rays of dawn had passed through the slats of the blinds. The
matin birds began their song in the chestnut-tree near the window. M.
de Camors raised his head and listened in an absent mood to the sound
which astonished him. Seeing that it was daybreak, he folded in some
haste the pages he had just finished, pressed his seal upon the envelope,
and addressed it, "For the Comte Louis de Camors." Then he rose.
M. de Camors was a great lover of art, and had carefully preserved a
magnificent ivory carving of the sixteenth century, which had belonged
to his wife. It was a Christ the pallid white relieved by a medallion of
dark velvet.
His eye, meeting this pale, sad image, was attracted to it for a moment
with strange fascination. Then he smiled bitterly, seized one of the
pistols with a firm hand and pressed it to his temple.
A shot resounded through the house; the fall of a heavy body shook the
floor-fragments of brains strewed the carpet. The Comte de Camors had
plunged into eternity!
His last will was clenched in his hand.
To whom was this document addressed? Upon what kind of soil will
these seeds fall?
At this time Louis de Camors was twenty-seven years old. His mother
had died young. It did not appear that she had been particularly happy
with her husband; and her son barely remembered her as a young
woman, pretty and pale, and frequently weeping, who used to sing him
to sleep in a low, sweet voice. He had been brought up chiefly by his
father's mistress, who was known as the Vicomtesse d'Oilly, a widow,
and a rather good sort of woman. Her natural sensibility, and the laxity
of morals then reigning at Paris, permitted her to occupy herself at the
same time with the happiness of the father and the education of the son.
When the father deserted her after a time, he left her the child, to
comfort her somewhat by this mark of confidence and affection. She
took him out three times a week; she dressed him and combed him; she
fondled him and took him with her to church, and made him play with
a handsome Spaniard, who had been for some time her secretary.
Besides, she neglected no opportunity of inculcating precepts of sound
morality. Thus the child, being surprised at seeing her one evening
press a kiss upon the forehead of her secretary, cried out, with the blunt
candor of his age:
"Why, Madame, do you kiss a gentleman who is not your husband?"
"Because, my dear," replied the Countess, "our good Lord commands
us to be charitable and affectionate to the poor, the infirm, and the exile;
and Monsieur Perez is an exile."
Louis de Camors merited better care, for he was a generous-hearted
child; and his comrades of the college of Louis-le-Grand always
remembered the warm-heartedness and natural grace which made them
forgive his successes during the week, and his varnished boots and lilac
gloves on Sunday. Toward the close of his college course, he became
particularly attached to a poor bursar, by name Lescande, who excelled
in mathematics, but who was very ungraceful, awkwardly shy and
timid, with a painful sensitiveness to the peculiarities of his person. He
was nicknamed "Wolfhead," from the refractory nature of his hair; but
the elegant Camors stopped the scoffers by protecting the young man
with his friendship. Lescande felt this deeply, and adored his friend, to
whom he opened the inmost recesses of his heart, letting out some
important secrets.
He loved a very young girl who was his cousin, but was as poor as
himself. Still it was a providential thing for him that she was poor,
otherwise he never should have dared to aspire to her. It was a sad
occurrence that had first thrown Lescande with his cousin--the loss of
her father, who was chief of one of the Departments of State.
After his death she lived with her mother in very straitened
circumstances; and Lescande, on occasion of his last visit, found her
with soiled cuffs. Immediately after he received the following note:
"Pardon me, dear cousin! Pardon my not wearing white cuffs. But I
must tell you that we can change our cuffs--my mother and I--only
three times a week. As to her, one would never discover it. She is neat
as a bird. I also try to be; but, alas! when I practise the piano, my cuffs
rub. After this explanation, my good Theodore, I hope you will love me
as before.
"JULIETTE."
Lescande wept over this note. Luckily he had his prospects as an
architect; and Juliette had promised to wait for him ten years, by which
time he would either be dead, or living deliciously in a
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