"It would never be hell to me where she
was, whatever she had done. I love her, man, I am not like you. I love her, do
you hear me?"
"I have known, it for some time,"
said Andre-Louis. "Though I didn't suspect your attack of the disease to
be quite so violent. Well, God knows I loved her, too, quite enough to share
your thirst for killing. For myself, the blue blood of La Tour d'Azyr would
hardly quench this thirst. I should like to add to it the dirty fluid that
flows in the veins of the unspeakable Binet."
For a second his emotion had been out of
hand, and he revealed to Leandre in the mordant tone of those last words
something of the fires that burned under his icy exterior. The young man caught
him by the hand.
"I knew you were acting," said he.
"You feel - you feel as I do."
"Behold us, fellows in viciousness. I
have betrayed myself, it seems. Well, and what now? Do you want to see this
pretty Marquis torn limb from limb? I might afford you the spectacle."
"What?" Leandre stared, wondering
was this another of Scaramouche's cynicisms.
"It isn't really difficult provided I
have aid. I require only a little. Will you lend it me?"
"Anything you ask," Leandre
exploded. "My life if you require it."
Andre-Louis took his arm again. "Let us
walk," he said. "I will instruct you."
When they came back the company was already
at dinner. Mademoiselle had not yet returned. Sullenness presided at the table.
Columbine and Madame wore anxious expressions. The fact was that relations
between Binet and his troupe were daily growing more strained.
Andre-Louis and Leandre went each to his
accustomed place. Binet's little eyes followed them with a malicious gleam, his
thick lips pouted into a crooked smile.
"You two are grown very friendly of a
sudden," he mocked.
"You are a man of discernment,
Binet," said Scaramouche, the cold loathing of his voice itself an insult.
"Perhaps you discern the reason?"
"It is readily discerned."
"Regale the company with it!" he
begged; and waited. "What? You hesitate? Is it possible that there are
limits to your shamelessness?"
Binet reared his great head. "Do you
want to quarrel with me, Scaramouche?" Thunder was rumbling in his deep,
voice.
"Quarrel? You want to laugh. A man
doesn't quarrel with creatures like you. We all know the place held in the
public esteem by complacent husbands. But, in God's name, what place is there
at all for complacent fathers?"
Binet heaved himself up, a great towering
mass of manhood. Violently he shook off the restraining hand of Pierrot who sat
on his left.
"A thousand devils!" he roared;
"if you take that tone with me, I'll break every bone in your filthy
body."
"If you were to lay a finger on me,
Binet, you would give me the only provocation I still need to kill you."
Andre-Louis was as calm as ever, and therefore the more menacing. Alarm stirred
the company. He protruded from his pocket the butt of a pistol - newly
purchased. "I go armed, Binet. It is only fair to give you warning.
Provoke me as you have suggested, and I'll kill you with no more compunction
than I should kill a slug, which after all is the thing you most resemble - a
slug, Binet; a fat, slimy body; foulness without soul and without intelligence.
When I come to think of it I can't suffer to sit at table with you. It turns my
stomach."
He pushed away his platter and got up.
"I'll go and eat at the ordinary below stairs."
Thereupon up jumped Columbine.
"And I'll come with you,
Scaramouche!" cried she.
It acted like a signal. Had the thing been
concerted it couldn't have fallen out more uniformly. Binet, in fact, was
persuaded of a conspiracy. For in the wake of Columbine went Leandre, in the
wake of Leandre, Polichinelle and then all the rest together, until Binet found
himself sitting alone at the head of an empty table in an empty room - a badly
shaken man whose rage could afford him no support against the dread by which he
was suddenly invaded.
He sat down to think things out, and he was
still at that melancholy occupation when perhaps a half-hour later his daughter
entered the room, returned at last from her excursion.
She looked pale, even a little scared - in
reality excessively self-conscious now that the ordeal of facing all the
company awaited her.
Seeing no one but her father in the room, she
checked on the threshold.
"Where is everybody?" she asked, in
a voice rendered natural by effort.
M. Binet reared his great head and turned
upon her eyes that were blood-injected. He scowled, blew out his thick lips and
made harsh noises in his throat. Yet he took stock of her, so graceful and
comely and looking so completely the lady of fashion in her long fur-trimmed
travelling coat of bottle green, her muff and her broad hat adorned by a
sparkling Rhinestone buckle above her adorably coiffed brown hair. No need to
fear the future whilst he owned such a daughter, let Scaramouche play what
tricks he would.
He expressed, however, none of these
comforting reflections.
"So you're back at last, little
fool," he growled in greeting. "I was beginning to ask myself if we
should perform this evening. It wouldn't greatly have surprised me if you had
not returned in time. Indeed, since you have chosen to play the fine hand you
held in your own way and scorning my advice, nothing can surprise me."
She crossed the room to the table, and
leaning against it, looked down upon him almost disdainfully.
"I have nothing to regret," she
said.
"So every fool says at first. Nor would
you admit it if you had. You are like that. You go your own way in spite of
advice from older heads. Death of my life, girl, what do you know of men?"
"I am not complaining," she
reminded him.
"No, but you may be presently, when you
discover that you would have done better to have been guided by your old
father. So long as your Marquis languished for you, there was nothing you could
not have done with the fool. So long as you let him have no more than your
fingertips to kiss... ah, name of a name! that was the time to build your
future. If you live to be a thousand you'll never have such a chance again, and
you've squandered it, for what?"
Mademoiselle sat down.- "You're
sordid," she said, with disgust.
"Sordid, am I?" His thick lips
curled again. "I have had enough of the dregs of life, and so I should
have thought have you. You held a hand on which to have won a fortune if you
had played it as I bade you. Well, you've played it, and where's the fortune?
We can whistle for that as a sailor whistles for wind. And, by Heaven, we'll
need to whistle presently if the weather in the troupe continues as it's set
in. That scoundrel Scaramouche has been at his ape's tricks with them. They've
suddenly turned moral. They won't sit at table with me any more." He was
spluttering between anger and sardonic mirth. "It was your friend
Scaramouche set them the example of that. He threatened my life actually. Threatened
my life! Called me... Oh, but what does that matter? What matters is that the
next thing to happen to us will be that the Binet Troupe will discover it can
manage without M. Binet and his daughter. This scoundrelly bastard I've
befriended has little by little robbed me of everything. It's in his power
to-day to rob me of my troupe, and the knave's ungrateful enough and vile
enough to make use of his power.
"Let him," said mademoiselle
contemptuously.
"Let him?" He was aghast. "And
what's to become of us?"
"In no case will the Binet Troupe
interest me much longer," said she. "I shall be going to Paris soon.
There are better theatres there than the Feydau. There's Mlle. Montansier's
theatre in the Palais Royal; there's the Ambigu Comique; there's the Comedie
Francaise; there's even a possibility I may have a theatre of my own."
His eyes grew big for once. He stretched out
a fat hand, and placed it on one of hers. She noticed that it trembled.
"Has he promised that? Has he
promised?"
She looked at him with her head on one side,
eyes sly and a queer little smile on her perfect lips.
"He did not refuse me when I asked
it," she answered, with conviction that all was as she desired it.
"Bah!" He withdrew his hand, and
heaved himself up. There was disgust on his face. "He did not
refuse!" he mocked her; and then with passion: "Had you acted as I
advised you, he would have consented to anything that you asked, and what is
more he would have provided anything that you asked - anything that lay within
his means, and they are inexhaustible. You have changed a certainty into a
possibility, and I hate possibilities - God of God! I have lived on
possibilities, and infernally near starved on them."
Had she known of the interview taking place
at that moment at the Chateau de Sautron she would have laughed less
confidently at her father's gloomy forebodings. But she was destined never to
know, which indeed was the cruellest punishment of all. She was to attribute
all the evil that of a sudden overwhelmed her, the shattering of all the future
hopes she had founded upon the Marquis and the sudden disintegration of the
Binet Troupe, to the wicked interference of that villain Scaramouche.
She had this much justification that
possibly, without the warning from M. de Sautron, the Marquis would have found
in the events of that evening at the Theatre Feydau a sufficient reason for
ending an entanglement that was fraught with too much unpleasant excitement,
whilst the breaking-up of the Binet Troupe was most certainly the result of
Andre-Louis' work. But it was not a result that he intended or even foresaw.
So much was this the case that in the
interval after the second act, he sought the dressing-room shared by
Polichinelle and Rhodomont. Polichinelle was in the act of changing.
"I shouldn't trouble to change," he
said. "The piece isn't likely to go beyond my opening scene of the next
act with Leandre."
"What do you mean?"
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