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Chapter 97- The Departure for Belgium.

Chapter 97

The Departure for Belgium.

 

A few minutes after the scene of confusion produced in the

salons of M. Danglars by the unexpected appearance of the

brigade of soldiers, and by the disclosure which had

followed, the mansion was deserted with as much rapidity as

if a case of plague or of cholera morbus had broken out

among the guests. In a few minutes, through all the doors,

down all the staircases, by every exit, every one hastened

to retire, or rather to fly; for it was a situation where

the ordinary condolences, -- which even the best friends are

so eager to offer in great catastrophes, -- were seen to be

utterly futile. There remained in the banker's house only

Danglars, closeted in his study, and making his statement to

the officer of gendarmes; Madame Danglars, terrified, in the

boudoir with which we are acquainted; and Eugenie, who with

haughty air and disdainful lip had retired to her room with

her inseparable companion, Mademoiselle Louise d'Armilly. As

for the numerous servants (more numerous that evening than

usual, for their number was augmented by cooks and butlers

from the Cafe de Paris), venting on their employers their

anger at what they termed the insult to which they had been

subjected, they collected in groups in the hall, in the

kitchens, or in their rooms, thinking very little of their

duty, which was thus naturally interrupted. Of all this

household, only two persons deserve our notice; these are

Mademoiselle Eugenie Danglars and Mademoiselle Louise

d'Armilly.

 

The betrothed had retired, as we said, with haughty air,

disdainful lip, and the demeanor of an outraged queen,

followed by her companion, who was paler and more disturbed

than herself. On reaching her room Eugenie locked her door,

while Louise fell on a chair. "Ah, what a dreadful thing,"

said the young musician; "who would have suspected it? M.

Andrea Cavalcanti a murderer -- a galley-slave escaped -- a

convict!" An ironical smile curled the lip of Eugenie. "In

truth I was fated," said she. "I escaped the Morcerf only to

fall into the Cavalcanti."

 

"Oh, do not confound the two, Eugenie."

 

"Hold your tongue! The men are all infamous, and I am happy

to be able now to do more than detest them -- I despise

them."

 

"What shall we do?" asked Louise.

 

"What shall we do?"

 

"Yes."

 

"Why, the same we had intended doing three days since -- set

off."

 

"What? -- although you are not now going to be married, you

intend still" --

 

"Listen, Louise. I hate this life of the fashionable world,

always ordered, measured, ruled, like our music-paper. What

I have always wished for, desired, and coveted, is the life

of an artist, free and independent, relying only on my own

resources, and accountable only to myself. Remain here? What

for? -- that they may try, a month hence, to marry me again;

and to whom? -- M. Debray, perhaps, as it was once proposed.

No, Louise, no! This evening's adventure will serve for my

excuse. I did not seek one, I did not ask for one. God sends

me this, and I hail it joyfully!"

 

"How strong and courageous you are!" said the fair, frail

girl to her brunette companion.

 

"Did you not yet know me? Come, Louise, let us talk of our

affairs. The post-chaise" --

 

"Was happily bought three days since."

 

"Have you had it sent where we are to go for it?"

 

"Yes."

 

"Our passport?"

 

"Here it is."

 

And Eugenie, with her usual precision, opened a printed

paper, and read, --

 

"M. Leon d'Armilly, twenty years of age; profession, artist;

hair black, eyes black; travelling with his sister."

 

"Capital! How did you get this passport?"

 

"When I went to ask M. de Monte Cristo for letters to the

directors of the theatres at Rome and Naples, I expressed my

fears of travelling as a woman; he perfectly understood

them, and undertook to procure for me a man's passport, and

two days after I received this, to which I have added with

my own hand, `travelling with his sister.'"

 

"Well," said Eugenie cheerfully, "we have then only to pack

up our trunks; we shall start the evening of the signing of

the contract, instead of the evening of the wedding -- that

is all."

 

"But consider the matter seriously, Eugenie!"

 

"Oh, I am done with considering! I am tired of hearing only

of market reports, of the end of the month, of the rise and

fall of Spanish funds, of Haitian bonds. Instead of that,

Louise -- do you understand? -- air, liberty, melody of

birds, plains of Lombardy, Venetian canals, Roman palaces,

the Bay of Naples. How much have we, Louise?" The young girl

to whom this question was addressed drew from an inlaid

secretary a small portfolio with a lock, in which she

counted twenty-three bank-notes.

 

"Twenty-three thousand francs," I said she.

 

"And as much, at least, in pearls, diamonds, and jewels,"

said Eugenie. "We are rich. With forty-five thousand francs

we can live like princesses for two years, and comfortably

for four; but before six months -- you with your music, and

I with my voice -- we shall double our capital. Come, you

shall take charge of the money, I of the jewel-box; so that

if one of us had the misfortune to lose her treasure, the

other would still have hers left. Now, the portmanteau --

let us make haste -- the portmanteau!"

 

"Stop!" said Louise, going to listen at Madame Danglars'

door.

 

"What do you fear?"

 

"That we may be discovered."

 

"The door is locked."

 

"They may tell us to open it."

 

"They may if they like, but we will not."

 

"You are a perfect Amazon, Eugenie!" And the two young girls

began to heap into a trunk all the things they thought they

should require. "There now," said Eugenie, "while I change

my costume do you lock the portmanteau." Louise pressed with

all the strength of her little hands on the top of the

portmanteau. "But I cannot," said she; "I am not strong

enough; do you shut it."

 

"Ah, you do well to ask," said Eugenie, laughing; "I forgot

that I was Hercules, and you only the pale Omphale!" And the

young girl, kneeling on the top, pressed the two parts of

the portmanteau together, and Mademoiselle d'Armilly passed

the bolt of the padlock through. When this was done, Eugenie

opened a drawer, of which she kept the key, and took from it

a wadded violet silk travelling cloak. "Here," said she,

"you see I have thought of everything; with this cloak you

will not be cold."

 

"But you?"

 

"Oh, I am never cold, you know! Besides, with these men's

clothes" --

 

"Will you dress here?"

 

"Certainly."

 

"Shall you have time?"

 

"Do not be uneasy, you little coward! All our servants are

busy, discussing the grand affair. Besides, what is there

astonishing, when you think of the grief I ought to be in,

that I shut myself up? -- tell me!"

 

"No, truly -- you comfort me."

 

"Come and help me."

 

From the same drawer she took a man's complete costume, from

the boots to the coat, and a provision of linen, where there

was nothing superfluous, but every requisite. Then, with a

promptitude which indicated that this was not the first time

she had amused herself by adopting the garb of the opposite

sex, Eugenie drew on the boots and pantaloons, tied her

cravat, buttoned her waistcoat up to the throat, and put on

a coat which admirably fitted her beautiful figure. "Oh,

that is very good -- indeed, it is very good!" said Louise,

looking at her with admiration; "but that beautiful black

hair, those magnificent braids, which made all the ladies

sigh with envy, -- will they go under a man's hat like the

one I see down there?"

 

"You shall see," said Eugenie. And with her left hand

seizing the thick mass, which her long fingers could

scarcely grasp, she took in her right hand a pair of long

scissors, and soon the steel met through the rich and

splendid hair, which fell in a cluster at her feet as she

leaned back to keep it from her coat. Then she grasped the

front hair, which she also cut off, without expressing the

least regret; on the contrary, her eyes sparkled with

greater pleasure than usual under her ebony eyebrows. "Oh,

the magnificent hair!" said Louise, with regret.

 

"And am I not a hundred times better thus?" cried Eugenie,

smoothing the scattered curls of her hair, which had now

quite a masculine appearance; "and do you not think me

handsomer so?"

 

"Oh, you are beautiful -- always beautiful!" cried Louise.

"Now, where are you going?"

 

"To Brussels, if you like; it is the nearest frontier. We

can go to Brussels, Liege, Aix-la-Chapelle; then up the

Rhine to Strasburg. We will cross Switzerland, and go down

into Italy by the Saint-Gothard. Will that do?"

 

"Yes."

 

"What are you looking at?"

 

"I am looking at you; indeed you are adorable like that! One

would say you were carrying me off."

 

"And they would be right, pardieu!"

 

"Oh, I think you swore, Eugenie." And the two young girls,

whom every one might have thought plunged in grief, the one

on her own account, the other from interest in her friend,

burst out laughing, as they cleared away every visible trace

of the disorder which had naturally accompanied the

preparations for their escape. Then, having blown out the

lights, the two fugitives, looking and listening eagerly,

with outstretched necks, opened the door of a dressing-room

which led by a side staircase down to the yard, -- Eugenie

going first, and holding with one arm the portmanteau, which

by the opposite handle Mademoiselle d'Armilly scarcely

raised with both hands. The yard was empty; the clock was

striking twelve. The porter was not yet gone to bed. Eugenie

approached softly, and saw the old man sleeping soundly in

an arm-chair in his lodge. She returned to Louise, took up

the portmanteau, which she had placed for a moment on the

ground, and they reached the archway under the shadow of the

wall.

 

Eugenie concealed Louise in an angle of the gateway, so that

if the porter chanced to awake he might see but one person.

Then placing herself in the full light of the lamp which lit

the yard, -- "Gate!" cried she, with her finest contralto

voice, and rapping at the window.

 

The porter got up as Eugenie expected, and even advanced

some steps to recognize the person who was going out, but

seeing a young man striking his boot impatiently with his

riding-whip, he opened it immediately. Louise slid through

the half-open gate like a snake, and bounded lightly

forward. Eugenie, apparently calm, although in all

probability her heart beat somewhat faster than usual, went

out in her turn. A porter was passing and they gave him the

portmanteau; then the two young girls, having told him to

take it to No. 36, Rue de la Victoire, walked behind this

man, whose presence comforted Louise. As for Eugenie, she

was as strong as a Judith or a Delilah. They arrived at the

appointed spot. Eugenie ordered the porter to put down the

portmanteau, gave him some pieces of money, and having

rapped at the shutter sent him away. The shutter where

Eugenie had rapped was that of a little laundress, who had

been previously warned, and was not yet gone to bed. She

opened the door.

 

"Mademoiselle," said Eugenie, "let the porter get the

post-chaise from the coach-house, and fetch some post-horses

from the hotel. Here are five francs for his trouble."

 

"Indeed," said Louise, "I admire you, and I could almost say

respect you." The laundress looked on in astonishment, but

as she had been promised twenty louis, she made no remark.

 

In a quarter of an hour the porter returned with a post-boy

and horses, which were harnessed, and put in the post-chaise

in a minute, while the porter fastened the portmanteau on

with the assistance of a cord and strap. "Here is the

passport," said the postilion, "which way are we going,

young gentleman?"

 

"To Fontainebleau," replied Eugenie with an almost masculine

voice.

 

"What do you say?" said Louise.

 

"I am giving them the slip," said Eugenie; "this woman to

whom we have given twenty louis may betray us for forty; we

will soon alter our direction." And the young girl jumped

into the britzska, which was admirably arranged for sleeping

in, without scarcely touching the step. "You are always

right," said the music teacher, seating herself by the side

of her friend.

 

A quarter of an hour afterwards the postilion, having been

put in the right road, passed with a crack of his whip

through the gateway of the Barriere Saint-Martin. "Ah," said

Louise, breathing freely, "here we are out of Paris."

 

"Yes, my dear, the abduction is an accomplished fact,"

replied Eugenie. "Yes, and without violence," said Louise.

 

"I shall bring that forward as an extenuating circumstance,"

replied Eugenie. These words were lost in the noise which

the carriage made in rolling over the pavement of La

Villette. M. Danglars no longer had a daughter.

 

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