes me great uneasiness, and I realise the urgent necessity of taking some decided action in the matter.
"I consulted our friend, Doctor Dufour, again yesterday. He feels certain that Frederick's age and rapid growth is the cause of his nervous and morbid condition, and advises me to divert his mind from himself as much as possible, or, better still, travel with him.
"This I am anxious to do, as in the seclusion in which we live it is almost impossible for me to give Frederick any diversion.
"It is hardly probable that your business will allow you to accompany us to Hyeres, where I wish to take my son, but Marguerite will accompany us, and we may be absent five or six months, or a much shorter time, as that will depend upon the improvement in Frederick's health.
"For reasons which it would take too long to enumerate here, I have fixed upon next Monday as the date of my departure. I would have started to-morrow morning if I had had the necessary amount of money, but the small sum you sent me last month has been used for household expenses, and you know I have no other money.
"I send this letter to Blois by a messenger, so you will receive it day after to-morrow, and I implore you to answer by return mail, enclosing a draft on your banker in Blois. I have no idea what amount you will consider adequate. You know the simplicity of my habits. Calculate the amount that will be needed to transport us to Hyeres by diligence, add to that the trifling expenses that cannot be exactly foreseen, and sufficient money to live upon for a short time. We will establish ourselves in the most economical manner, and I will afterward write you exactly how much it will cost us a month.
"Stress of business often prevents you from replying to my letters promptly or even at all, but you must realise the importance of this letter too much to permit any delay in this instance.
"I do not wish to alarm you, but I feel it my duty to tell you that Frederick shows symptoms of so grave a nature that this journey may, and I hope will, be the salvation of my son.
"I think I must have given you during the last seventeen years sufficient proofs of my strength of character and devoted affection for Frederick for you to feel satisfied that, sudden as this resolution on my part may appear to you, you will do everything in your power to aid me in carrying out a resolution dictated by the most urgent and imperative necessity.
"I shall leave old Andre here. He will take charge of the house, and perform any service you may require during your visits. He is a trusty man to whom I can safely confide the charge of everything in my absence.
"Good-bye. I end my letter rather abruptly so it can be mailed this evening.
"I hope to receive a reply on Monday, in which case I shall take the diligence that same evening for Paris, where we shall remain only twenty-four hours, and then leave for Lyons on our way southward.
"Once more adieu.
"MARIE BASTIEN."
Her letter concluded, Madame Bastien ordered the horse harnessed so the letter could be taken to Blois at once.
After satisfying herself several times in regard to the condition of her son, who seemed to be resting more quietly, Madame Bastien sat down and began to reflect upon the determination to travel that she had just announced to her husband, and found it more and more opportune, though she asked herself anxiously how she should manage to prevent Frederick from getting out of her sight for a moment until the time appointed for their departure. The little clock on the mantel had just struck twelve, and the young mother was still absorbed in the same sorrowful reflections, when she fancied she heard the quick ring of a horse's hoofs in the distance, and the sound came nearer and nearer, until the animal paused at the door of the farmhouse.
A few minutes afterward an unwonted bustle pervaded the dwelling and some one rapped at the door of Madame Bastien's chamber.
"Who is there?" she asked.
"I, Marguerite, madame."
The Seven Cardinal Sins: Envy and Indolence Part 18
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The Seven Cardinal Sins: Envy and Indolence Part 18 summary
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