Paul and His Dog Volume I Part 66
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"Madame," he said, turning amorously toward Thelenie, "I believe that I must begin by apologizing for my share in that adventure--in the coupe on the Champs-Elysees. I a.s.sure you that I was far from suspecting--Freluchon and Edmond Didier had a.s.sured me----"
"Enough, Monsieur Chamoureau; I beg you not to refer to that affair again. I am convinced that you were not to blame, but those two gentlemen whom you have just named, they acted like vile blackguards, like true bar-room loafers; it doesn't surprise me on their part, and in a moment I will tell you my intentions with regard to them. Let us come now to your own affairs. Is it true that you have inherited money, monsieur?"
"Perfectly true, madame; twenty thousand francs a year."
"Why, that is a very pretty little fortune! Do you know, monsieur, that this is like a dream, like a tale from the _Thousand and One Nights_, or the conclusion of a comedy! A legacy which you did not expect, which fell upon you suddenly, from the clouds!"
"Good fortune almost always comes like that; when you are looking for it, it keeps you waiting!"
"True; indeed, there are some people who wait for it all their lives."
"Here is the wallet which contains my fortune; be good enough to examine it, madame, to make sure that I have not deceived you."
"Oh! I believe you, monsieur."
Nevertheless, although she said: "I believe you," the fair Thelenie closely scrutinized the wallet, which Chamoureau had placed in her lap.
She examined the notes of the Treasury and of the Caisse d'Escompte, the drafts and the bank-notes; then she returned the wallet to Chamoureau, saying:
"Yes, you are rich; there are more than four hundred thousand francs there. What do you propose to do with this fortune?"
"Did I not write you that I offered it to you, with my hand?"
"Yes, you did write me that; so the offer is serious, is it?"
"Is it serious! as serious as is my love for you, which has become a pa.s.sion that I cannot control."
"Do you know that you are a very dangerous man? that it's hard to resist you?"
Chamoureau's face became radiant; his eyes dilated like a cat's; his nostrils swelled; he seized a hand, which was not withdrawn, and kissed it again and again, puffing like a man who has ascended seven flights of stairs without stopping.
When Thelenie considered that her visitor had kissed her hand sufficiently, she withdrew it, saying in her sweetest voice--for she had inflections for all occasions:
"Be good, and let us talk seriously.--I am going to tell you what conditions I should impose if I consented to become your wife."
"Oh! I agree to them all beforehand."
"Let us not go so fast; I wish you to reflect before accepting; marriage is a chain which cannot be broken, in France; so one should not submit to it heedlessly.--Listen: I believe you to be a sensible man, of orderly habits; but as you may become a gambler, a spendthrift, a rake----"
"Oh! madame!"
"A man who is none of those things, may become one or the other! In a word, I wish to have the sole right to keep the key to the cash-box, to handle our fortune. You know that I myself have ten thousand francs a year."
"Yes, charming creature; but if you had nothing----"
"Let me speak. I desire that, when you marry me, you will certify that I have brought you property to the amount of four hundred thousand francs----"
"Certainly; twice that, if you choose."
"You will leave to me the management of our fortune. It will not diminish, never fear."
"I trust implicitly in you."
"I will give you two hundred francs a month for your clothes and your private expenses; I should say that that was enough, eh?"
"It is more than I need! I shan't spend it."
"You will not have to worry about the housekeeping; that will be my business and mine alone."
"That will be all the better."
"Do you agree to all these conditions?"
"With the greatest pleasure."
"It is well. But there is something else: I do not propose that the man whose wife I am, whose name I bear, shall continue to entertain the slightest relations with those persons who have insulted me, and whom I justly regard as my enemies. You must understand me? you must break off all relations with Messieurs Edmond Didier and Freluchon."
"That is understood. Indeed, I shall regret them very little; I will break with them forever!"
"Unless, however, as the result of events which cannot be foreseen, I myself authorize you to see them again."
"Of course, if you authorize me, I must obey you."
"Nor do I want you to speak to a certain Monsieur Beauregard, whom you have met here, I believe?"
"Ah, yes! a gentleman with a bilious complexion!"
"He is a detestable fellow; he paid court to me long ago, and as I refused to listen to him, he spreads all sorts of slanders and falsehoods about me!"
"I guessed as much, _belle dame_; I said to myself: 'This man abuses Madame de Sainte-Suzanne too much not to have been rigorously treated by her.'--I won't talk with him any more, and if he should try to talk to me, I'll turn my back on him at once."
"Very good; you are submissive. Look you, I believe you will be an excellent husband."
"With you, who would not be? no man could fail to be!"
"By the way, there is one thing more; it is a weakness, a puerile fancy, but I am set upon it nevertheless."
"Speak; I am here to obey."
"I don't like your name--Chamoureau; no, I don't like it at all!"
"The devil! that's rather embarra.s.sing; I can't unbaptize myself."
"No, but listen: you were born somewhere."
"There's not the slightest doubt of that."
"Where were you born?"
"At Belleville."
Paul and His Dog Volume I Part 66
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Paul and His Dog Volume I Part 66 summary
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