The Slaves of Paris by Émile Gaboriau (good book recommendations .txt) 📕
Description
In this, Gaboriau’s penultimate Lecoq novel, Lecoq doesn’t make an appearance until the last few chapters of the book. In fact, the protagonists’ identity remains unclear until almost halfway through. They’re not missed, though, because the antagonists are a group of blackmailers of exhaustive ingenuity and knowledge, and piecing together the game they’re playing with several noblemen and women occupies all of one’s faculties for most of the book.
Young love, old love, forbidden love, lost love, along with a couple of missing individuals: what is the blackmailers’ endgame? Will Lecoq be able to figure it out in time? Called “French sensational” in its day, Lecoq’s last case is still sensational today.
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- Author: Émile Gaboriau
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Every word she spoke betrayed the utter selfishness of her soul, and yet her father listened with a fixed smile of delight on his face.
“And why do you love him?” asked he.
“Because—because,” stammered the girl, “first, because he is himself; and then—well, I can’t say, but I do love him.”
Her accents betrayed such depth of passion that the father uttered a groan of anguish.
Flavia caught the expression of his features, and burst into a fit of laughter.
“I really believe that you are jealous,” said she, as if she were speaking to a spoiled child. “That is very naughty of you; you ought to be ashamed of yourself. I tell you that the first time I set eyes upon him at Van Klopen’s, I felt a thrill of love pierce through my heart, such love as I never felt for a human being before. Since then, I have known no rest. I cannot sleep, and instead of blood, liquid fire seems to come through my veins.”
Martin Rigal raised his eyes to the ceiling in mute surprise at this outburst of feeling.
“You do not understand me,” went on Flavia. “You are the best of fathers, but, after all, you are but a man. Had I a mother, she would comprehend me better.”
“What could your mother have done for you more than I? Have I neglected anything for your happiness?” asked the banker, with a sigh.
“Perhaps nothing; for there are times when I hardly understand my own feelings.”
In gloomy silence the banker listened to the narrative of his daughter’s state of mind; then he said—
“All shall be as you desire, and the man you love shall be your husband.”
The girl was almost beside herself with joy, and, throwing her arms around his neck, pressed kiss upon kiss on his cheeks and forehead.
“Darling,” said she, “I love you for this more than for anything that you have given me in my life.”
The banker sighed again; and Flavia, shaking her pretty little fist at him, exclaimed, “What is the meaning of that sigh, sir? Do you by any chance regret your promise? But never mind that. How do you mean to bring him here without causing any suspicion?”
A benevolent smile passed over her father’s face, as he answered—
“That, my pet, is my secret.”
“Very well, keep it; I do not care what means you use, as long as I see him soon, very soon—tonight perhaps, in an hour, or even in a few minutes. You say Dr. Hortebise will bring him here; he will sit at our table. I can look at him without trouble, I shall hear his voice—”
“Silly little puss!” broke in the banker; “or, rather, I should say, unhappy child.”
“Silly, perhaps; but why should you say unhappy?”
“You love him too fondly, and he will take advantage of your feeling for him.”
“Never; I do not believe it,” answered the girl.
“I hope to heaven, darling, that my fears may never be realized. But he is not the sort of husband that I intended for you; he is a composer.”
“And is that anything against him!” exclaimed Flavia in angry tones; “one would think from your sneers that this was a crime. Not only is he a composer, but he is a genius. I can read that in his face. He may be poor, but I am rich enough for both, and he will owe all to me; so much the better, for then he will not be compelled to give lessons for his livelihood, and he will have leisure to compose an opera more beautiful than any that Gounod has ever written, and I shall share all his glory. Why, perhaps, he may even sing his own songs to me alone.”
Her father noticed her state of feverish excitement and gazed upon her sadly. Flavia’s mother had been removed from this world at the early age of twenty-four by that insidious malady, consumption, which defies modern medical science, and in a brief space changes a beautiful girl into a livid corpse, and the father viewed her excited manner, flushed cheeks, and sparkling eyes with tears and dismay.
“By heavens!” cried he, bursting into a sudden fit of passion; “if ever he ill treats you, he is a dead man.”
The girl was startled at the sudden ferocity of his manner.
“What have I done to make you angry?” asked she; “and why do you have such evil thoughts of him?”
“I tremble for you, in whom my whole soul is wrapped up,” answered the banker. “This man has robbed me of my child’s heart, and you will be happier with him than you are with your poor old father. I tremble because of your inexperience and his weakness, which may prove a source of trouble to you.”
“If he is weak, all the better; my will can guide him.”
“You are wrong,” replied her father, “as many other women have been before you. You believe that weak and vacillating dispositions are easily controlled, but I tell you that this is an error. Only determined characters can be influenced, and it is on substantial foundations that we find support.”
Flavia made no reply, and her father drew her closer to him.
“Listen to me, my child,” said he. “You will never have a better friend than I am. You know that I would shed every drop of blood in my veins for you. He is coming, so search your heart to discover if this is not some mere passing fancy.”
“Father!” cried she.
“Remember that your happiness is in your own hands now, so be careful and
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