Stories of Modern French Novels
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第88章

From the doorway my eyes met hers, and I could not mistake their look of impatience and intense anxiety.I placed the little coffer on her bed and she instantly opened it, took out a packet of letters, then another, finally kept only one out, replaced those she had removed at first, locked the box, and signed to me to place it on the chest of drawers.While I was clearing away the things on the top of the drawers, to make a clear space for the box, Icaught sight, in the glass opposite to me, of the sick woman.By a great effort she had turned herself partly on her side, and she was trying to throw the packet of letters which she had retained into the fireplace; it was on the right of her bed, and only about a yard away from the foot.But she could hardly raise herself at all, the movement of her hand was too weak, and the little parcel fell on the floor.I hastened to her, to replace her head on the pillows and her body in the middle of the bed, and then, with her powerless arm she again began to make that terrible gesture of despair, clutching the sheet with her thin fingers, while tears streamed from her poor eyes.

Ah! how bitterly ashamed I am of what I am going to write in this place! I will write it, however, for I have sworn to myself that Iwill be true, even to the avowal of that fault, even to the avowal of a worse still.I had no difficulty in understanding what was passing in my aunt's mind; the little packet--it had fallen on the carpet close to the fender--evidently contained letters which she wished to destroy, so that I should not read them.She might have burned them, dreading as she did their fatal influence upon me, long since; yet I understood why she had shrunk from doing this, year after year, I, who knew with what idolatry she worshipped the smallest objects that had belonged to my father.Had I not seen her put away the blotting-book which he used when he came to Compiegne, with the paper and envelopes that were in it at his last visit?

Yes, she had gone on waiting, still waiting, before she could bring herself to part forever with those dear and dangerous letters, and then her sudden illness came, and with it the terrible thought that these papers would come into my possession.I could also take into account that the unreasonable distrust which she had yielded to of late had prevented her from asking Jean or Julie for the little coffer.This was the secret--I understood it on the instant--of the poor thing's impatience for my arrival, the secret also of the trouble I had witnessed.And now her strength had betrayed her.

She had vainly endeavored to throw the letters into the fire, that fire which she could hear crackling, without being able to raise her head so as to see the flame.All these notions which presented themselves suddenly to my thoughts took form afterwards; at the moment they melted into pity for the suffering of the helpless creature before me.

"Do not disturb yourself, dear aunt," said I, as I drew the coverlet up to her shoulders, "I am going to burn those letters."She raised her eyes, full of eager supplication.I closed the lids with my lips and stooped to pick up the little packet.On the paper in which it was folded, I distinctly read this date: "1864--Justin's letters." 1864! that was the last year of my father's life.I know it, I feel it, that which I did was infamous; the last wishes of the dying are sacred.I ought not, no, I ought not to have deceived her who was on the point of leaving me forever.Iheard her breathing quicken at that very moment.Then came a whirlwind of thought too strong for me.If my Aunt Louise was so wildly, passionately eager that those letters should be burned, it was because they could put me on the right track of vengeance.

Letters written in the last year of my father's life, and she had never spoken of them to me! I did not reason, I did not hesitate, in a lightning-flash I perceived the possibility of learning--what?

I know not; but--of learning.Instead of throwing the packet of letters into the fire, I flung it to one side, under a chair, returned to the bedside and told her in a voice which I endeavored to keep steady and calm, that her directions had been obeyed, that the letters were burning.She took my hand and kissed it.Oh, what a stab that gentle caress inflicted upon me! I knelt down by her bedside, and hid my head in the sheets, so that her eyes should not meet mine.Alas! it was not for long that I had to dread her glance.At ten she fell asleep, but at noon her restlessness recurred.At two the priest came, and administered the last sacraments to her.She had a second stroke towards evening, never recovered consciousness, and died in the night.