One day Marguerite was in her room. I entered. She was writing. "To whom

are you writing?" I asked. "To Prudence. Do you want to see what I am

writing?"

I had a horror of anything that might look like suspicion, and I

answered that I had no desire to know what she was writing; and yet

I was certain that letter would have explained to me the cause of her

sadness.

Next day the weather was splendid.' Marguerite proposed to me to

take the boat and go as far as the island of Croissy. She seemed very

cheerful; when we got back it was five o'clock.

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"Mme. Duvernoy has been here," said Nanine, as she saw us enter. "She

has gone again?" asked Marguerite.

"Yes, madame, in the carriage; she said it was arranged."

"Quite right," said Marguerite sharply. "Serve the dinner."

Two days afterward there came a letter from Prudence, and for a

fortnight Marguerite seemed to have got rid of her mysterious gloom,

for which she constantly asked my forgiveness, now that it no longer

existed. Still, the carriage did not return.

"How is it that Prudence does not send you back your carriage?" I asked

one day.

"One of the horses is ill, and there are some repairs to be done. It is

better to have that done while we are here, and don't need a carriage,

than to wait till we get back to Paris."

Prudence came two days afterward, and confirmed what Marguerite had

said. The two women went for a walk in the garden, and when I joined

them they changed the conversation. That night, as she was going,

Prudence complained of the cold and asked Marguerite to lend her a

shawl.

So a month passed, and all the time Marguerite was more joyous and more

affectionate than she ever had been. Nevertheless, the carriage did not

return, the shawl had not been sent back, and I began to be anxious in

spite of myself, and as I knew in which drawer Marguerite put Prudence's

letters, I took advantage of a moment when she was at the other end of

the garden, went to the drawer, and tried to open it; in vain, for it

was locked. When I opened the drawer in which the trinkets and diamonds

were usually kept, these opened without resistance, but the jewel cases

had disappeared, along with their contents no doubt.

A sharp fear penetrated my heart. I might indeed ask Marguerite for the

truth in regard to these disappearances, but it was certain that she

would not confess it.




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