Anthony Hope

The Indiscretion of the Duchess


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seeing that the duke is gone to Algeria, we certainly are wanted there,” said Gustave.

      “And a man should go where he is wanted,” said I.

      “And a man is wanted,” said Gustave, “where a lady bids him come.”

      “It would,” I cried, “be impolite not to go.”

      “It would be dastardly. Besides, think how you will enjoy the memory of it!”

      “The memory?” I repeated, pausing in my eager walk up and down.

      “It will be a sweet memory,” he said.

      “Ah!”

      “Because, my friend, it is prodigiously unwise—for you.”

      “And not for you?”

      “Why, no. Lady Cynthia—”

      He broke off, content to indicate the shield that protected him. But it was too late to draw back.

      “Let it be as unwise,” said I, “as it will—”

      “Or as the duke is,” put in Gustave, with a knowing twinkle in his eye.

      “Yet it is a plan as delightful—”

      “As the duchess is,” said Gustave.

      And so, for all the excellent reasons which may be collected from the foregoing conversation—and if carefully tabulated they would, I am persuaded, prove as numerous as weighty—I went.

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      The Significance of a Supper-Table.

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      The Aycons of Aycon Knoll have always been a hard-headed, levelheaded race. We have had no enthusiasms, few ambitions, no illusions, and not many scandals. We keep our heads on our shoulders and our purses in our pockets. We do not rise very high, but we have never sunk. We abide at the Knoll from generation to generation, deeming our continued existence in itself a service to the state and an honor to the house. We think more highly of ourselves than we admit, and allow ourselves to smile when we walk in to dinner behind the new nobility. We grow just a little richer with every decade, and add a field or two to our domains once in five years. The gaps made by falling rents we have filled by judicious purchases of land near rising towns; and we have no doubt that there lies before us a future as long and prosperous as our past has been. We are not universally popular, and we see in the fact a tribute to our valuable qualities.

      I venture to mention these family virtues and characteristics because it has been thought in some quarters that I displayed them but to a very slight degree in the course of the expedition on which I was now embarked. The impression is a mistaken one. As I have said before, I did nothing that was not forced upon me. Any of my ancestors would, I am sure, have done the same, had they chanced to be thrown under similar circumstances into the society of Mme. de Saint-Maclou and of the other persons whom I was privileged to meet; and had those other persons happened to act in the manner in which they did when I fell in with them.

      Gustave maintained his gayety and good spirits unabated through the trials of our voyage to Cherbourg. The mild mystery that attended our excursion was highly to his taste. He insisted on our coming without servants. He persuaded me to leave no address; obliged to keep himself within touch of the Embassy, he directed letters to be sent to Avranches, where, he explained, he could procure them; for, as he thought it safe to disclose when a dozen miles of sea separated us from the possibility of curious listeners, the house to which we were bound stood about ten miles distant from that town, in a retired and somewhat desolate bit of country lining the seashore.

      “My sister says it is the most triste place in the world,” said he; “but we shall change all that when we arrive.”

      There was nothing to prevent our arriving very soon to relieve Mlle. de Berensac’s depression, for the middle of the next day found us at Avranches, and we spent the afternoon wandering about somewhat aimlessly and staring across the bay at the mass of Mont St. Michel. Directly beneath us as we stood on the hill, and lying in a straight line with the Mount, there was a large square white house, on the very edge of the stretching sand. We were told that it was a convent.

      “But the whole place is no livelier than one,” said I, yawning. “My dear fellow, why don’t we go on?”

      “It is right for you to see this interesting town,” answered Gustave gravely, but with a merry gleam in his eye. “However, I have ordered a carriage, so be patient.”

      “For what time?”

      “Nine o’clock, when we have dined.”

      “We are to get there in the dark, then?”

      “What reason is there against that?” he asked, smiling.

      “None,” said I; and I went to pack up my bag.

      In my room I chanced to find a femme-de-chambre. To her I put a question or two as to the gentry of the neighborhood. She rattled me off a few distinguished names, and ended:

      “The duke of Saint-Maclou has also a small château.”

      “Is he there now?” I asked.

      “The duchess only, sir,” she answered. “Ah, they tell wonderful stories of her!”

      “Do they? Pray, of what kind?”

      “Oh, not to her harm, sir; or, at least, not exactly, though to simple country-folk—”

      The national shrug was an appropriate ending.

      “And the duke?”

      “He is a good man,” she answered earnestly, “and a very clever man. He is very highly thought of at Paris, sir.”

      I had hoped, secretly, to hear that he was a villain; but he was a good man. It was a scurvy trick to play on a good man. Well, there was no help for it. I packed my bag with some dawning misgivings; the chambermaid, undisturbed by my presence, went on rubbing the table with some strong-smelling furniture polish.

      “At least,” she observed, as though there had been no pause, “he gives much to the church and to the poor.”

      “It may be repentance,” said I, looking up with a hopeful air.

      “It is possible, sir.”

      “Or,” cried I, with a smile, “hypocrisy?”

      The chambermaid’s shake of her head refused to accept this idea; but my conscience, fastening on it, found rest. I hesitated no longer. The man was a cunning hypocrite. I would go on cheerfully, secure that he deserved all the bamboozling which the duchess and my friend Gustave might prepare for him.

      At nine o’clock, as Gustave had arranged, we started in a heavy carriage drawn by two great white horses and driven by a stolid fat hostler. Slowly we jogged along under the stars, St. Michel being our continual companion on the right hand, as we followed the road round the bay. When we had gone five or six miles, we turned suddenly inland. There were banks on each side of the road now, and we were going uphill; for rising out of the plain there was a sudden low spur of higher ground.

      “Is the house at the top?” I asked Gustave.

      “Just under the top,” said he.

      “I shall walk,” said I.

      The fact is, I had grown intolerably impatient of our slow jog, which had now sunk to a walk.

      We