The Champdoce Mystery by Emile Gaboriau (crime books to read TXT) ๐
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- Author: Emile Gaboriau
Read book online ยซThe Champdoce Mystery by Emile Gaboriau (crime books to read TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Emile Gaboriau
โM. Andre, if ever we can free ourselves from those miscreants, whose daggers are pointed at our hearts, Sabine shall be your wife.โ
CHAPTER XXXI. GASTONโS DILEMMA.
Yes, Sabine might yet be his, but between the lovers stood the forms of Croisenois and his associates. But now he felt strong enough to contend with them all.
โTo work!โ said he, โto work!โ
Just then, however, he heard a sound of ringing laughter outside his door. He could distinguish a womanโs voice, and also a manโs, speaking in high, shrill tones. All at once his door burst open, and a hurricane of silks, velvets, feathers, and lace whirled in. With extreme surprise, the young artist recognized the beautiful features of Rose, alias Zora de Chantemille. Gaston de Gandelu followed her, and at once began,โ
โHere we are,โ said he, โall right again. Did you expect to see us?โ
โNot in the least.โ
โAh! well, it is a little surprise of the governorโs. On my word, I really will be a dutiful son for the future. To-day, the good old boy came into my room, and said, โThis morning I took the necessary steps to release the person in whom you are interested. Go and meet her.โ What do you think of that? So off I ran to find Zora, and here we are.โ
Andre did not pay much attention to Gaston, but was engaged in watching Zora, who was looking round the studio. She went up to Sabineโs portrait, and was about to draw the curtain, when Andre exclaimed,โ
โExcuse me,โ said he; โI must put this picture to dry.โ And as the portrait stood on a moveable easel, he wheeled it into the adjoining room.
โAnd now,โ said Gaston, โI want you to come and breakfast with us to celebrate Zoraโs happy release.โ
โI am much obliged to you, but it is impossible. I must get on with my work.โ
โYes, yes; work is an excellent thing, but just now you must go and dress.โ
โI assure you that it is quite out of the question. I cannot leave the studio yet.โ
Gaston paused for a moment in deep thought.
โI have it,โ said he triumphantly. โYou will not come to breakfast; then breakfast shall come to you. I am off to order it.โ
Andre ran after him, but Gaston was too quick, and he returned to the studio in anything but an amiable temper. Zora noticed his evident annoyance.
โHe always goes on in this absurd way,โ said she, with a shrug of her pretty shoulders, โand thinks himself so clever and witty, bah!โ
Her tone disclosed such contempt for Gaston that Andre looked at her in perplexed surprise.
โWhat do you look so astonished at? It is easy to see you do not know much of him. All his friends are just like him; if you listen to them for half an hour at a stretch, you get regularly sick. When I think of the terrible evenings that I have spent in their company, I feel ready to die with yawning;โ and as she spoke, she suited the action to the word. โAh! if he really loved me!โ added she.
โLove you! Why, he adores you.โ
Zora made a little gesture of contempt which Toto Chupin might have envied.
โDo you think so?โ said she. โDo you know what it is he loves in me? When people pass me they cry out, โIsnโt she good style?โ and then the idiot is as pleased as Punch; but if I had on a cotton gown, he would think nothing of me.โ
Rose had evidently learned a good ideal, as her beauty had never been so radiant. She was one glow of health and strength.
โThen my name was not good enough for him,โ she went on. โHis aristocratic lips could not bring themselves to utter such a common name as Rose, so he christened me Zora, a regular puppy dogโs name. He has plenty of money, but money is not everything after all. Paul had no money, and yet I loved him a thousand times better. On my word, I have almost forgotten how to laugh, and yet I used to be as merry as the day was long.โ
โWhy did you leave Paul then?โ
โWell, you see, I wanted to experience what a woman feels when she has a Cashmere shawl on, so one fine morning I took wing. But there, who knows? Paul would very likely have left me one day. There was some one who was doing his best to separate us, an old blackguard called Tantaine, who lived in the same house.โ
โAh!โ answered he cautiously. โWhat interest could he have had in separating you?โ
โI donโt know,โ answered the girl, assuming a serious air; โbut I am sure he was trying it on. A fellow doesnโt hand over banknotes for nothing, and I saw him give one for five hundred francs to Paul; and more than that, he promised him that he should make a great fortune through a friend of his called Mascarin.โ
Andre started. He remembered the visit that Paul had made him, on the pretext of restoring the twenty francs he had borrowed, and at which he had boasted that he had an income of a thousand francs a month, and might make more, though he had not said how this was to be done. โI think that Paul has forgotten me. I saw him once at Van Klopenโs, and he never attempted to say a word to me. He was certainly with that Mascarin at the time.โ
Andre could only draw one conclusion from this, either that Paul was protected by the band of conspirators, or else that he formed one of it. In that case he was useful to them; while Rose, who was in their way, was persecuted by them. Andreโs mind came to this conclusion in an instant. It seemed to him that if Catenac had been desirous of imprisoning Rose, it was because she was in the way, and her presence disturbed certain combinations. Before, however, he could work out his line of deduction, Gastonโs shrill voice was heard upon the stairs, and in another moment he made his appearance.
โPlace for the banquet,โ said he; โmake way for the lordly feast.โ
Two waiters followed him, bearing a number of covered dishes on trays. At another time Andre would have been very angry at this invasion, and at the
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