The Duke having read the billet, which fully justified

him, presented it to her to read, and told her she might possibly know

the hand. She could not forbear taking it, and examining the

superscription to see if it was addressed to the Viscount de Chartres,

and reading it all over, that she might the better judge, if the letter

which was redemanded was the same with that she had in her hand. The

Duke de Nemours added whatever he thought proper to persuade her of it;

and as one is easily persuaded of the truth of what one wishes, he soon

convinced Madam de Cleves that he had no concern in the letter.

She began now to reason with him concerning the embarrassment and

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danger the Viscount was in, to blame his ill conduct, and to think of

means to help him: she was astonished at the Queen's proceedings, and

confessed to the Duke that she had the letter; in short, she no sooner

believed him innocent, but she discoursed with him with greater ease

and freedom, concerning what she would scarce before vouchsafe to hear;

they agreed that the letter should not be restored to the

Queen-Dauphin, for fear she should show it to Madam de Martigues, who

knew Madam de Themines's hand, and would easily guess, by the interest

she had in the Viscount, that it was addressed to him; they agreed

also, that they ought not to entrust the Queen-Dauphin with all that

concerned the Queen her mother-in-law. Madam de Cleves, under pretence

of serving her uncle, was pleased to be the Duke de Nemours's confidant

in the secrets he had imparted to her.

The Duke would not have confined his discourse to the Viscount's

concerns, but from the liberty he had of free conversation with her,

would have assumed a boldness he had never yet done, had not a message

been brought in to Madam de Cleves, that the Queen-Dauphin had sent for

her. The Duke was forced to withdraw; he went to the Viscount to

inform him, that after he had left him, he thought it more proper to

apply to Madam de Cleves, his niece, than to go directly to the

Queen-Dauphin; he did not want reasons to make him approve what he had

done, and to give him hopes of good success.

In the meantime Madam de Cleves dressed herself in all haste to go to

the Queen-Dauphin; she was no sooner entered her chamber, but she

called her to her, and whispered her, "I have been waiting for you

these two hours, and was never so perplexed about disguising a truth as

I have been this morning: the Queen has heard of the letter I gave you

yesterday, and believes it was the Viscount de Chartres that dropped

it; you know, she has some interest to be satisfied in it; she has been

in search for the letter, and has caused Chatelart to be asked for it;

who said he had given it to me; they have been to ask me for it, under

pretence it was an ingenious letter which the Queen had a curiosity to

see; I durst not say that you had it, for fear she should think I had

given it you on your uncle the Viscount's account, and that there was a

correspondence between him and me. I was already satisfied that his

seeing me so often gave her uneasiness, so that I said the letter was

in the clothes I had on yesterday, and that those who had them in

keeping were gone abroad; give me the letter immediately," added she,

"that I may send it her, and that I may read it before I send it to see

if I know the hand."




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