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<h2> CHAPTER XII </h2>
<p>"No, never in my whole life have I met a woman who can compare with this
Marie-Anne! What grace and what dignity! Ah! her beauty is divine!"</p>
<p>So Martial was thinking while returning to Sairmeuse after his proposals
to M. Lacheneur.</p>
<p>At the risk of losing his way he took the shortest course, which led
across the fields and over ditches, which he leaped with the aid of his
gun.</p>
<p>He found a pleasure, entirely novel and very delightful, in picturing
Marie-Anne as he had just seen her, blushing and paling, about to swoon,
then lifting her head haughtily in her pride and disdain.</p>
<p>Who would have suspected that such indomitable energy and such an
impassioned soul was hidden beneath such girlish artlessness and apparent
coldness? What an adorable expression illumined her face, what passion
shone in those great black eyes when she looked at that little fool
d'Escorval! What would not one give to be regarded thus, even for a
moment? How could the boy help being crazy about her?</p>
<p>He himself loved her, without being, as yet, willing, to confess it. What
other name could be given to this passion which had overpowered reason,
and to the furious desires which agitated him?</p>
<p>"Ah!" he exclaimed, "she shall be mine. Yes, she shall be mine; I will
have her!"</p>
<p>Consequently he began to study the strategic side of the undertaking which
this resolution involved with the sagacity of one who had not been without
an extended experience in such matters.</p>
<p>His debut, he was forced to admit, had been neither fortunate nor adroit.
Conveyed compliments and money had both been rejected. If Marie-Anne had
heard his covert insinuations with evident horror, M. Lacheneur had
received, with even more than coldness, his advances and his offers of
actual wealth.</p>
<p>Moreover, he remembered Chanlouineau's terrible eyes.</p>
<p>"How he measured me, that magnificent rustic!" he growled. "At a sign from
Marie-Anne he would have crushed me like an eggshell, without a thought of
my ancestors. Ah! does he also love her? There will be three rivals in
that case."</p>
<p>But the more difficult and even perilous the undertaking seemed, the more
his passions were inflamed.</p>
<p>"My failures can be repaired," he thought. "Occasions of meeting shall not
be wanting. Will it not be necessary to hold frequent interviews with
Monsieur Lacheneur in effecting a formal transfer of Sairmeuse? I will win
him over to my side. With the daughter my course is plain. Profiting by my
unfortunate experience, I will, in the future, be as timid as I have been
bold; and she will be hard to please if she is not flattered by this
triumph of her beauty. D'Escorval remains to be disposed of——"</p>
<p>But this was the point upon which Martial was most exercised.</p>
<p>He had, it is true, seen this rival rudely dismissed by M. Lacheneur; and
yet the anger of the latter had seemed to him too great to be absolutely
real.</p>
<p>He suspected a comedy, but for whose benefit? For his, or for
Chanlouineau's? And yet, what could possibly be the motive?</p>
<p>"And yet," he reflected, "my hands are tied; and I cannot call this little
d'Escorval to account for his insolence. To swallow such an affront in
silence is hard. Still, he is brave, there is no denying that; perhaps I
can find some other way to provoke his anger. But even then, what could I
do? If I harmed a hair of his head, Marie-Anne would never forgive me. Ah!
I would give a handsome sum in exchange for some little device to send him
out of the country."</p>
<p>Revolving in his mind these plans, whose frightful consequences he could
neither calculate nor foresee, Martial was walking up the avenue leading
to the chateau, when he heard hurried footsteps behind him.</p>
<p>He turned, and seeing two men running after him and motioning him to stop,
he paused.</p>
<p>It was Chupin, accompanied by one of his sons.</p>
<p>This old rascal had been enrolled among the servants charged with
preparing Sairmeuse for the reception of the duke; and he had already
discovered the secret of making himself useful to his master, which was by
seeming to be indispensable.</p>
<p>"Ah, Monsieur," he cried, "we have been searching for you everywhere, my
son and I. It was Monsieur le Duc——"</p>
<p>"Very well," said Martial, dryly. "I am returning——"</p>
<p>But Chupin was not sensitive; and although he had not been very favorably
received, he ventured to follow the marquis at a little distance, but
sufficiently near to make himself heard. He also had his schemes; for it
was not long before he began a long recital of the calumnies which had
been spread about the neighborhood in regard to the Lacheneur affair. Why
did he choose this subject in preference to any other? Did he suspect the
young marquis's passion for Marie-Anne?</p>
<p>According to this report, Lacheneur—he no longer said "monsieur"—was
unquestionably a rascal; the complete surrender of Sairmeuse was only a
farce, as he must possess thousands, and hundreds of thousands of francs,
since he was about to marry his daughter.</p>
<p>If the scoundrel had felt only suspicions, they were changed into
certainty by the eagerness with which Martial demanded:</p>
<p>"How! is Mademoiselle Lacheneur to be married?"</p>
<p>"Yes, Monsieur."</p>
<p>"And to whom?"</p>
<p>"To Chanlouineau, the fellow whom the peasants wished to kill yesterday
upon the square, because he was disrespectful to the duke. He is an
avaricious man; and if Marie-Anne does not bring him a good round sum as a
dowry, he will never marry her, no matter how beautiful she may be."</p>
<p>"Are you sure of what you say?"</p>
<p>"It is true. My eldest son heard from Chanlouineau and from Lacheneur that
the wedding would take place within a month."</p>
<p>And turning to his son:</p>
<p>"Is it not true, boy?"</p>
<p>"Yes," promptly replied the youth, who had heard nothing of the kind.</p>
<p>Martial was silent, ashamed, perhaps, of allowing himself to listen to the
gossip, but glad to have been informed of such an important circumstance.</p>
<p>If Chupin was not telling a falsehood—and what reason could he have
for doing so—it became evident that M. Lacheneur's conduct concealed
some great mystery. Why, without some potent motive, should he have
refused to give his daughter to Maurice d'Escorval whom she loved, to
bestow her upon a peasant?</p>
<p>As he reached Sairmeuse, he was swearing that he would discover this
motive. A strange scene awaited him. In the broad open space extending
from the front of the chateau to the <i>parterre</i> lay a huge pile of
all kinds of clothing, linen, plate, and furniture. One might have
supposed that the occupants of the chateau were moving. A half dozen men
were running to and fro, and standing in the centre of the rubbish was the
Duc de Sairmeuse, giving orders.</p>
<p>Martial did not understand the whole meaning of the scene at first. He
went to his father, and after saluting him respectfully, inquired:</p>
<p>"What is all this?"</p>
<p>M. de Sairmeuse laughed heartily.</p>
<p>"What! can you not guess?" he replied. "It is very simple, however. When
the lawful master, on his return, sleeps beneath the bed-coverings of the
usurper, it is delightful, the first night, not so pleasant on the second.
Everything here reminds me too forcibly of Monsieur Lacheneur. It seems to
me that I am in his house; and the thought is unendurable. So I have had
them collect everything belonging to him and to his daughter—everything,
in fact, which did not belong to the chateau in former years. The servants
will put it all into a cart and carry it to him."</p>
<p>The young marquis gave fervent thanks to Heaven that he had arrived before
it was too late. Had his father's project been executed, he would have
been obliged to bid farewell to all his hopes.</p>
<p>"You surely will not do this, Monsieur le Duc?" said he, earnestly.</p>
<p>"And why, pray? Who will prevent me from doing it?"</p>
<p>"No one, most assuredly. But you will decide, on reflection, that a man
who has not conducted himself <i>too</i> badly has a right to some
consideration."</p>
<p>The duke seemed greatly astonished.</p>
<p>"Consideration!" he exclaimed. "This rascal has a right to some
consideration! Well, this is one of the poorest of jokes. What! I give him—that
is to say—you give him a hundred thousand francs, and that will not
content him! He is entitled to consideration! You, who are after the
daughter, may give it to him if you like, but I shall do as I like!"</p>
<p>"Very well; but, Monsieur, I would think twice, if I were in your place.
Lacheneur has surrendered Sairmeuse. That is all very well; but how can
you authenticate your claim to the property? What would you do if, in case
you imprudently irritated him, he should change his mind? What would
become of your right to the estate?"</p>
<p>M. Sairmeuse actually turned green.</p>
<p>"Zounds!" he exclaimed. "I had not thought of that. Here, you fellows,
take all these things back again, and that quickly!"</p>
<p>And as they were obeying his order:</p>
<p>"Now," he remarked, "let us hasten to Courtornieu. They have already sent
for us twice. It must be business of the utmost importance which demands
our attention."</p>
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