"I constituted myself a kind of vengeance. Mademoiselle Catharine

expected you to establish her in the millinery. Have you done so?"

The Chevalier fell back from the table. This thrust utterly confused

and bewildered him. It was so groundless and unexpected.

"She is very plump, and her cheeks are like winter apples. She had at

one time been in my service, but I had reasons to discharge her. I

compliment you upon your taste. After kissing my hands, these,"

holding out those beautiful members of an exquisite anatomy, "you could

go and kiss the cheeks of a serving-wench! Monsieur, I come from a

proud and noble race. A man can not, after having kissed my hands,

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press his lips to the cheeks of a Catharine and return again to me. I

wrote that letter to lead you a dance such as you would not soon

forget. And see! you did not trouble yourself to start to find me.

And a Catharine! Faugh! Her hands are large and red, her eyes are

bold; when she is thirty she will be fat and perhaps dispensing cheap

wine in a low cabaret. And you called me Rosalind between times and

signed your verses and letters Orlando! You quoted from Petrarch and

said I was your Laura. My faith! man is a curious animal. I have

been told that I am beautiful; and from me you turned to a Catharine!

I suspect she is lodged somewhere here in Quebec."

"A Catharine!" he repeated, wildly. The devil gathered up the reins.

"This is a mad, fantastic world! You kiss my handsome grey eyes a

thousand times, then? What rapture! Catharine? What a pretext! It

has no saving grace. You are mad, I am mad; the world is one of those

Italian panoramas! A thousand kisses, Diane . . . No; you have ceased

to be the huntress. You are Daphne. Well, I will play Apollo to your

Daphne. Let us see if you will change into laurel!" Lightly he leaped

the table, and she was locked in his arms. "What! daughter of Perseus

and Terra, you are still in human shape? Ah! then the gods themselves

are lies!"

She said nothing, but there was fear and rage in her eyes; and her

heart beat furiously against his.

Presently he pressed her from him with a pressure gentle but steady.

"Have no fear, Diane, or Daphne, or whatever you may be pleased to call

yourself. I am a gentleman. I will not take by force what you would

not willingly give. I have never played with a woman's heart nor with

a man's honor. And as for Catharine, I laugh. It is true that I

kissed her cheeks. I had been drinking, and the wine was still in my

head. I had left you. My heart was light and happy. I would have

kissed a spaniel, had a spaniel crossed my path instead of a Catharine.

There was no more taint to those kisses I gave to her than to those you

have often thoughtlessly given to the flowers in your garden. I loved

you truly; I love you still. Catharine is a poor pretext. There is

something you have not told me. Say truthfully that your belief is

that I was secretly paying court to that poor Madame de Brissac, and

that I wore the grey cloak that terrible night; that I fled from France

because of these things. You say that you are about to become a nun.

You do, then, believe in God. Well," releasing her, "I swear to you by

that God that I never saw Madame de Brissac; that I was far away from

Paris on the nineteenth of February. You have wantonly and cruelly

destroyed the only token I had which was closely associated with my

love of you. This locket means nothing." He pulled it forth, took the

chain from round his neck. "You never wore it; it is nothing. I do

not need it to recall your likeness. Since I have been the puppet,

since even God mocks me by bringing you here, take the locket."




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