Read The Chevalier De Maison Rouge Online
Authors: Alexandre Dumas
wish to say to me, Maurice ? "
" You have been arrested through me, condemned for
her ; as for Genevieve and I, let us pay our debt ; it is
not fair, at the same time, that you should be made to pay
also."
" I do not understand you."
" Louis, you are free."
"I, free ? you are mad !" said Louis.
" No, I am not mad ; 1 repeat that you are free ; see, here is the pass. They will iiu|uire who you are ; you
are cmploved at the register of the Carmelites, and are
going to speak to the registrar of the palace ; you have,
from motives of curiosity, requested a pass from him to
THE CHEVALIER DE MAISON ROUGE. 4Q1
see the condemned ; you have seen them, and are now
leaving, perfectly satisfied with your visit."
" This is a joke, is it not ? "
"~So, indeed, my friend ; here is the card, take advantage of it. You are not a lover, like myself ; you do not
wish to die that you may be enabled to pass a few more
minutes in the society of the well-beloved of your heart,
and not to lose a second of eternity with her."
" But, Maurice," replied Louis, " if one might be able to get out from here a circumstance I swear to you I could
not have believed possible why do you not save madame
first ? as to yourself, we will consider afterward about that."
"Impossible !" said Maurice, with a frightful oppression at his heart ; " this card is for a citoyen, not for a citoyenne ; besides, Genevieve would not depart and leave
me here to live herself, while knowing that I remained to
die."
" If she would not, then why should I ? Do you im-
agine I possess less courage than a woman ? "
" Xo, dear friend ; I know and acknowledge your
bravery, but nothing can excuse your obstinacy in this
case. Then, profit by this moment, and allow us the su-
preme felicity of knowing and feeling that you are free
and happy.''
"Happy ! '' said Louis. ''You are facetious, surely
happy without you, eh ? What the devil am I to do in
this world without you ? In Paris, without my usual
avocations, without seeing you again ; to weary you no
more with my bouts-rimes ; ah, pardicu, no ! '"
' Louis, my friend ''
" Exactly ; it is because I am your friend that I persist in my opinion, with the prospect of recovering you both ;
were I a prisoner, as I now am, I would tear down the
walls, but to save myself, and go out from here alone into
the streets, my head bowed down with a feeling resem-
bling remorse, and a continued cry in my ears, ' Maurice
Genevieve ! ' To pass into certain quarters, and before
certain houses, where I have seen your persons, but shall
now only recognize your shadows ; to arrive at last to exe-
402 THE CHEVALIER DE MAISON ROUGE.
crate this dear Paris that I love so well ; ah, ma foi, no !
And I find there was good reason to proscribe these kings ; might not this be the motive of King Dagobert ? "
" And what relation has King Dagobert with what
concerns us ?"
" What ? Did not this frightful tyrant say of the
grand Eloi, ' He is not such good company that one can-
not quit him.' Ah, well ! I am a Republican. I say one
never ought to quit good company, even the guillotine ; I
feel very comfortable here, and I will remain."
" Poor fellow ! poor fellow ! " said Maurice.
Genevieve said nothing, but looked at them with eyes
suffused with tears.
" You regret your life, then ?" said Louis.
" Yes, on her account."
" And I have nothing to regret in mine, not even on
account of the Goddess Reason, who, I had forgotten to
tell you, has latterly behaved most shamefully to me ;
who will not take the trouble even to console herself, like the other Arthemises of old. I shall go to my death perfectly cool and rather facetious. I will amuse all the beg-
garly wretches who follow the cart. I will repeat a pretty
quatrain to Monsieur Sanson, and wish the company good-
night that is to say wait, then " Louis interrupted
himself. " Ah ! if so," said he, " I will go out. I well know I love no one, but I forgot that I hated some one.
The time, Maurice, the time ! "
'Half-past three."
' I have time, mon Dieu there is time."
"Certainly," cried Maurice; '-there are nine more accused persons still to be tried, this will not terminate
before live o'clock ; we have, therefore, nearly two hours'
respite."
" That is all that I require ; lend me your card, and
also twenty sous."
" Ah, mon Dicu ! what are you going to do ?" mur-
mured Genevieve.
Maurice pressed his hand ; it was important to him that
Louis should go out.
THE CHEVALIER DE MAISON ROUGE. 403
tf I have my own plan," said Louis.
Maurice drew his purse from his pocket, and placed it
in his friend's hand.
" Now, the card, for the love of God I ought to say,
for the love of the Supreme Being."
Maurice gave him the pass. Louis kissed Genevieve's
hand, and availing himself of the moment when a fresh
batch of the condemned were ushered in he leaped the
benches, and presented himself before the principal en-
trance.
" Eh ! " said the gendarme, " here is one, it appears to me, trying to escape."
Louis drew himself up, and presented his card.
" Hold, Citizen Gendarme," said he, " and learn to know people better."
The gendarme recognized the signature of the registrar,
but, belonging to a class of functionaries rather wanting
in confidence and as at this moment the registrar himself
came down from the tribunal with a nervous shudder,
which had not left him since he had so imprudently haz-
arded his signature :
' Citizen Registrar," said he, " here is a pass bearing your signature, with which this person wishes to leave La
Salle des Morts ; is it all right ? "
The registrar turned pale with fright, and, feeling con-
vinced that if be turned his eyes in that direction it would only be to encounter the terrible figure of Dixmer, hastily seizing the card, quickly replied :
" Yes, yes, it is my signature."
11 Then," cried Louis, "if it is your signature, return it to me."
' Xo," said the registrar, tearing it into a thousand
pieces, " these cards can only be once available."
Louis remained for a moment irresolute.
" So much the worse," said he ; " but, above all things, it is necessary I should kill him ;" and he passed through the office.
Maurice had followed Louis with an emotion easy to
comprehend When he had disappeared, Maurice re-
404: THE CHEVALIER DE MAISON ROUGE,
turned, saying, with an exultation nearly amounting to
joy :
" He is saved, Genevieve ; the card is destroyed, therefore he cannot return-. Besides, even if he were able to
do so, the sitting of the tribunal will have terminated at
five o'clock. He will return, but we shall have ceased to
live."
Genevie've shuddered, and breathed a deep sigh.
" Oh, press me in your arms !" said she, "and let us separate no more. Why is not possible, oh my God ! for
one blow to annihilate us both, that together we might
breathe our last sigh ? "
Then, retiring into the deep shade of the gloomy hall,
Geneveive placed herself near Maurice, who closely twined
his arms around her. Thus they remained, rendered by
the strength of their love insensible to the surrounding
scene, almost to the approach of even death itself. Half
an hour passed thus.
CHAPTER LV.
WHY LOUIS WENT OUT.
SUDDENLY a loud noise was heard ; the gendarmes
opened the lower door ; behind them appeared Sanson and
his assistants, the latter carrying rolls of cord.
" Oh, won ami, mon ami!" said Genevieve, " the fatal moment has arrived, and I feel that my senses are leaving
me."
"There you are wrong," said the cheering voice of Louis.
" Here you are wrong, en veriet,
Since death is now la libert&."
" Louis ! " cried Maurice, in despair.
" Well, that is good, now, is it not ? I have adopted
your opinion since yesterday evening, and could not be so
contemptible "
" Ah ! that is the question. You are returned, unhappy man, you are returned I "
THE CHEVALIER DE MAISON ROUGE. 405
"I considered that was our agreement. But listen, as
wlnit I have to say to you will also interest madame."
" Mon Dieu ! Mon Dicu ! "
" Allow me to speak, or I shall not have time to tell you all. I wished to go out that I might purchase a knife in
La Rue de la Baullerie."
" What did you want with a knife ? "
" I wished to despatch this nice Monsieur Dixmer."
Genevieve shuddered.
"Ah ! " said Maurice, "I comprehend/'
" I purchased it. Listen attentively to what I tell you, and you will understand your friend has a soul for logic ;
indeed, I begin to think I should have been a mathe-
matician instead of a poet. Unfortunately, it is now too
late. This is the way I reasoned : Monsieur Dixmer has
compromised his wife ; Monsieur Dixmer came to be pres-
ent at her trial, and Monsieur Dixmer will not deprive
himself of the pleasure of seeing her pass in the fatal
cart ; and, above all, he will accompany us. I will
then look for him in the foremost of the spectators. I
will glide near him, and say, ' Bon jour, Monsieur
Dixmer ; ' and then I will drive my knife into his ribs,
or his heart.''
" Louis ! '' cried Genevieve.
'*' Rest assured, dear friend, Providence has arranged all.
Picture to yourself the spectators, instead of remaining
stationary in front of the palace, according to their usual custom, making a demiturn to the right, and assembling
on the borders of the quay.
" Oh ! '' said I to myself, it is doubtless a dog drowned.
Why should not Dixmer be there ? Even a dog drowning
will serve to pass away the time. I approached the
parapet, and beheld all along the high bank a troop of
people, who, throwing their arms aloft in the air, and
uttering loud exclamations, stooped down to gaze into the
water beneath. I joined them and also looked down
there was something guess what it was
" Dixmer ! " said Maurice, in a gloomy tone.
" Yes. How could you guess that ? Yes, it was
406 THE CHEVALIER DE MAISON ROUGE.
Dixmer, severely wounded. The unfortunate wretch
killed himself in expiation, no doubt."
" Ah ! " said Maurice, with a sad smile, " do you think so?"
Genevive let her head drop between her two hands.
She was too feeble to support these successive emotions.
" Yes, I thought so, from his blood-stained sword being found near him at least sometimes he had not met any
one "
Maurice, without reply, availing himself of the moment
when Geuevieve, overpowered by emotion, did not observe,
opened his coat and displayed to Louis his waistcoat and
shirt stained with blood.
"Ah ! this alters the case," said Louis, as he held out his hand to Maurice. "Now," said he, whispering in his ear, " they have not searched me, seeing that I entered in Sanson's suite. I have the weapon still if the guillotine
is too revolting to your feelings."
Maurice seized his arm with a joyful expression,
" No," said he, "she would suffer too much."
And he returned the knife to Louis.
" You are right," said he, " long live Monsieur Guillotine ! Why, what is it, after all ? a filip on the neck, as I observed to Dan ton. And what is that, after all ? "
And he flung his knife in the midst of a group of the con-
demned, one of whom immediately seized and buried it in
his breast. He was dead in an instant. At the same mo-
ment Genevieve awoke and uttered a piercing cry. Sho
felt the pressure of the executioner's hand upon her shoul-
der.
THE CHEVALIER DE MAISON ROUGE. 407
" LOXG LIVE SIMON ! "
AT the sonnd of this cry, Maurice understood that the
struggle was about to commence. The influence of love
may be able to exalt the love to heroism it may, against
natural instinct, impel a human being to desire death, but
it had not, in his instance, extinguished the fear of pain.
It was evident that G-eiievieve resigned herself the more
patiently to death since Maurice was to die with her ; but
resignation did not exclude suffering, and to quit this
world is not only to fall into the abyss termed fathomless
and unknown, but also to suffer in the descent. Maurice,
at a glance, embraced the entire scene and thought of
what would follow. In the center of the hall lay the
suicide, from whose breast the gendarme had just torn the
weapon of destruction, fearing, probably, it might be
useful to some others. Around him were several indi-
viduals, mute with despair, and scarcely heeding him,
inscribing in their pocket-books some indistinct words,
or pressing one another's hands ; some repeating, without
any intermission, a cherished name, as if imbecile, or
bathing with tears a portrait, a ring, or tress of hair ;
some hurling imprecations against tyranny, a word ban-
ished and cursed by each one in turn, and sometimes even