The Clique of Gold eBook

Émile Gaboriau
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 623 pages of information about The Clique of Gold.

The Clique of Gold eBook

Émile Gaboriau
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 623 pages of information about The Clique of Gold.

A clerk whom he asked told him that the president was in his rooms,—­in the third story on the left.  He went up.  The maid who came to open the door recognized him.  It was the same Clarissa who had betrayed him.  When he asked for the count she invited him in.  She took him through an anteroom, dark, and fragrant with odors from the kitchen; and then, opening a door, she said;—­

“Please walk in!”

Before an immense table, covered with papers, sat Count Ville-Handry.  He had grown sadly old.  His lower lip hung down, giving him a painful expression of weakness of mind; and his watery eyes looked almost senile.  Still his efforts to look young had not been abandoned.  He was rouged and dyed as carefully as ever.  When he recognized Daniel, he pushed back his papers; and offering him his hand, as if they had parted the day before, he said,—­

“Ah, here you are back again among us!  Upon my word, I am very glad to see you!  We know what you have been doing out there; for my wife sent me again and again to the navy department to see if there were any news of you.  And you have become an officer of the Legion of Honor!  You ought to be pleased.”

“Fortune has favored, me, count.”

“Alas!  I am sorry I cannot say as much for myself,” replied the latter with a sigh.

“You must be surprised,” he continued, “to find me living in such a dog’s kennel, I who formerly—­But so it goes.  ’The ups and downs of speculations,’ says Sir Thorn.  Look here, my dear Daniel, let me give you a piece of advice:  never speculate in industrial enterprises!  Nowadays it is mere gambling, furious gambling; and everybody cheats.  If you stake a dollar, you are in for everything.  That is my story, and I thought I would enrich my country by a new source of revenue.  From the first day on which I emitted shares, speculators have gotten hold of them, and have crushed me, till my whole fortune has been spent in useless efforts to keep them up.  And yet Sir Thorn says I have fought as bravely on this slippery ground as my ancestors did in the lists.”

Every now and then the poor old man passed his hand over his face as if trying to drive away painful thoughts; and then he went on in a different tone of voice,—­

“And yet I am far from complaining.  My misfortunes have been the source of the purest and highest happiness for me.  It is to them I owe the knowledge of the boundless devotion of a beloved wife; they have taught me how dearly Sarah loves me.  I alone can tell what treasures are hid in that angelic heart, which they dared to calumniate.  Ah!  I think I can hear her now, when I told her one evening how embarrassed I had become in my finances.

“‘To have concealed that from me!’ she exclaimed,—­’from me, your wife:  that was wrong!’ And the very next day she showed her sublime courage.  She sold her diamonds to bring me the proceeds, and gave up to me her whole fortune.  And, since we are living here, she goes out on foot, like a simple citizen’s wife; and more than once I have caught her preparing our modest meals with her own hands.”

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Project Gutenberg
The Clique of Gold from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.