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<h2> CHAPTER III. THE DEMON CHANCE </h2>
<p>St. Just would have given much to be back in his lonely squalid lodgings
now. Too late did he realise how wise had been the dictum which had warned
him against making or renewing friendships in France.</p>
<p>Men had changed with the times. How terribly they had changed! Personal
safety had become a fetish with most—a goal so difficult to attain
that it had to be fought for and striven for, even at the expense of
humanity and of self-respect.</p>
<p>Selfishness—the mere, cold-blooded insistence for self-advancement—ruled
supreme. De Batz, surfeited with foreign money, used it firstly to ensure
his own immunity, scattering it to right and left to still the ambition of
the Public Prosecutor or to satisfy the greed of innumerable spies.</p>
<p>What was left over he used for the purpose of pitting the bloodthirsty
demagogues one against the other, making of the National Assembly a
gigantic bear-den, wherein wild beasts could rend one another limb from
limb.</p>
<p>In the meanwhile, what cared he—he said it himself—whether
hundreds of innocent martyrs perished miserably and uselessly? They were
the necessary food whereby the Revolution was to be satiated and de Batz'
schemes enabled to mature. The most precious life in Europe even was only
to be saved if its price went to swell the pockets of de Batz, or to
further his future ambitions.</p>
<p>Times had indeed changed an entire nation. St. Just felt as sickened with
this self-seeking Royalist as he did with the savage brutes who struck to
right or left for their own delectation. He was meditating immediate
flight back to his lodgings, with a hope of finding there a word for him
from the chief—a word to remind him that men did live nowadays who
had other aims besides their own advancement—other ideals besides
the deification of self.</p>
<p>The curtain had descended on the first act, and traditionally, as the
works of M. de Moliere demanded it, the three knocks were heard again
without any interval. St. Just rose ready with a pretext for parting with
his friend. The curtain was being slowly drawn up on the second act, and
disclosed Alceste in wrathful conversation with Celimene.</p>
<p>Alceste's opening speech is short. Whilst the actor spoke it Armand had
his back to the stage; with hand outstretched, he was murmuring what he
hoped would prove a polite excuse for thus leaving his amiable host while
the entertainment had only just begun.</p>
<p>De Batz—vexed and impatient—had not by any means finished with
his friend yet. He thought that his specious arguments—delivered
with boundless conviction—had made some impression on the mind of
the young man. That impression, however, he desired to deepen, and whilst
Armand was worrying his brain to find a plausible excuse for going away,
de Batz was racking his to find one for keeping him here.</p>
<p>Then it was that the wayward demon Chance intervened. Had St. Just risen
but two minutes earlier, had his active mind suggested the desired excuse
more readily, who knows what unspeakable sorrow, what heartrending misery,
what terrible shame might have been spared both him and those for whom he
cared? Those two minutes—did he but know it—decided the whole
course of his future life. The excuse hovered on his lips, de Batz
reluctantly was preparing to bid him good-bye, when Celimene, speaking
common-place words enough in answer to her quarrelsome lover, caused him
to drop the hand which he was holding out to his friend and to turn back
towards the stage.</p>
<p>It was an exquisite voice that had spoken—a voice mellow and tender,
with deep tones in it that betrayed latent power. The voice had caused
Armand to look, the lips that spoke forged the first tiny link of that
chain which riveted him forever after to the speaker.</p>
<p>It is difficult to say if such a thing really exists as love at first
sight. Poets and romancists will have us believe that it does; idealists
swear by it as being the only true love worthy of the name.</p>
<p>I do not know if I am prepared to admit their theory with regard to Armand
St. Just. Mlle. Lange's exquisite voice certainly had charmed him to the
extent of making him forget his mistrust of de Batz and his desire to get
away. Mechanically almost he sat down again, and leaning both elbows on
the edge of the box, he rested his chin in his hand, and listened. The
words which the late M. de Moliere puts into the mouth of Celimene are
trite and flippant enough, yet every time that Mlle. Lange's lips moved
Armand watched her, entranced.</p>
<p>There, no doubt, the matter would have ended: a young man fascinated by a
pretty woman on the stage—'tis a small matter, and one from which
there doth not often spring a weary trail of tragic circumstances. Armand,
who had a passion for music, would have worshipped at the shrine of Mlle.
Lange's perfect voice until the curtain came down on the last act, had not
his friend de Batz seen the keen enchantment which the actress had
produced on the young enthusiast.</p>
<p>Now de Batz was a man who never allowed an opportunity to slip by, if that
opportunity led towards the furtherance of his own desires. He did not
want to lose sight of Armand just yet, and here the good demon Chance had
given him an opportunity for obtaining what he wanted.</p>
<p>He waited quietly until the fall of the curtain at the end of Act II.;
then, as Armand, with a sigh of delight, leaned back in his chair, and
closing his eyes appeared to be living the last half-hour all over again,
de Batz remarked with well-assumed indifference:</p>
<p>"Mlle. Lange is a promising young actress. Do you not think so, my
friend?"</p>
<p>"She has a perfect voice—it was exquisite melody to the ear,"
replied Armand. "I was conscious of little else."</p>
<p>"She is a beautiful woman, nevertheless," continued de Batz with a smile.
"During the next act, my good St. Just, I would suggest that you open your
eyes as well as your ears."</p>
<p>Armand did as he was bidden. The whole appearance of Mlle. Lange seemed in
harmony with her voice. She was not very tall, but eminently graceful,
with a small, oval face and slender, almost childlike figure, which
appeared still more so above the wide hoops and draped panniers of the
fashions of Moliere's time.</p>
<p>Whether she was beautiful or not the young man hardly knew. Measured by
certain standards, she certainly was not so, for her mouth was not small,
and her nose anything but classical in outline. But the eyes were brown,
and they had that half-veiled look in them—shaded with long lashes
that seemed to make a perpetual tender appeal to the masculine heart: the
lips, too, were full and moist, and the teeth dazzling white. Yes!—on
the whole we might easily say that she was exquisite, even though we did
not admit that she was beautiful.</p>
<p>Painter David has made a sketch of her; we have all seen it at the Musee
Carnavalet, and all wondered why that charming, if irregular, little face
made such an impression of sadness.</p>
<p>There are five acts in "Le Misanthrope," during which Celimene is almost
constantly on the stage. At the end of the fourth act de Batz said
casually to his friend:</p>
<p>"I have the honour of personal acquaintanceship with Mlle. Lange. An you
care for an introduction to her, we can go round to the green room after
the play."</p>
<p>Did prudence then whisper, "Desist"? Did loyalty to the leader murmur,
"Obey"? It were indeed difficult to say. Armand St. Just was not
five-and-twenty, and Mlle. Lange's melodious voice spoke louder than the
whisperings of prudence or even than the call of duty.</p>
<p>He thanked de Batz warmly, and during the last half-hour, while the
misanthropical lover spurned repentant Celimene, he was conscious of a
curious sensation of impatience, a tingling of his nerves, a wild, mad
longing to hear those full moist lips pronounce his name, and have those
large brown eyes throw their half-veiled look into his own.</p>
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