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I saw a young woman in the conventional costume, with white bouquet and orange blossoms.
"Do you see her?"
"Yes, madame. But why is she not dancing?"
"Because that great lout of an Archibald trod on her foot just now, and nearly crushed it. What an awkward creature he is! Anna is obliged to rest through at least two quadrilles."
I had learned that the bride's name was Anna. That was something.
"Poor Adolphe was in despair. He wanted to fight Monsieur Archibald."
Adolphe--that must be the groom's name.
"I can well understand that," I hastened to reply. "If I had been in Adolphe's place, I would have been furious, too; for, you know, on the wedding day----"
"He's so fond of his cousin! But, after all, he could hardly pick a quarrel with the bride's brother."
The deuce! I was on the point of putting my foot in it.
Cousin--brother--I didn't know where I was. So Adolphe was not the groom. I was treading on very slippery ground, and had to look carefully to my steps.
My partner, who was fond of talking, soon began again.
"As for Monsieur Dablemar, I fancy that he cares very little about it.
You know the kind of man he is?"
That question embarra.s.sed me sadly. I wondered who Monsieur Dablemar could be, and I answered, by way of subterfuge:
"Oh! to be sure; Monsieur--Dablemar probably does care very little about it. That is just what I was thinking, especially, knowing him--as I know him."
"Are you very intimate with him, monsieur?"
"Very intimate--why, not precisely, madame--but enough so--to have a--decided opinion about him."
"Do you think that he will make her happy, monsieur?"
"Whom, madame?"
My pretty partner stared at me in amazement as she exclaimed:
"What do you say? whom? Why, his wife, our dear Anna!"
So Monsieur Dablemar was the bridegroom; there was no longer any doubt.
"Oh! I beg your pardon, madame," I hastily replied. "I meant to say that she will be happy, madame, very happy. At least, that is my honest opinion."
"I love to think that you are not mistaken. I knew Anna at boarding school; I know that she has an excellent disposition; and a husband must needs be very uncongenial to induce her ever to complain of her lot. But still, to speak frankly, the other one was prettier."
Once more I was beyond my depth. Who was this other one of whom she was speaking? I turned and looked in another direction; but my partner stuck to the point.
"And yet," she continued, "they say that he did not love her, that he neglected her sadly. You must have known her, monsieur, being a friend of Monsieur Dablemar?"
"Known whom, madame?"
This time my partner looked at me in a very singular way; I was convinced that she believed that she had fallen in with a lunatic. She simply said, with a smile:
"You are absent-minded, aren't you, monsieur?"
"It should not be possible with you, madame."
This compliment changed the current of my pretty brunette's thoughts, and fully restored her amiability.--Oh! flattery! It is like calumny--some trace of it always remains.
"Your gallantry, monsieur, cannot prevent my thinking that you are absent-minded. Still, you may have reasons for not choosing to answer the questions I asked you."
"Well, madame, it is true, I have reasons--very strong ones, indeed."
"I understand."
Sapristi! she was very lucky to understand; for my part, I confess that that conversation made me much more uncomfortable than I had antic.i.p.ated; for I was most anxious not to appear a lunatic in the eyes of that partner of mine, who seemed prettier to me every minute. There are people who gain by being looked at, at close range; they are not numerous, but my partner was one of them. And I was terribly afraid that my incoherent replies would give her a very contemptuous opinion of me.
"There goes Monsieur Archibald," she continued, after a moment, "trying to crush somebody else's foot; the way he capers about is perfectly horrible; I will never dance near him."
I did not know where she saw Monsieur Archibald, so I smiled without raising my eyes.
"Of course, you know the lady he is dancing with at this moment?"
"No, madame, no; I don't know her."
"But you haven't looked in their direction."
"I beg your pardon."
"Ha! ha! ha!"
My partner indulged in a burst of merriment which worried me. When she had ceased to laugh, she said:
"Mon Dieu! monsieur, pray excuse me; it is very foolish of me to laugh so."
"Why, madame? laughing is most becoming to you."
"But such a strange idea pa.s.sed through my head, that I couldn't possibly keep a serious face."
"If you would tell me your idea--I should be very happy to be taken for your confidant."
"Oh! I should never dare; for it was you yourself, monsieur, who made me want to laugh."
"So much the better, madame; I am delighted."
"Look you: for some reason or other, you seem to me to be very much preoccupied by something."