enveloped in a mantle of pink broad cloth, therese went down the steps with dechartre. he had come in the morning to joinville. she had made him join the circle of her intimate friends, before the hunting-party to which she feared le menil had been invited, as was the custom. the light air of september agitated the curls of her hair, and the sun made golden darts shine in the profound gray of her eyes. behind them, the facade of the palace displayed above the three arcades of the first story, in the intervals of the windows, on long tables, busts of roman emperors. the house was placed between two tall pavilions which their great slate roofs made higher, over pillars of the ionic order. this style betrayed the art of the architect leveau, who had constructed, in 1650, the castle of joinville-sur-oise for that rich mareuilles, creature of mazarin, and fortunate accomplice of fouquet.
therese and jacques saw before them the flower-beds designed by le notre, the green carpet, the fountain; then the grotto with its five rustic arcades crowned by the tall trees on which autumn had already begun to spread its golden mantle.
“this green geometry is beautiful,” said dechartre.
“yes,” said therese. “but i think of the tree bent in the small courtyard where grass grows among the stones. we shall build a beautiful fountain in it, shall we not, and put flowers in it?”
leaning against one of the stone lions with almost human faces, that guarded the steps, she turned her head toward the castle, and, looking at one of the windows, said:
“there is your room; i went into it last night. on the same floor, on the other side, at the other end, is my father’s office. a white wooden table, a mahogany portfolio, a decanter on the mantelpiece: his office when he was a young man. our entire fortune came from that place.”
through the sand-covered paths between the flowerbeds they walked to the boxwood hedge which bordered the park on the southern side. they passed before the orange-grove, the monumental door of which was surmounted by the lorraine cross of mareuilles, and then passed under the linden-trees which formed an alley on the lawn. statues of nymphs shivered in the damp shade studded with pale lights. a pigeon, posed on the shoulder of one of the white women, fled. from time to time a breath of wind detached a dried leaf which fell, a shell of red gold, where remained a drop of rain. therese pointed to the nymph and said:
“she saw me when i was a girl and wishing to die. i suffered from dreams and from fright. i was waiting for you. but you were so far away!”
the linden alley stopped near the large basin, in the centre of which was a group of tritons blowing in their shells to form, when the waters played, a liquid diadem with flowers of foam.
“it is the joinville crown,” she said.
she pointed to a pathway which, starting from the basin, lost itself in the fields, in the direction of the rising sun.
“this is my pathway. how often i walked in it sadly! i was sad when i did not know you.”
they found the alley which, with other lindens and other nymphs, went beyond. and they followed it to the grottoes. there was, in the rear of the park, a semicircle of five large niches of rocks surmounted by balustrades and separated by gigantic terminus gods. one of these gods, at a corner of the monument, dominated all the others by his monstrous nudity, and lowered on them his stony look.
“when my father bought joinville,” she said, “the grottoes were only ruins, full of grass and vipers. a thousand rabbits had made holes in them. he restored the terminus gods and the arcades in accordance with prints by perrelle, which are preserved at the bibliotheque nationale. he was his own architect.”
a desire for shade and mystery led them toward the arbor near the grottoes. but the noise of footsteps which they heard, coming from the covered alley, made them stop for a moment, and they saw, through the leaves, montessuy, with his arm around the princess seniavine’s waist. quietly they were walking toward the palace. jacques and therese, hiding behind the enormous terminus god, waited until they had passed.
then she said to dechartre, who was looking at her silently:
“that is amazing! i understand now why the princess seniavine, this winter, asked my father to advise her about buying horses.”
yet therese admired her father for having conquered that beautiful woman, who passed for being hard to please, and who was known to be wealthy, in spite of the embarrassments which her mad disorder had caused her. she asked jacques whether he did not think the princess was beautiful. he said she had elegance. she was beautiful, doubtless.
therese led jacques to the moss-covered steps which, ascending behind the grottoes, led to the gerbe-de-l’oise, formed of leaden reeds in the midst of a great pink marble vase. tall trees closed the park’s perspective and stood at the beginning of the forest. they walked under them. they were silent under the faint moan of the leaves.
he pressed her in his arms and placed kisses on her eyelids. night was descending, the first stars were trembling among the branches. in the damp grass sighed the frog’s flutes. they went no farther.
when she took with him, in darkness, the road to the palace, the taste of kisses and of mint remained on her lips, and in her eyes was the image of her lover. she smiled under the lindens at the nymphs who had seen the tears of her childhood. the swan lifted in the sky its cross of stars, and the moon mirrored its slender horn in the basin of the crown. insects in the grass uttered appeals to love. at the last turn of the boxwood hedge, therese and jacques saw the triple black mass of the castle, and through the wide bay-windows of the first story distinguished moving forms in the red light. the bell rang.
therese exclaimed:
“i have hardly time to dress for dinner.”
and she passed swiftly between the stone lions, leaving her lover under the impression of a fairy-tale vision.
in the drawing-room, after dinner, m. berthier d’eyzelles read the newspaper, and the princess seniavine played solitaire. therese sat, her eyes half closed over a book.
the princess asked whether she found what she was reading amusing.
“i do not know. i was reading and thinking. paul vence is right: ‘we find only ourselves in books.’”
through the hangings came from the billiard-room the voices of the players and the click of the balls.
“i have it!” exclaimed the princess, throwing down the cards.
she had wagered a big sum on a horse which was running that day at the chantilly races.
therese said she had received a letter from fiesole. miss bell announced her forthcoming marriage with prince eusebia albertinelli della spina.
the princess laughed:
“there’s a man who will render a service to her.”
“what service?” asked therese.
“he will disgust her with men, of course.”
montessuy came into the parlor joyfully. he had won the game.
he sat beside berthier-d’eyzelles, and, taking a newspaper from the sofa, said:
“the minister of finance announces that he will propose, when the chamber reassembles, his savings-bank bill.”
this bill was to give to savings-banks the authority to lend money to communes, a proceeding which would take from montessuy’s business houses their best customers.
“berthier,” asked the financier, “are you resolutely hostile to that bill?”
berthier nodded.
montessuy rose, placed his hand on the deputy’s shoulder, and said:
“my dear berthier, i have an idea that the cabinet will fall at the beginning of the session.”
he approached his daughter.
“i have received an odd letter from le menil.”
therese rose and closed the door that separated the parlor from the billiard-room.
she was afraid of draughts, she said.
“a singular letter,” continued montessuy. “le menil will not come to joinville. he has bought the yacht rosebud. he is on the mediterranean, and can not live except on the water. it is a pity. he is the only one who knows how to manage a hunt.”
at this instant dechartre came into the room with count martin, who, after beating him at billiards, had acquired a great affection for him and was explaining to him the dangers of a personal tax based on the number of servants one kept.