You had only been gone an hour when your father presented himself. I

won't say what impression his severe face made upon me. Your father had

the old theory that a courtesan is a being without heart or reason, a

sort of machine for coining gold, always ready, like the machine,

to bruise the hand that gives her everything, and to tear in pieces,

without pity or discernment, those who set her in motion.

Your father had written me a very polite letter, in order that I might

consent to see him; he did not present himself quite as he had written.

His manner at first was so stiff, insolent, and even threatening, that I

had to make him understand that I was in my own house, and that I had no

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need to render him an account of my life, except because of the sincere

affection which I had for his son.

M. Duval calmed down a little, but still went on to say that he could

not any longer allow his son to ruin himself over me; that I was

beautiful, it was true, but, however beautiful I might be, I ought not

to make use of my beauty to spoil the future of a young man by such

expenditure as I was causing.

At that there was only one thing to do, to show him the proof that since

I was your mistress I had spared no sacrifice to be faithful to you

without asking for more money than you had to give me. I showed him the

pawn tickets, the receipts of the people to whom I had sold what I could

not pawn; I told him of my resolve to part with my furniture in order

to pay my debts, and live with you without being a too heavy expense. I

told him of our happiness, of how you had shown me the possibility of

a quieter and happier life, and he ended by giving in to the evidence,

offering me his hand, and asking pardon for the way in which he had at

first approached me.

Then he said to me: "So, madame, it is not by remonstrances or by threats, but by

entreaties, that I must endeavour to obtain from you a greater sacrifice

than you have yet made for my son."

I trembled at this beginning.

Your father came over to me, took both my hands, and continued in an

affectionate voice: "My child, do not take what I have to say to you amiss; only remember

that there are sometimes in life cruel necessities for the heart, but

that they must be submitted to. You are good, your soul has generosity

unknown to many women who perhaps despise you, and are less worthy than

you. But remember that there is not only the mistress, but the family;

that besides love there are duties; that to the age of passion succeeds

the age when man, if he is to be respected, must plant himself solidly

in a serious position. My son has no fortune, and yet he is ready to

abandon to you the legacy of his mother. If he accepted from you the

sacrifice which you are on the point of making, his honour and dignity

would require him to give you, in exchange for it, this income, which

would always put you out of danger of adversity. But he can not accept

this sacrifice, because the world, which does not know you, would give a

wrong interpretation to this acceptance, and such an interpretation must

not tarnish the name which we bear. No one would consider whether

Armand loves you, whether you love him, whether this mutual love means

happiness to him and redemption to you; they would see only one thing,

that Armand Duval allowed a kept woman (forgive me, my child, for what

I am forced to say to you) to sell all she had for him. Then the day of

reproaches and regrets would arrive, be sure, for you or for others, and

you would both bear a chain that you could not sever. What would you do

then? Your youth would be lost, my son's future destroyed; and I, his

father, should receive from only one of my children the recompense that

I look for from both.




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