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it to them more energetically than would be convenient to your bodily health and the duration of your life. May I give you a friendly counsel? Set out for Naples, the Hague, or St. Petersburgโ โ€”calm countries, where the point of honor is better understood than among our hotheaded Parisians. Seek quietude and oblivion, so that you may return peaceably to France after a few years. Am I not right, M. de Chรขteau-Renaud?โ€

โ€œThat is quite my opinion,โ€ said the gentleman; โ€œnothing induces serious duels so much as a duel forsworn.โ€

โ€œThank you, gentlemen,โ€ replied Albert, with a smile of indifference; โ€œI shall follow your adviceโ โ€”not because you give it, but because I had before intended to quit France. I thank you equally for the service you have rendered me in being my seconds. It is deeply engraved on my heart, and, after what you have just said, I remember that only.โ€

Chรขteau-Renaud and Beauchamp looked at each other; the impression was the same on both of them, and the tone in which Morcerf had just expressed his thanks was so determined that the position would have become embarrassing for all if the conversation had continued.

โ€œGoodbye, Albert,โ€ said Beauchamp suddenly, carelessly extending his hand to the young man. The latter did not appear to arouse from his lethargy; in fact, he did not notice the offered hand.

โ€œGoodbye,โ€ said Chรขteau-Renaud in his turn, keeping his little cane in his left hand, and saluting with his right.

Albertโ€™s lips scarcely whispered โ€œGoodbye,โ€ but his look was more explicit; it expressed a whole poem of restrained anger, proud disdain, and generous indignation. He preserved his melancholy and motionless position for some time after his two friends had regained their carriage; then suddenly unfastening his horse from the little tree to which his servant had tied it, he mounted and galloped off in the direction of Paris.

In a quarter of an hour he was entering the house in the Rue du Helder. As he alighted, he thought he saw his fatherโ€™s pale face behind the curtain of the countโ€™s bedroom. Albert turned away his head with a sigh, and went to his own apartments. He cast one lingering look on all the luxuries which had rendered life so easy and so happy since his infancy; he looked at the pictures, whose faces seemed to smile, and the landscapes, which appeared painted in brighter colors. Then he took away his motherโ€™s portrait, with its oaken frame, leaving the gilt frame from which he took it black and empty. Then he arranged all his beautiful Turkish arms, his fine English guns, his Japanese china, his cups mounted in silver, his artistic bronzes by Feuchรจres or Barye; examined the cupboards, and placed the key in each; threw into a drawer of his secretaire, which he left open, all the pocket-money he had about him, and with it the thousand fancy jewels from his vases and his jewel-boxes; then he made an exact inventory of everything, and placed it in the most conspicuous part of the table, after putting aside the books and papers which had collected there.

At the beginning of this work, his servant, notwithstanding orders to the contrary, came to his room.

โ€œWhat do you want?โ€ asked he, with a more sorrowful than angry tone.

โ€œPardon me, sir,โ€ replied the valet; โ€œyou had forbidden me to disturb you, but the Count of Morcerf has called me.โ€

โ€œWell!โ€ said Albert.

โ€œI did not like to go to him without first seeing you.โ€

โ€œWhy?โ€

โ€œBecause the count is doubtless aware that I accompanied you to the meeting this morning.โ€

โ€œIt is probable,โ€ said Albert.

โ€œAnd since he has sent for me, it is doubtless to question me on what happened there. What must I answer?โ€

โ€œThe truth.โ€

โ€œThen I shall say the duel did not take place?โ€

โ€œYou will say I apologized to the Count of Monte Cristo. Go.โ€

The valet bowed and retired, and Albert returned to his inventory. As he was finishing this work, the sound of horses prancing in the yard, and the wheels of a carriage shaking his window, attracted his attention. He approached the window, and saw his father get into it, and drive away. The door was scarcely closed when Albert bent his steps to his motherโ€™s room; and, no one being there to announce him, he advanced to her bedchamber, and distressed by what he saw and guessed, stopped for one moment at the door.

As if the same idea had animated these two beings, Mercรฉdรจs was doing the same in her apartments that he had just done in his. Everything was in orderโ โ€”laces, dresses, jewels, linen, money, all were arranged in the drawers, and the countess was carefully collecting the keys. Albert saw all these preparations and understood them, and exclaiming, โ€œMy mother!โ€ he threw his arms around her neck.

The artist who could have depicted the expression of these two countenances would certainly have made of them a beautiful picture. All these proofs of an energetic resolution, which Albert did not fear on his own account, alarmed him for his mother. โ€œWhat are you doing?โ€ asked he.

โ€œWhat were you doing?โ€ replied she.

โ€œOh, my mother!โ€ exclaimed Albert, so overcome he could scarcely speak; โ€œit is not the same with you and meโ โ€”you cannot have made the same resolution I have, for I have come to warn you that I bid adieu to your house, andโ โ€”and to you.โ€

โ€œI also,โ€ replied Mercรฉdรจs, โ€œam going, and I acknowledge I had depended on your accompanying me; have I deceived myself?โ€

โ€œMother,โ€ said Albert with firmness. โ€œI cannot make you share the fate I have planned for myself. I must live henceforth without rank and fortune, and to begin this hard apprenticeship I must borrow from a friend the loaf I shall eat until I have earned one. So, my dear mother, I am going at once to ask Franz to lend me the small sum I shall require to supply my present wants.โ€

โ€œYou, my poor child, suffer poverty and hunger? Oh, do not say so; it will break my resolutions.โ€

โ€œBut not mine, mother,โ€ replied Albert.

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