<h3><SPAN name="linkC2HCH0091" id="linkC2HCH0091"></SPAN> Chapter 91. Mother and Son</h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he Count of Monte
Cristo bowed to the five young men with a melancholy and dignified smile, and
got into his carriage with Maximilian and Emmanuel. Albert, Beauchamp, and
Château-Renaud remained alone. Albert looked at his two friends, not timidly,
but in a way that appeared to ask their opinion of what he had just done.</p>
<p>“Indeed, my dear friend,” said Beauchamp first, who had either the
most feeling or the least dissimulation, “allow me to congratulate you;
this is a very unhoped-for conclusion of a very disagreeable affair.”</p>
<p>Albert remained silent and wrapped in thought. Château-Renaud contented himself
with tapping his boot with his flexible cane.</p>
<p>“Are we not going?” said he, after this embarrassing silence.</p>
<p>“When you please,” replied Beauchamp; “allow me only to
compliment M. de Morcerf, who has given proof today of rare chivalric
generosity.”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes,” said Château-Renaud.</p>
<p>“It is magnificent,” continued Beauchamp, “to be able to
exercise so much self-control!”</p>
<p>“Assuredly; as for me, I should have been incapable of it,” said
Château-Renaud, with most significant coolness.</p>
<p>“Gentlemen,” interrupted Albert, “I think you did not
understand that something very serious had passed between M. de Monte Cristo
and myself.”</p>
<p>“Possibly, possibly,” said Beauchamp immediately; “but every
simpleton would not be able to understand your heroism, and sooner or later you
will find yourself compelled to explain it to them more energetically than
would be convenient to your bodily health and the duration of your life. May I
give you a friendly counsel? Set out for Naples, the Hague, or St.
Petersburg—calm countries, where the point of honor is better understood
than among our hot-headed Parisians. Seek quietude and oblivion, so that you
may return peaceably to France after a few years. Am I not right, M. de
Château-Renaud?”</p>
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<p>“That is quite my opinion,” said the gentleman; “nothing
induces serious duels so much as a duel forsworn.”</p>
<p>“Thank you, gentlemen,” replied Albert, with a smile of
indifference; “I shall follow your advice—not because you give it,
but because I had before intended to quit France. I thank you equally for the
service you have rendered me in being my seconds. It is deeply engraved on my
heart, and, after what you have just said, I remember that only.”</p>
<p>Château-Renaud and Beauchamp looked at each other; the impression was the same
on both of them, and the tone in which Morcerf had just expressed his thanks
was so determined that the position would have become embarrassing for all if
the conversation had continued.</p>
<p>“Good-bye, Albert,” said Beauchamp suddenly, carelessly extending
his hand to the young man. The latter did not appear to arouse from his
lethargy; in fact, he did not notice the offered hand.</p>
<p>“Good-bye,” said Château-Renaud in his turn, keeping his little
cane in his left hand, and saluting with his right.</p>
<p>Albert’s lips scarcely whispered “Good-bye,” but his look was
more explicit; it expressed a whole poem of restrained anger, proud disdain,
and generous indignation. He preserved his melancholy and motionless position
for some time after his two friends had regained their carriage; then suddenly
unfastening his horse from the little tree to which his servant had tied it, he
mounted and galloped off in the direction of Paris.</p>
<p>In a quarter of an hour he was entering the house in the Rue du Helder. As he
alighted, he thought he saw his father’s pale face behind the curtain of
the count’s bedroom. Albert turned away his head with a sigh, and went to
his own apartments. He cast one lingering look on all the luxuries which had
rendered life so easy and so happy since his infancy; he looked at the
pictures, whose faces seemed to smile, and the landscapes, which appeared
painted in brighter colors. Then he took away his mother’s portrait, with
its oaken frame, leaving the gilt frame from which he took it black and empty.
Then he arranged all his beautiful Turkish arms, his fine English guns, his
Japanese china, his cups mounted in silver, his artistic bronzes by Feuchères
or Barye; examined the cupboards, and placed the key in each; threw into a
drawer of his secretaire, which he left open, all the pocket-money he had about
him, and with it the thousand fancy jewels from his vases and his jewel-boxes;
then he made an exact inventory of everything, and placed it in the most
conspicuous part of the table, after putting aside the books and papers which
had collected there.</p>
<p>At the beginning of this work, his servant, notwithstanding orders to the
contrary, came to his room.</p>
<p>“What do you want?” asked he, with a more sorrowful than angry
tone.</p>
<p>“Pardon me, sir,” replied the valet; “you had forbidden me to
disturb you, but the Count of Morcerf has called me.”</p>
<p>“Well!” said Albert.</p>
<p>“I did not like to go to him without first seeing you.”</p>
<p>“Why?”</p>
<p>“Because the count is doubtless aware that I accompanied you to the
meeting this morning.”</p>
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<p>“It is probable,” said Albert.</p>
<p>“And since he has sent for me, it is doubtless to question me on what
happened there. What must I answer?”</p>
<p>“The truth.”</p>
<p>“Then I shall say the duel did not take place?”</p>
<p>“You will say I apologized to the Count of Monte Cristo. Go.”</p>
<p>The valet bowed and retired, and Albert returned to his inventory. As he was
finishing this work, the sound of horses prancing in the yard, and the wheels
of a carriage shaking his window, attracted his attention. He approached the
window, and saw his father get into it, and drive away. The door was scarcely
closed when Albert bent his steps to his mother’s room; and, no one being
there to announce him, he advanced to her bedchamber, and distressed by what he
saw and guessed, stopped for one moment at the door.</p>
<p>As if the same idea had animated these two beings, Mercédès was doing the same
in her apartments that he had just done in his. Everything was in
order,—laces, dresses, jewels, linen, money, all were arranged in the
drawers, and the countess was carefully collecting the keys. Albert saw all
these preparations and understood them, and exclaiming, “My
mother!” he threw his arms around her neck.</p>
<p>The artist who could have depicted the expression of these two countenances
would certainly have made of them a beautiful picture. All these proofs of an
energetic resolution, which Albert did not fear on his own account, alarmed him
for his mother. “What are you doing?” asked he.</p>
<p>“What were you doing?” replied she.</p>
<p>“Oh, my mother!” exclaimed Albert, so overcome he could scarcely
speak; “it is not the same with you and me—you cannot have made the
same resolution I have, for I have come to warn you that I bid adieu to your
house, and—and to you.”</p>
<p>“I also,” replied Mercédès, “am going, and I acknowledge I
had depended on your accompanying me; have I deceived myself?”</p>
<p>“Mother,” said Albert with firmness. “I cannot make you share
the fate I have planned for myself. I must live henceforth without rank and
fortune, and to begin this hard apprenticeship I must borrow from a friend the
loaf I shall eat until I have earned one. So, my dear mother, I am going at
once to ask Franz to lend me the small sum I shall require to supply my present
wants.”</p>
<p>“You, my poor child, suffer poverty and hunger? Oh, do not say so; it
will break my resolutions.”</p>
<p>“But not mine, mother,” replied Albert. “I am young and
strong; I believe I am courageous, and since yesterday I have learned the power
of will. Alas, my dear mother, some have suffered so much, and yet live, and
have raised a new fortune on the ruin of all the promises of happiness which
heaven had made them—on the fragments of all the hope which God had given
them! I have seen that, mother; I know that from the gulf in which their
enemies have plunged them they have risen with so much vigor and glory that in
their turn they have ruled their former conquerors, and have punished them. No,
mother; from this moment I have done with the past, and accept nothing from
it—not even a name, because you can understand that your son cannot bear
the name of a man who ought to blush for it before another.”</p>
<p>“Albert, my child,” said Mercédès, “if I had a stronger
heart, that is the counsel I would have given you; your conscience has spoken
when my voice became too weak; listen to its dictates. You had friends, Albert;
break off their acquaintance. But do not despair; you have life before you, my
dear Albert, for you are yet scarcely twenty-two years old; and as a pure heart
like yours wants a spotless name, take my father’s—it was Herrera.
I am sure, my dear Albert, whatever may be your career, you will soon render
that name illustrious. Then, my son, return to the world still more brilliant
because of your former sorrows; and if I am wrong, still let me cherish these
hopes, for I have no future to look forward to. For me the grave opens when I
pass the threshold of this house.”</p>
<p>“I will fulfil all your wishes, my dear mother,” said the young
man. “Yes, I share your hopes; the anger of Heaven will not pursue us,
since you are pure and I am innocent. But, since our resolution is formed, let
us act promptly. M. de Morcerf went out about half an hour ago; the opportunity
is favorable to avoid an explanation.”</p>
<p>“I am ready, my son,” said Mercédès.</p>
<p>Albert ran to fetch a carriage. He recollected that there was a small furnished
house to let in the Rue des Saints-Pères, where his mother would find a humble
but decent lodging, and thither he intended conducting the countess. As the
carriage stopped at the door, and Albert was alighting, a man approached and
gave him a letter.</p>
<p>Albert recognized the bearer. “From the count,” said Bertuccio.
Albert took the letter, opened, and read it, then looked round for Bertuccio,
but he was gone.</p>
<p>He returned to Mercédès with tears in his eyes and heaving breast, and without
uttering a word he gave her the letter. Mercédès read:</p>
<p>“Albert,—While showing you that I have discovered your plans, I
hope also to convince you of my delicacy. You are free, you leave the
count’s house, and you take your mother to your home; but reflect,
Albert, you owe her more than your poor noble heart can pay her. Keep the
struggle for yourself, bear all the suffering, but spare her the trial of
poverty which must accompany your first efforts; for she deserves not even the
shadow of the misfortune which has this day fallen on her, and Providence is
not willing that the innocent should suffer for the guilty. I know you are
going to leave the Rue du Helder without taking anything with you. Do not seek
to know how I discovered it; I know it—that is sufficient.</p>
<p>“Now, listen, Albert. Twenty-four years ago I returned, proud and joyful,
to my country. I had a betrothed, Albert, a lovely girl whom I adored, and I
was bringing to my betrothed a hundred and fifty louis, painfully amassed by
ceaseless toil. This money was for her; I destined it for her, and, knowing the
treachery of the sea I buried our treasure in the little garden of the house my
father lived in at Marseilles, on the Allées de Meilhan. Your mother, Albert,
knows that poor house well. A short time since I passed through Marseilles, and
went to see the old place, which revived so many painful recollections; and in
the evening I took a spade and dug in the corner of the garden where I had
concealed my treasure. The iron box was there—no one had touched
it—under a beautiful fig-tree my father had planted the day I was born,
which overshadowed the spot. Well, Albert, this money, which was formerly
designed to promote the comfort and tranquillity of the woman I adored, may
now, through strange and painful circumstances, be devoted to the same purpose.</p>
<p>“Oh, feel for me, who could offer millions to that poor woman, but who
return her only the piece of black bread forgotten under my poor roof since the
day I was torn from her I loved. You are a generous man, Albert, but perhaps
you may be blinded by pride or resentment; if you refuse me, if you ask another
for what I have a right to offer you, I will say it is ungenerous of you to
refuse the life of your mother at the hands of a man whose father was allowed
by your father to die in all the horrors of poverty and despair.”</p>
<p>Albert stood pale and motionless to hear what his mother would decide after she
had finished reading this letter. Mercédès turned her eyes with an ineffable
look towards heaven.</p>
<p>“I accept it,” said she; “he has a right to pay the dowry,
which I shall take with me to some convent!”</p>
<p>Putting the letter in her bosom, she took her son’s arm, and with a
firmer step than she even herself expected she went downstairs.</p>
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