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"Your servant, monsieur!"
"Monsieur, like myself, has just come from Madame de Sainte-Suzanne's, I believe?"
"Yes, monsieur, I have come from Thelenie's. The lady's name is Thelenie."
"It is her Christian name, then?"
"As you say, it is her Christian name; didn't you know it?"
"No, monsieur; but, having known Madame de Sainte-Suzanne only a very short time, that is not surprising."
"Why do you call her _de_ Sainte-Suzanne? She never had a sign of a _de_ before her name."
"Oh! I thought that she was of n.o.ble birth."
"You are very much mistaken. In fact, I don't think she is much of a _saint_ either! So she ought to be called plain Suzanne; but that isn't sonorous enough for her; so give her the _de_ if it gives you any pleasure. I have no objection!"
"Has monsieur known the lady a long while?"
"Oh! yes, monsieur, a very long while."
Chamoureau hesitated awhile, but at last decided to falter:
"And monsieur is--er--intimately acquainted with--er--Madame de--Madame Sainte--er--Madame Suzanne?"
Beauregard laughed heartily as he replied in the satirical tone habitual to him:
"Do you know, monsieur, that your question is just the least bit indiscreet?"
"I beg pardon, monsieur; if it offends you, I withdraw it. I asked it as I might have asked: 'Do you smoke?'"
"Oh! not at all, monsieur; and it's of no use for you to try to conceal your cunning beneath that affable air. You asked me that because you are in love with Thelenie, and because you are afraid of finding a rival in me! Is not that the truth?"
"Faith! monsieur, you are so good at guessing that I see that it would be useless to try to dissemble with you.--I confess that I consider that lady enchanting, adorable!"
"You made her acquaintance at the Opera ball, at Mi-Careme, did you not?"
"Yes, that is so; I was disguised as a Spaniard."
"Oh! I know it; I saw you pa.s.s with Thelenie on your arm. But how in the devil did you go about it to induce her to accept your arm? that is what I can't comprehend."
"The lady herself offered to walk with me; she spoke to me first in the foyer, calling me by my name, which surprised me greatly as I had never seen her before."
"It is very strange; she certainly did not accost you without some reason."
"Why, the reason was that it gave her pleasure, presumably."
Beauregard laughed ironically as he rejoined:
"Oh, yes! it gave her pleasure; and there was another reason too, I'll wager! Did you go to the ball alone?"
"No, I went with two friends of mine--Freluchon and Edmond Didier."
"Edmond Didier! good! now we are on the track; I understand it all now."
"What! what track are you on?"
"I'll stake my head that Thelenie questioned you closely on the subject of Monsieur Edmond."
"Why, yes; she asked me very often whom he was with, if his mistress was pretty----"
"That's it; and she forbade you to mention her to those gentlemen?"
"Really, it is extraordinary how you guess everything, monsieur; how you read Madame Sainte-Suzanne's thoughts!"
"It's because I've known her a long while, as I told you just now! I have been in a position to study her character, her sentiments and her mind. You asked me if I were intimately acquainted with this lady--Well, my dear monsieur--I beg pardon, but I don't know your name."
"Chamoureau--Sigismond Chamoureau."
"Well, my dear Monsieur Sigismond Chamoureau, I will tell you that I was once, but that I have not been for a long time."
The agent's face brightened, and he cried:
"As you no longer are, it's just as if you had never been."
"It isn't altogether the same thing, but I congratulate you on being so philosophical."
"In that case, monsieur, you don't bear me a grudge for being in love with Madame Sainte-Suzanne, and I need no longer look upon you as a rival?"
"I, bear you a grudge! oh! not the least in the world! I should have had my hands very full if I had been the rival of all those whom that lady's fine eyes have bewitched!"
"She has fine eyes, hasn't she?"
"Magnificent; and they have made many victims!"
"And will make many more; she is in all the bloom of her beauty!"
"Ah! if you had seen her nine years ago! that was a different matter!"
"Great G.o.d! what was she then?--For my part, I flattered myself too soon on having made a conquest of the lady; she was very stern with me when I had the good fortune to see her at her home; she even forbade me to speak of my love. I will confess to you, monsieur, that that drove me to despair."
"Ha! ha! poor Monsieur Chamoureau!"
"Not speak to her of love! Of what shall I speak to her, pray, that she may listen with pleasure?"
"Pardieu! speak of Edmond Didier, who is her lover! whom she loves to madness--for the moment. That is why she wanted to converse with you at the Opera ball,--Ha! ha! ha! Do you see now?"
Chamoureau turned pale; he halted in the middle of the gutter, crying: