<h3><SPAN name="linkC2HCH0073" id="linkC2HCH0073"></SPAN> Chapter 73. The Promise</h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was indeed Maximilian
Morrel, who had passed a wretched existence since the previous day. With the
instinct peculiar to lovers he had anticipated after the return of Madame de
Saint-Méran and the death of the marquis, that something would occur at M. de
Villefort’s in connection with his attachment for Valentine. His
presentiments were realized, as we shall see, and his uneasy forebodings had
goaded him pale and trembling to the gate under the chestnut-trees.</p>
<p>Valentine was ignorant of the cause of this sorrow and anxiety, and as it was
not his accustomed hour for visiting her, she had gone to the spot simply by
accident or perhaps through sympathy. Morrel called her, and she ran to the
gate.</p>
<p>“You here at this hour?” said she.</p>
<p>“Yes, my poor girl,” replied Morrel; “I come to bring and to
hear bad tidings.”</p>
<p>“This is, indeed, a house of mourning,” said Valentine;
“speak, Maximilian, although the cup of sorrow seems already full.”</p>
<p>“Dear Valentine,” said Morrel, endeavoring to conceal his own
emotion, “listen, I entreat you; what I am about to say is very serious.
When are you to be married?”</p>
<p>“I will tell you all,” said Valentine; “from you I have
nothing to conceal. This morning the subject was introduced, and my dear
grandmother, on whom I depended as my only support, not only declared herself
favorable to it, but is so anxious for it, that they only await the arrival of
M. d’Épinay, and the following day the contract will be signed.”</p>
<p>A deep sigh escaped the young man, who gazed long and mournfully at her he
loved.</p>
<p>“Alas,” replied he, “it is dreadful thus to hear my
condemnation from your own lips. The sentence is passed, and, in a few hours,
will be executed; it must be so, and I will not endeavor to prevent it. But,
since you say nothing remains but for M. d’Épinay to arrive that the
contract may be signed, and the following day you will be his, tomorrow you
will be engaged to M. d’Épinay, for he came this morning to Paris.”
Valentine uttered a cry.</p>
<p>“I was at the house of Monte Cristo an hour since,” said Morrel;
“we were speaking, he of the sorrow your family had experienced, and I of
your grief, when a carriage rolled into the courtyard. Never, till then, had I
placed any confidence in presentiments, but now I cannot help believing them,
Valentine. At the sound of that carriage I shuddered; soon I heard steps on the
staircase, which terrified me as much as the footsteps of the commander did Don
Juan. The door at last opened; Albert de Morcerf entered first, and I began to
hope my fears were vain, when, after him, another young man advanced, and the
count exclaimed: ‘Ah, here is the Baron Franz d’Épinay!’ I
summoned all my strength and courage to my support. Perhaps I turned pale and
trembled, but certainly I smiled; and five minutes after I left, without having
heard one word that had passed.”</p>
<p>“Poor Maximilian!” murmured Valentine.</p>
<p>“Valentine, the time has arrived when you must answer me. And remember my
life depends on your answer. What do you intend doing?” Valentine held
down her head; she was overwhelmed.</p>
<p>“Listen,” said Morrel; “it is not the first time you have
contemplated our present position, which is a serious and urgent one; I do not
think it is a moment to give way to useless sorrow; leave that for those who
like to suffer at their leisure and indulge their grief in secret. There are
such in the world, and God will doubtless reward them in heaven for their
resignation on earth, but those who mean to contend must not lose one precious
moment, but must return immediately the blow which fortune strikes. Do you
intend to struggle against our ill-fortune? Tell me, Valentine for it is that I
came to know.”</p>
<p>Valentine trembled, and looked at him with amazement. The idea of resisting her
father, her grandmother, and all the family, had never occurred to her.</p>
<p>“What do you say, Maximilian?” asked Valentine. “What do you
mean by a struggle? Oh, it would be a sacrilege. What? I resist my
father’s order, and my dying grandmother’s wish? Impossible!”</p>
<p>Morrel started.</p>
<p>“You are too noble not to understand me, and you understand me so well
that you already yield, dear Maximilian. No, no; I shall need all my strength
to struggle with myself and support my grief in secret, as you say. But to
grieve my father—to disturb my grandmother’s last
moments—never!”</p>
<p>“You are right,” said Morrel, calmly.</p>
<p>“In what a tone you speak!” cried Valentine.</p>
<p>“I speak as one who admires you, mademoiselle.”</p>
<p>“Mademoiselle,” cried Valentine; “mademoiselle! Oh, selfish
man! he sees me in despair, and pretends he cannot understand me!”</p>
<p>“You mistake—I understand you perfectly. You will not oppose M.
Villefort, you will not displease the marchioness, and tomorrow you will sign
the contract which will bind you to your husband.”</p>
<p>“But, <i>mon Dieu!</i> tell me, how can I do otherwise?”</p>
<p>“Do not appeal to me, mademoiselle; I shall be a bad judge in such a
case; my selfishness will blind me,” replied Morrel, whose low voice and
clenched hands announced his growing desperation.</p>
<p>“What would you have proposed, Maximilian, had you found me willing to
accede?”</p>
<p>“It is not for me to say.”</p>
<p>“You are wrong; you must advise me what to do.”</p>
<p>“Do you seriously ask my advice, Valentine?”</p>
<p>“Certainly, dear Maximilian, for if it is good, I will follow it; you
know my devotion to you.”</p>
<p>“Valentine,” said Morrel pushing aside a loose plank, “give
me your hand in token of forgiveness of my anger; my senses are confused, and
during the last hour the most extravagant thoughts have passed through my
brain. Oh, if you refuse my advice——”</p>
<p>“What do you advise?” said Valentine, raising her eyes to heaven
and sighing.</p>
<p>“I am free,” replied Maximilian, “and rich enough to support
you. I swear to make you my lawful wife before my lips even shall have
approached your forehead.”</p>
<p>“You make me tremble!” said the young girl.</p>
<p>“Follow me,” said Morrel; “I will take you to my sister, who
is worthy also to be yours. We will embark for Algiers, for England, for
America, or, if you prefer it, retire to the country and only return to Paris
when our friends have reconciled your family.”</p>
<p>Valentine shook her head.</p>
<p>“I feared it, Maximilian,” said she; “it is the counsel of a
madman, and I should be more mad than you, did I not stop you at once with the
word ‘Impossible, Morrel, impossible!’”</p>
<p>“You will then submit to what fate decrees for you without even
attempting to contend with it?” said Morrel sorrowfully.</p>
<p>“Yes,—if I die!”</p>
<p>“Well, Valentine,” resumed Maximilian, “I can only say again
that you are right. Truly, it is I who am mad, and you prove to me that passion
blinds the most well-meaning. I appreciate your calm reasoning. It is then
understood that tomorrow you will be irrevocably promised to M. Franz
d’Épinay, not only by that theatrical formality invented to heighten the
effect of a comedy called the signature of the contract, but your own
will?”</p>
<p>“Again you drive me to despair, Maximilian,” said Valentine,
“again you plunge the dagger into the wound! What would you do, tell me,
if your sister listened to such a proposition?”</p>
<p>“Mademoiselle,” replied Morrel with a bitter smile, “I am
selfish—you have already said so—and as a selfish man I think not
of what others would do in my situation, but of what I intend doing myself. I
think only that I have known you not a whole year. From the day I first saw
you, all my hopes of happiness have been in securing your affection. One day
you acknowledged that you loved me, and since that day my hope of future
happiness has rested on obtaining you, for to gain you would be life to me.
Now, I think no more; I say only that fortune has turned against me—I had
thought to gain heaven, and now I have lost it. It is an every-day occurrence
for a gambler to lose not only what he possesses but also what he has
not.”</p>
<p>Morrel pronounced these words with perfect calmness; Valentine looked at him a
moment with her large, scrutinizing eyes, endeavoring not to let Morrel
discover the grief which struggled in her heart.</p>
<p>“But, in a word, what are you going to do?” asked she.</p>
<p>“I am going to have the honor of taking my leave of you, mademoiselle,
solemnly assuring you that I wish your life may be so calm, so happy, and so
fully occupied, that there may be no place for me even in your memory.”</p>
<p>“Oh!” murmured Valentine.</p>
<p>“Adieu, Valentine, adieu!” said Morrel, bowing.</p>
<p>“Where are you going?” cried the young girl, extending her hand
through the opening, and seizing Maximilian by his coat, for she understood
from her own agitated feelings that her lover’s calmness could not be
real; “where are you going?”</p>
<p>“I am going, that I may not bring fresh trouble into your family: and to
set an example which every honest and devoted man, situated as I am, may
follow.”</p>
<p>“Before you leave me, tell me what you are going to do,
Maximilian.” The young man smiled sorrowfully.</p>
<p>“Speak, speak!” said Valentine; “I entreat you.”</p>
<p>“Has your resolution changed, Valentine?”</p>
<p>“It cannot change, unhappy man; you know it must not!” cried the
young girl.</p>
<p>“Then adieu, Valentine!”</p>
<p>Valentine shook the gate with a strength of which she could not have been
supposed to be possessed, as Morrel was going away, and passing both her hands
through the opening, she clasped and wrung them. “I must know what you
mean to do!” said she. “Where are you going?”</p>
<p>“Oh, fear not,” said Maximilian, stopping at a short distance,
“I do not intend to render another man responsible for the rigorous fate
reserved for me. Another might threaten to seek M. Franz, to provoke him, and
to fight with him; all that would be folly. What has M. Franz to do with it? He
saw me this morning for the first time, and has already forgotten he has seen
me. He did not even know I existed when it was arranged by your two families
that you should be united. I have no enmity against M. Franz, and promise you
the punishment shall not fall on him.”</p>
<p>“On whom, then!—on me?”</p>
<p>“On you? Valentine! Oh, Heaven forbid! Woman is sacred; the woman one
loves is holy.”</p>
<p>“On yourself, then, unhappy man; on yourself?”</p>
<p>“I am the only guilty person, am I not?” said Maximilian.</p>
<p>“Maximilian!” said Valentine, “Maximilian, come back, I
entreat you!”</p>
<p>He drew near with his sweet smile, and but for his paleness one might have
thought him in his usual happy mood.</p>
<p>“Listen, my dear, my adored Valentine,” said he in his melodious
and grave tone; “those who, like us, have never had a thought for which
we need blush before the world, such may read each other’s hearts. I
never was romantic, and am no melancholy hero. I imitate neither Manfred nor
Anthony; but without words, protestations, or vows, my life has entwined itself
with yours; you leave me, and you are right in doing so,—I repeat it, you
are right; but in losing you, I lose my life. The moment you leave me,
Valentine, I am alone in the world. My sister is happily married; her husband
is only my brother-in-law, that is, a man whom the ties of social life alone
attach to me; no one then longer needs my useless life. This is what I shall
do; I will wait until the very moment you are married, for I will not lose the
shadow of one of those unexpected chances which are sometimes reserved for us,
since M. Franz may, after all, die before that time, a thunderbolt may fall
even on the altar as you approach it,—nothing appears impossible to one
condemned to die, and miracles appear quite reasonable when his escape from
death is concerned. I will, then, wait until the last moment, and when my
misery is certain, irremediable, hopeless, I will write a confidential letter
to my brother-in-law, another to the prefect of police, to acquaint them with
my intention, and at the corner of some wood, on the brink of some abyss, on
the bank of some river, I will put an end to my existence, as certainly as I am
the son of the most honest man who ever lived in France.”</p>
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<p>Valentine trembled convulsively; she loosened her hold of the gate, her arms
fell by her side, and two large tears rolled down her cheeks. The young man
stood before her, sorrowful and resolute.</p>
<p>“Oh, for pity’s sake,” said she, “you will live, will
you not?”</p>
<p>“No, on my honor,” said Maximilian; “but that will not affect
you. You have done your duty, and your conscience will be at rest.”</p>
<p>Valentine fell on her knees, and pressed her almost bursting heart.
“Maximilian,” said she, “Maximilian, my friend, my brother on
earth, my true husband in heaven, I entreat you, do as I do, live in suffering;
perhaps we may one day be united.”</p>
<p>“Adieu, Valentine,” repeated Morrel.</p>
<p>“My God,” said Valentine, raising both her hands to heaven with a
sublime expression, “I have done my utmost to remain a submissive
daughter; I have begged, entreated, implored; he has regarded neither my
prayers, my entreaties, nor my tears. It is done,” cried she, wiping away
her tears, and resuming her firmness, “I am resolved not to die of
remorse, but rather of shame. Live, Maximilian, and I will be yours. Say when
shall it be? Speak, command, I will obey.”</p>
<p>Morrel, who had already gone some few steps away, again returned, and pale with
joy extended both hands towards Valentine through the opening.</p>
<p>“Valentine,” said he, “dear Valentine, you must not speak
thus—rather let me die. Why should I obtain you by violence, if our love
is mutual? Is it from mere humanity you bid me live? I would then rather
die.”</p>
<p>“Truly,” murmured Valentine, “who on this earth cares for me,
if he does not? Who has consoled me in my sorrow but he? On whom do my hopes
rest? On whom does my bleeding heart repose? On him, on him, always on him!
Yes, you are right, Maximilian, I will follow you. I will leave the paternal
home, I will give up all. Oh, ungrateful girl that I am,” cried
Valentine, sobbing, “I will give up all, even my dear old grandfather,
whom I had nearly forgotten.”</p>
<p>“No,” said Maximilian, “you shall not leave him. M. Noirtier
has evinced, you say, a kind feeling towards me. Well, before you leave, tell
him all; his consent would be your justification in God’s sight. As soon
as we are married, he shall come and live with us, instead of one child, he
shall have two. You have told me how you talk to him and how he answers you; I
shall very soon learn that language by signs, Valentine, and I promise you
solemnly, that instead of despair, it is happiness that awaits us.”</p>
<p>“Oh, see, Maximilian, see the power you have over me, you almost make me
believe you; and yet, what you tell me is madness, for my father will curse
me—he is inflexible—he will never pardon me. Now listen to me,
Maximilian; if by artifice, by entreaty, by accident—in short, if by any
means I can delay this marriage, will you wait?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I promise you, as faithfully as you have promised me that this
horrible marriage shall not take place, and that if you are dragged before a
magistrate or a priest, you will refuse.”</p>
<p>“I promise you by all that is most sacred to me in the world, namely, by
my mother.”</p>
<p>“We will wait, then,” said Morrel.</p>
<p>“Yes, we will wait,” replied Valentine, who revived at these words;
“there are so many things which may save unhappy beings such as we
are.”</p>
<p>“I rely on you, Valentine,” said Morrel; “all you do will be
well done; only if they disregard your prayers, if your father and Madame de
Saint-Méran insist that M. d’Épinay should be called tomorrow to sign the
contract——”</p>
<p>“Then you have my promise, Maximilian.”</p>
<p>“Instead of signing——”</p>
<p>“I will go to you, and we will fly; but from this moment until then, let
us not tempt Providence, let us not see each other. It is a miracle, it is a
providence that we have not been discovered. If we were surprised, if it were
known that we met thus, we should have no further resource.”</p>
<p>“You are right, Valentine; but how shall I ascertain?”</p>
<p>“From the notary, M. Deschamps.”</p>
<p>“I know him.”</p>
<p>“And for myself—I will write to you, depend on me. I dread this
marriage, Maximilian, as much as you.”</p>
<p>“Thank you, my adored Valentine, thank you; that is enough. When once I
know the hour, I will hasten to this spot, you can easily get over this fence
with my assistance, a carriage will await us at the gate, in which you will
accompany me to my sister’s; there living, retired or mingling in
society, as you wish, we shall be enabled to use our power to resist
oppression, and not suffer ourselves to be put to death like sheep, which only
defend themselves by sighs.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Valentine, “I will now acknowledge you are right,
Maximilian; and now are you satisfied with your betrothal?” said the
young girl sorrowfully.</p>
<p>“My adored Valentine, words cannot express one half of my
satisfaction.”</p>
<p>Valentine had approached, or rather, had placed her lips so near the fence,
that they nearly touched those of Morrel, which were pressed against the other
side of the cold and inexorable barrier.</p>
<p>“Adieu, then, till we meet again,” said Valentine, tearing herself
away. “I shall hear from you?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“Thanks, thanks, dear love, adieu!”</p>
<p>The sound of a kiss was heard, and Valentine fled through the avenue. Morrel
listened to catch the last sound of her dress brushing the branches, and of her
footstep on the gravel, then raised his eyes with an ineffable smile of
thankfulness to heaven for being permitted to be thus loved, and then also
disappeared.</p>
<p>The young man returned home and waited all the evening and all the next day
without getting any message. It was only on the following day, at about ten
o’clock in the morning, as he was starting to call on M. Deschamps, the
notary, that he received from the postman a small billet, which he knew to be
from Valentine, although he had not before seen her writing. It was to this
effect:</p>
<p>“Tears, entreaties, prayers, have availed me nothing. Yesterday, for two
hours, I was at the church of Saint-Philippe-du-Roule, and for two hours I
prayed most fervently. Heaven is as inflexible as man, and the signature of the
contract is fixed for this evening at nine o’clock. I have but one
promise and but one heart to give; that promise is pledged to you, that heart
is also yours. This evening, then, at a quarter to nine at the gate.</p>
<p>“Your betrothed,</p>
<p>“Valentine de Villefort.”</p>
<p>“P.S.—My poor grandmother gets worse and worse; yesterday her fever
amounted to delirium; today her delirium is almost madness. You will be very
kind to me, will you not, Morrel, to make me forget my sorrow in leaving her
thus? I think it is kept a secret from grandpapa Noirtier, that the contract is
to be signed this evening.”</p>
<p>Morrel went also to the notary, who confirmed the news that the contract was to
be signed that evening. Then he went to call on Monte Cristo and heard still
more. Franz had been to announce the ceremony, and Madame de Villefort had also
written to beg the count to excuse her not inviting him; the death of M. de
Saint-Méran and the dangerous illness of his widow would cast a gloom over the
meeting which she would regret should be shared by the count whom she wished
every happiness.</p>
<p>The day before Franz had been presented to Madame de Saint-Méran, who had left
her bed to receive him, but had been obliged to return to it immediately after.</p>
<p>It is easy to suppose that Morrel’s agitation would not escape the
count’s penetrating eye. Monte Cristo was more affectionate than
ever,—indeed, his manner was so kind that several times Morrel was on the
point of telling him all. But he recalled the promise he had made to Valentine,
and kept his secret.</p>
<p>The young man read Valentine’s letter twenty times in the course of the
day. It was her first, and on what an occasion! Each time he read it he renewed
his vow to make her happy. How great is the power of a woman who has made so
courageous a resolution! What devotion does she deserve from him for whom she
has sacrificed everything! How ought she really to be supremely loved! She
becomes at once a queen and a wife, and it is impossible to thank and love her
sufficiently.</p>
<p>Morrel longed intensely for the moment when he should hear Valentine say,
“Here I am, Maximilian; come and help me.” He had arranged
everything for her escape; two ladders were hidden in the clover-field; a
cabriolet was ordered for Maximilian alone, without a servant, without lights;
at the turning of the first street they would light the lamps, as it would be
foolish to attract the notice of the police by too many precautions.
Occasionally he shuddered; he thought of the moment when, from the top of that
wall, he should protect the descent of his dear Valentine, pressing in his arms
for the first time her of whom he had yet only kissed the delicate hand.</p>
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