File No. 113 by Emile Gaboriau (classic literature books TXT) ๐
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- Author: Emile Gaboriau
Read book online ยซFile No. 113 by Emile Gaboriau (classic literature books TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Emile Gaboriau
โWhat do you mean? That I am lost, dishonored? Am I any more so to-day than I was yesterday? Do you think that the jeers and scoffs of the world could make me suffer more than do the pangs of my guilty conscience? I have long since passed judgment upon myself, Gaston; and, although the sound of your voice and the touch of your hand would make me forget all save the bliss of your love, no sooner were you away than I would weep tears of shame and remorse.โ
Gaston listened immovable, stupefied. He seemed to see a new Valentine standing before him, an entirely different woman from the one whose tender soul he thought he knew so well.
โYour mother, what will she say?โ he asked.
โIt is my duty to her that keeps me here. Do you wish me to prove an unnatural daughter, and desert a poor, lonely, friendless old woman, who has nothing but me to cling to? Could I abandon her to follow a lover?โ
โBut our enemies will inform her of everything, Valentine, and think how she will make you suffer!โ
โNo matter. The dictates of conscience must be obeyed. Ah, why can I not, at the price of my life, spare her the agony of hearing that her only daughter, her Valentine, has disgraced her name? She may be hard, cruel, pitiless toward me; but have I not deserved it? Oh, my only friend, we have been revelling in a dream too beautiful to last! I have long dreaded this awakening. Like two weak, credulous fools we imagined that happiness could exist beyond the pale of duty. Sooner or later stolen joys must be dearly paid for. After the sweet comes the bitter; we must bow our heads, and drink the cup to the dregs.โ
This cold reasoning, this sad resignation, was more than the fiery nature of Gaston could bear.
โYou shall not talk thus!โ he cried. โCan you not feel that the bare idea of your suffering humiliation drives me mad?โ
โAlas! I see nothing but disgrace, the most fearful disgrace, staring me in the face.โ
โWhat do you mean, Valentine?โ
โI have not told you, Gaston, I amโโโ
Here she stopped, hesitated, and then added:
โNothing! I am a fool.โ
Had Gaston been less excited, he would have suspected some new misfortune beneath this reticence of Valentine; but his mind was too full of one ideaโthat of possessing her.
โAll hope is not lost,โ he continued. โMy father is kind-hearted, and was touched by my love and despair. I am sure that my letters, added to the intercession of my brother Louis, will induce him to ask Mme. de la Verberie for your hand.โ
This proposition seemed to frighten Valentine.
โHeaven forbid that the marquis should take this rash step!โ
โWhy, Valentine?โ
โBecause my mother would reject his offer; because, I must confess it now, she has sworn I shall marry none but a rich man; and your father is not rich, Gaston, so you will have very little.โ
โGood heavens!โ cried Gaston, with disgust, โis it to such an unnatural mother that you sacrifice me?โ
โShe is my mother; that is sufficient. I have not the right to judge her. My duty is to remain with her, and remain I shall.โ
Valentineโs manner showed such determined resolution, that Gaston saw that further prayers would be in vain.
โAlas!โ he cried, as he wrung his hands with despair, โyou do not love me; you have never loved me!โ
โGaston, Gaston! you do not think what you say! Have you no mercy?โ
โIf you loved me,โ he cried, โyou could never, at this moment of separation, have the cruel courage to coldly reason and calculate. Ah, far different is my love for you. Without you the world is void; to lose you is to die. What have I to live for? Let the Rhone take back this worthless life, so miraculously saved; it is now a burden to me!โ
And he rushed toward the river, determined to bury his sorrow beneath its waves; Valentine seized his arm, and held him back.
โIs this the way to show your love for me?โ she asked.
Gaston was absolutely discouraged.
โWhat is the use of living?โ he said, dejectedly. โWhat is left to me now?โ
โGod is left to us, Gaston; and in his hands lies our future.โ
As a shipwrecked man seizes a rotten plank in his desperation, so Gaston eagerly caught at the word โfuture,โ as a beacon in the gloomy darkness surrounding him.
โYour commands shall be obeyed,โ he cried with enthusiasm. โAway with weakness! Yes, I will live, and struggle, and triumph. Mme. de la Verberie wants gold; well, she shall have it; in three years I will be rich, or I shall be dead.โ
With clasped hands Valentine thanked Heaven for this sudden determination, which was more than she had dared hope for.
โBut,โ said Gaston, โbefore going away I wish to confide to you a sacred deposit.โ
He drew from his pocket the purse of jewels, and, handing them to Valentine, added:
โThese jewels belonged to my poor mother; you, my angel, are alone worthy of wearing them. I thought of you when I accepted them from my father. I felt that you, as my affianced wife, were the proper person to have them.โ
Valentine refused to accept them.
โTake them, my darling, as a pledge of my return. If I do not come back within three years, you may know that I am dead, and then you must keep them as a souvenir of him who so much loved you.โ
She burst into tears, and took the purse.
โAnd now,โ said Gaston, โI have a last request to make. Everybody believes me dead, but I cannot let my poor old father labor under this impression. Swear to me that you will go yourself to-morrow morning, and tell him that I am still alive.โ
โI will tell him, myself,โ she said.
Gaston felt that he must now tear himself away before his courage failed him; each moment he was more loath to leave the only being who bound him to this world; he enveloped Valentine in a last fond embrace, and started up.
โWhat is your plan of escape?โ she asked.
โI shall go to Marseilles, and hide in a friendโs house until I can procure a passage to America.โ
โYou must
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