<h3><SPAN name="linkC2HCH0067" id="linkC2HCH0067"></SPAN> Chapter 67. The Office of the King’s Attorney</h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">L</span>et us leave the banker
driving his horses at their fullest speed, and follow Madame Danglars in her
morning excursion. We have said that at half-past twelve o’clock Madame
Danglars had ordered her horses, and had left home in the carriage. She
directed her course towards the Faubourg Saint Germain, went down the Rue
Mazarine, and stopped at the Passage du Pont-Neuf. She descended, and went
through the passage. She was very plainly dressed, as would be the case with a
woman of taste walking in the morning. At the Rue Guénégaud she called a cab,
and directed the driver to go to the Rue de Harlay. As soon as she was seated
in the vehicle, she drew from her pocket a very thick black veil, which she
tied on to her straw bonnet. She then replaced the bonnet, and saw with
pleasure, in a little pocket-mirror, that her white complexion and brilliant
eyes were alone visible. The cab crossed the Pont-Neuf and entered the Rue de
Harlay by the Place Dauphine; the driver was paid as the door opened, and
stepping lightly up the stairs Madame Danglars soon reached the Salle des
Pas-Perdus.</p>
<p>There was a great deal going on that morning, and many business-like persons at
the Palais; business-like persons pay very little attention to women, and
Madame Danglars crossed the hall without exciting any more attention than any
other woman calling upon her lawyer.</p>
<p>There was a great press of people in M. de Villefort’s antechamber, but
Madame Danglars had no occasion even to pronounce her name. The instant she
appeared the door-keeper rose, came to her, and asked her whether she was not
the person with whom the procureur had made an appointment; and on her
affirmative answer being given, he conducted her by a private passage to M. de
Villefort’s office.</p>
<p>The magistrate was seated in an armchair, writing, with his back towards the
door; he did not move as he heard it open, and the door-keeper pronounce the
words, “Walk in, madame,” and then reclose it; but no sooner had
the man’s footsteps ceased, than he started up, drew the bolts, closed
the curtains, and examined every corner of the room. Then, when he had assured
himself that he could neither be seen nor heard, and was consequently relieved
of doubts, he said:</p>
<p>“Thanks, madame,—thanks for your punctuality;” and he offered
a chair to Madame Danglars, which she accepted, for her heart beat so violently
that she felt nearly suffocated.</p>
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<p>“It is a long time, madame,” said the procureur, describing a
half-circle with his chair, so as to place himself exactly opposite to Madame
Danglars,—“it is a long time since I had the pleasure of speaking
alone with you, and I regret that we have only now met to enter upon a painful
conversation.”</p>
<p>“Nevertheless, sir, you see I have answered your first appeal, although
certainly the conversation must be much more painful for me than for
you.” Villefort smiled bitterly.</p>
<p>“It is true, then,” he said, rather uttering his thoughts aloud
than addressing his companion,—“it is true, then, that all our
actions leave their traces—some sad, others bright—on our paths; it
is true that every step in our lives is like the course of an insect on the
sands;—it leaves its track! Alas, to many the path is traced by
tears.”</p>
<p>“Sir,” said Madame Danglars, “you can feel for my emotion,
can you not? Spare me, then, I beseech you. When I look at this
room,—whence so many guilty creatures have departed, trembling and
ashamed, when I look at that chair before which I now sit trembling and
ashamed,—oh, it requires all my reason to convince me that I am not a
very guilty woman and you a menacing judge.”</p>
<p>Villefort dropped his head and sighed.</p>
<p>“And I,” he said, “I feel that my place is not in the
judge’s seat, but on the prisoner’s bench.”</p>
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<p>“You?” said Madame Danglars.</p>
<p>“Yes, I.”</p>
<p>“I think, sir, you exaggerate your situation,” said Madame
Danglars, whose beautiful eyes sparkled for a moment. “The paths of which
you were just speaking have been traced by all young men of ardent
imaginations. Besides the pleasure, there is always remorse from the indulgence
of our passions, and, after all, what have you men to fear from all this? the
world excuses, and notoriety ennobles you.”</p>
<p>“Madame,” replied Villefort, “you know that I am no
hypocrite, or, at least, that I never deceive without a reason. If my brow be
severe, it is because many misfortunes have clouded it; if my heart be
petrified, it is that it might sustain the blows it has received. I was not so
in my youth, I was not so on the night of the betrothal, when we were all
seated around a table in the Rue du Cours at Marseilles. But since then
everything has changed in and about me; I am accustomed to brave difficulties,
and, in the conflict to crush those who, by their own free will, or by chance,
voluntarily or involuntarily, interfere with me in my career. It is generally
the case that what we most ardently desire is as ardently withheld from us by
those who wish to obtain it, or from whom we attempt to snatch it. Thus, the
greater number of a man’s errors come before him disguised under the
specious form of necessity; then, after error has been committed in a moment of
excitement, of delirium, or of fear, we see that we might have avoided and
escaped it. The means we might have used, which we in our blindness could not
see, then seem simple and easy, and we say, ‘Why did I not do this,
instead of that?’ Women, on the contrary, are rarely tormented with
remorse; for the decision does not come from you,—your misfortunes are
generally imposed upon you, and your faults the results of others’
crimes.”</p>
<p>“In any case, sir, you will allow,” replied Madame Danglars,
“that, even if the fault were alone mine, I last night received a severe
punishment for it.”</p>
<p>“Poor thing,” said Villefort, pressing her hand, “it was too
severe for your strength, for you were twice overwhelmed, and
yet——”</p>
<p>“Well?”</p>
<p>“Well, I must tell you. Collect all your courage, for you have not yet
heard all.”</p>
<p>“Ah,” exclaimed Madame Danglars, alarmed, “what is there more
to hear?”</p>
<p>“You only look back to the past, and it is, indeed, bad enough. Well,
picture to yourself a future more gloomy still—certainly frightful,
perhaps sanguinary!”</p>
<p>The baroness knew how calm Villefort naturally was, and his present excitement
frightened her so much that she opened her mouth to scream, but the sound died
in her throat.</p>
<p>“How has this terrible past been recalled?” cried Villefort;
“how is it that it has escaped from the depths of the tomb and the
recesses of our hearts, where it was buried, to visit us now, like a phantom,
whitening our cheeks and flushing our brows with shame?”</p>
<p>“Alas,” said Hermine, “doubtless it is chance.”</p>
<p>“Chance?” replied Villefort; “No, no, madame, there is no
such thing as chance.”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes; has not a fatal chance revealed all this? Was it not by chance
the Count of Monte Cristo bought that house? Was it not by chance he caused the
earth to be dug up? Is it not by chance that the unfortunate child was
disinterred under the trees?—that poor innocent offspring of mine, which
I never even kissed, but for whom I wept many, many tears. Ah, my heart clung
to the count when he mentioned the dear spoil found beneath the flowers.”</p>
<p>“Well, no, madame,—this is the terrible news I have to tell
you,” said Villefort in a hollow voice—“no, nothing was found
beneath the flowers; there was no child disinterred—no. You must not
weep, no, you must not groan, you must tremble!”</p>
<p>“What can you mean?” asked Madame Danglars, shuddering.</p>
<p>“I mean that M. de Monte Cristo, digging underneath these trees, found
neither skeleton nor chest, because neither of them was there!”</p>
<p>“Neither of them there?” repeated Madame Danglars, her staring,
wide-open eyes expressing her alarm. “Neither of them there!” she
again said, as though striving to impress herself with the meaning of the words
which escaped her.</p>
<p>“No,” said Villefort, burying his face in his hands, “no, a
hundred times no!”</p>
<p>“Then you did not bury the poor child there, sir? Why did you deceive me?
Where did you place it? tell me—where?”</p>
<p>“There! But listen to me—listen—and you will pity me who has
for twenty years alone borne the heavy burden of grief I am about to reveal,
without casting the least portion upon you.”</p>
<p>“Oh, you frighten me! But speak; I will listen.”</p>
<p>“You recollect that sad night, when you were half-expiring on that bed in
the red damask room, while I, scarcely less agitated than you, awaited your
delivery. The child was born, was given to me—motionless, breathless,
voiceless; we thought it dead.”</p>
<p>Madame Danglars moved rapidly, as though she would spring from her chair, but
Villefort stopped, and clasped his hands as if to implore her attention.</p>
<p>“We thought it dead,” he repeated; “I placed it in the chest,
which was to take the place of a coffin; I descended to the garden, I dug a
hole, and then flung it down in haste. Scarcely had I covered it with earth,
when the arm of the Corsican was stretched towards me; I saw a shadow rise,
and, at the same time, a flash of light. I felt pain; I wished to cry out, but
an icy shiver ran through my veins and stifled my voice; I fell lifeless, and
fancied myself killed. Never shall I forget your sublime courage, when, having
returned to consciousness, I dragged myself to the foot of the stairs, and you,
almost dying yourself, came to meet me. We were obliged to keep silent upon the
dreadful catastrophe. You had the fortitude to regain the house, assisted by
your nurse. A duel was the pretext for my wound. Though we scarcely expected
it, our secret remained in our own keeping alone. I was taken to Versailles;
for three months I struggled with death; at last, as I seemed to cling to life,
I was ordered to the South. Four men carried me from Paris to Châlons, walking
six leagues a day; Madame de Villefort followed the litter in her carriage. At
Châlons I was put upon the Saône, thence I passed on to the Rhône, whence I
descended, merely with the current, to Arles; at Arles I was again placed on my
litter, and continued my journey to Marseilles. My recovery lasted six months.
I never heard you mentioned, and I did not dare inquire for you. When I
returned to Paris, I learned that you, the widow of M. de Nargonne, had married
M. Danglars.</p>
<p>“What was the subject of my thoughts from the time consciousness returned
to me? Always the same—always the child’s corpse, coming every
night in my dreams, rising from the earth, and hovering over the grave with
menacing look and gesture. I inquired immediately on my return to Paris; the
house had not been inhabited since we left it, but it had just been let for
nine years. I found the tenant. I pretended that I disliked the idea that a
house belonging to my wife’s father and mother should pass into the hands
of strangers. I offered to pay them for cancelling the lease; they demanded
6,000 francs. I would have given 10,000—I would have given 20,000. I had
the money with me; I made the tenant sign the deed of resilition, and when I
had obtained what I so much wanted, I galloped to Auteuil. No one had entered
the house since I had left it.</p>
<p>“It was five o’clock in the afternoon; I ascended into the red
room, and waited for night. There all the thoughts which had disturbed me
during my year of constant agony came back with double force. The Corsican, who
had declared the vendetta against me, who had followed me from Nîmes to Paris,
who had hid himself in the garden, who had struck me, had seen me dig the
grave, had seen me inter the child,—he might become acquainted with your
person,—nay, he might even then have known it. Would he not one day make
you pay for keeping this terrible secret? Would it not be a sweet revenge for
him when he found that I had not died from the blow of his dagger? It was
therefore necessary, before everything else, and at all risks, that I should
cause all traces of the past to disappear—that I should destroy every
material vestige; too much reality would always remain in my recollection. It
was for this I had annulled the lease—it was for this I had come—it
was for this I was waiting.</p>
<p>“Night arrived; I allowed it to become quite dark. I was without a light
in that room; when the wind shook all the doors, behind which I continually
expected to see some spy concealed, I trembled. I seemed everywhere to hear
your moans behind me in the bed, and I dared not turn around. My heart beat so
violently that I feared my wound would open. At length, one by one, all the
noises in the neighborhood ceased. I understood that I had nothing to fear,
that I should neither be seen nor heard, so I decided upon descending to the
garden.</p>
<p>“Listen, Hermine; I consider myself as brave as most men, but when I drew
from my breast the little key of the staircase, which I had found in my
coat—that little key we both used to cherish so much, which you wished to
have fastened to a golden ring—when I opened the door, and saw the pale
moon shedding a long stream of white light on the spiral staircase like a
spectre, I leaned against the wall, and nearly shrieked. I seemed to be going
mad. At last I mastered my agitation. I descended the staircase step by step;
the only thing I could not conquer was a strange trembling in my knees. I
grasped the railings; if I had relaxed my hold for a moment, I should have
fallen. I reached the lower door. Outside this door a spade was placed against
the wall; I took it, and advanced towards the thicket. I had provided myself
with a dark lantern. In the middle of the lawn I stopped to light it, then I
continued my path.</p>
<p>“It was the end of November, all the verdure of the garden had
disappeared, the trees were nothing more than skeletons with their long bony
arms, and the dead leaves sounded on the gravel under my feet. My terror
overcame me to such a degree as I approached the thicket, that I took a pistol
from my pocket and armed myself. I fancied continually that I saw the figure of
the Corsican between the branches. I examined the thicket with my dark lantern;
it was empty. I looked carefully around; I was indeed alone,—no noise
disturbed the silence but the owl, whose piercing cry seemed to be calling up
the phantoms of the night. I tied my lantern to a forked branch I had noticed a
year before at the precise spot where I stopped to dig the hole.</p>
<p>“The grass had grown very thickly there during the summer, and when
autumn arrived no one had been there to mow it. Still one place where the grass
was thin attracted my attention; it evidently was there I had turned up the
ground. I went to work. The hour, then, for which I had been waiting during the
last year had at length arrived. How I worked, how I hoped, how I struck every
piece of turf, thinking to find some resistance to my spade! But no, I found
nothing, though I had made a hole twice as large as the first. I thought I had
been deceived—had mistaken the spot. I turned around, I looked at the
trees, I tried to recall the details which had struck me at the time. A cold,
sharp wind whistled through the leafless branches, and yet the drops fell from
my forehead. I recollected that I was stabbed just as I was trampling the
ground to fill up the hole; while doing so I had leaned against a laburnum;
behind me was an artificial rockery, intended to serve as a resting-place for
persons walking in the garden; in falling, my hand, relaxing its hold of the
laburnum, felt the coldness of the stone. On my right I saw the tree, behind me
the rock. I stood in the same attitude, and threw myself down. I rose, and
again began digging and enlarging the hole; still I found nothing,
nothing—the chest was no longer there!”</p>
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<p>“The chest no longer there?” murmured Madame Danglars, choking with
fear.</p>
<p>“Think not I contented myself with this one effort,” continued
Villefort. “No; I searched the whole thicket. I thought the assassin,
having discovered the chest, and supposing it to be a treasure, had intended
carrying it off, but, perceiving his error, had dug another hole, and deposited
it there; but I could find nothing. Then the idea struck me that he had not
taken these precautions, and had simply thrown it in a corner. In the last case
I must wait for daylight to renew my search. I remained in the room and
waited.”</p>
<p>“Oh, Heaven!”</p>
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<p>When daylight dawned I went down again. My first visit was to the thicket. I
hoped to find some traces which had escaped me in the darkness. I had turned up
the earth over a surface of more than twenty feet square, and a depth of two
feet. A laborer would not have done in a day what occupied me an hour. But I
could find nothing—absolutely nothing. Then I renewed the search.
Supposing it had been thrown aside, it would probably be on the path which led
to the little gate; but this examination was as useless as the first, and with
a bursting heart I returned to the thicket, which now contained no hope for
me.”</p>
<p>“Oh,” cried Madame Danglars, “it was enough to drive you
mad!”</p>
<p>“I hoped for a moment that it might,” said Villefort; “but
that happiness was denied me. However, recovering my strength and my ideas,
‘Why,’ said I, ‘should that man have carried away the
corpse?’”</p>
<p>“But you said,” replied Madame Danglars, “he would require it
as a proof.”</p>
<p>“Ah, no, madame, that could not be. Dead bodies are not kept a year; they
are shown to a magistrate, and the evidence is taken. Now, nothing of the kind
has happened.”</p>
<p>“What then?” asked Hermine, trembling violently.</p>
<p>“Something more terrible, more fatal, more alarming for us—the
child was, perhaps, alive, and the assassin may have saved it!”</p>
<p>Madame Danglars uttered a piercing cry, and, seizing Villefort’s hands,
exclaimed, “My child was alive?” said she; “you buried my
child alive? You were not certain my child was dead, and you buried it?
Ah——”</p>
<p>Madame Danglars had risen, and stood before the procureur, whose hands she
wrung in her feeble grasp.</p>
<p>“I know not; I merely suppose so, as I might suppose anything
else,” replied Villefort with a look so fixed, it indicated that his
powerful mind was on the verge of despair and madness.</p>
<p>“Ah, my child, my poor child!” cried the baroness, falling on her
chair, and stifling her sobs in her handkerchief. Villefort, becoming somewhat
reassured, perceived that to avert the maternal storm gathering over his head,
he must inspire Madame Danglars with the terror he felt.</p>
<p>“You understand, then, that if it were so,” said he, rising in his
turn, and approaching the baroness, to speak to her in a lower tone, “we
are lost. This child lives, and someone knows it lives—someone is in
possession of our secret; and since Monte Cristo speaks before us of a child
disinterred, when that child could not be found, it is he who is in possession
of our secret.”</p>
<p>“Just God, avenging God!” murmured Madame Danglars.</p>
<p>Villefort’s only answer was a stifled groan.</p>
<p>“But the child—the child, sir?” repeated the agitated mother.</p>
<p>“How I have searched for him,” replied Villefort, wringing his
hands; “how I have called him in my long sleepless nights; how I have
longed for royal wealth to purchase a million of secrets from a million of men,
and to find mine among them! At last, one day, when for the hundredth time I
took up my spade, I asked myself again and again what the Corsican could have
done with the child. A child encumbers a fugitive; perhaps, on perceiving it
was still alive, he had thrown it into the river.”</p>
<p>“Impossible!” cried Madame Danglars: “a man may murder
another out of revenge, but he would not deliberately drown a child.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps,” continued Villefort, “he had put it in the
foundling hospital.”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, yes,” cried the baroness; “my child is
there!”</p>
<p>“I ran to the hospital, and learned that the same night—the night
of the 20th of September—a child had been brought there, wrapped in part
of a fine linen napkin, purposely torn in half. This portion of the napkin was
marked with half a baron’s crown, and the letter H.”</p>
<p>“Truly, truly,” said Madame Danglars, “all my linen is marked
thus; Monsieur de Nargonne was a baron, and my name is Hermine. Thank God, my
child was not then dead!”</p>
<p>“No, it was not dead.”</p>
<p>“And you can tell me so without fearing to make me die of joy? Where is
the child?”</p>
<p>Villefort shrugged his shoulders.</p>
<p>“Do I know?” said he; “and do you believe that if I knew I
would relate to you all its trials and all its adventures as would a dramatist
or a novel writer? Alas, no, I know not. A woman, about six months after, came
to claim it with the other half of the napkin. This woman gave all the
requisite particulars, and it was intrusted to her.”</p>
<p>“But you should have inquired for the woman; you should have traced
her.”</p>
<p>“And what do you think I did? I feigned a criminal process, and employed
all the most acute bloodhounds and skilful agents in search of her. They traced
her to Châlons, and there they lost her.”</p>
<p>“They lost her?”</p>
<p>“Yes, forever.”</p>
<p>Madame Danglars had listened to this recital with a sigh, a tear, or a shriek
for every detail. “And this is all?” said she; “and you
stopped there?”</p>
<p>“Oh, no,” said Villefort; “I never ceased to search and to
inquire. However, the last two or three years I had allowed myself some
respite. But now I will begin with more perseverance and fury than ever, since
fear urges me, not my conscience.”</p>
<p>“But,” replied Madame Danglars, “the Count of Monte Cristo
can know nothing, or he would not seek our society as he does.”</p>
<p>“Oh, the wickedness of man is very great,” said Villefort,
“since it surpasses the goodness of God. Did you observe that man’s
eyes while he was speaking to us?”</p>
<p>“No.”</p>
<p>“But have you ever watched him carefully?”</p>
<p>“Doubtless he is capricious, but that is all; one thing alone struck
me,—of all the exquisite things he placed before us, he touched nothing.
I might have suspected he was poisoning us.”</p>
<p>“And you see you would have been deceived.”</p>
<p>“Yes, doubtless.”</p>
<p>“But believe me, that man has other projects. For that reason I wished to
see you, to speak to you, to warn you against everyone, but especially against
him. Tell me,” cried Villefort, fixing his eyes more steadfastly on her
than he had ever done before, “did you ever reveal to anyone our
connection?”</p>
<p>“Never, to anyone.”</p>
<p>“You understand me,” replied Villefort, affectionately; “when
I say anyone,—pardon my urgency,—to anyone living I mean?”</p>
<p>“Yes, yes, I understand very well,” ejaculated the baroness;
“never, I swear to you.”</p>
<p>“Were you ever in the habit of writing in the evening what had transpired
in the morning? Do you keep a journal?”</p>
<p>“No, my life has been passed in frivolity; I wish to forget it
myself.”</p>
<p>“Do you talk in your sleep?”</p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/30275m.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="30275m " /><br/></div>
<p>“I sleep soundly, like a child; do you not remember?”</p>
<p>The color mounted to the baroness’s face, and Villefort turned awfully
pale.</p>
<p>“It is true,” said he, in so low a tone that he could hardly be
heard.</p>
<p>“Well?” said the baroness.</p>
<p>“Well, I understand what I now have to do,” replied Villefort.
“In less than one week from this time I will ascertain who this M. de
Monte Cristo is, whence he comes, where he goes, and why he speaks in our
presence of children that have been disinterred in a garden.”</p>
<p>Villefort pronounced these words with an accent which would have made the count
shudder had he heard him. Then he pressed the hand the baroness reluctantly
gave him, and led her respectfully back to the door. Madame Danglars returned
in another cab to the passage, on the other side of which she found her
carriage, and her coachman sleeping peacefully on his box while waiting for
her.</p>
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