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In The Second April
by
“Because otherwise I would not have been the devil’s lackey?” said John Bulmer. “Eh, mademoiselle, I have been inspecting the world for more years than I care to confess; I have observed the king upon his throne, and the caught thief upon his coffin in passage for the gallows: and I suspect they both came thither through taking such employment as chance offered. Meanwhile, we waste daylight. You were journeying–?”
“To Perdigon,” Claire answered. She drew nearer to him and laid one hand upon his arm. “You are a gallant man, Monsieur Bulmer. Surely you understand. Two weeks ago my brother affianced me to the Duke of Ormskirk. Ormskirk!–ah, I know he is your kinsman,–your patron,–but you yourself could not deny that the world reeks with his infamy. And my own brother, monsieur, had betrothed me to this perjurer, to that lewd rake, to that inhuman devil who slaughters defenceless prisoners, men, women, and children alike. Why, I had sooner marry the first beggar or the ugliest fiend in hell!” the girl wailed, and she wrung her plump little hands in desperation.
“Good, good!” he cried, in his soul. “It appears my eloquence of yesterday was greater than I knew of!”
Claire resumed: “But you cannot argue with Gaston–he merely shrugs. So I decided to go over to Perdigon and marry Gérard des Roches. He has wanted to marry me for a long while, but Gaston said he was too poor. And, O Monsieur Bulmer, Gérard is so very, very stupid!–but he was the only person available, and in any event,” she concluded, with a sigh of resignation, “he is preferable to that terrible Ormskirk.”
John Bulmer gazed on her considerately. “‘Beautiful as an angel, and headstrong as a devil,'” was his thought, “You have an eye, Gaston!” Aloud John Bulmer said: “Your remedy against your brother’s tyranny, mademoiselle, is quite masterly, though perhaps a trifle Draconic. Yet if on his return he find you already married, he undoubtedly cannot hand you over to this wicked Ormskirk. Marry, therefore, by all means,–but not with this stupid Gérard.”
“With whom, then?” she wondered.
“Fate has planned it,” he laughed; “here are you and I, and yonder is the clergyman whom Madam Destiny has thoughtfully thrown in our way.”
“Not you,” she answered, gravely. “I am too deeply in your debt, Monsieur Bulmer, to think of marrying you.”
“You refuse,” he said, “because you have known for some days past that I loved you. Yet it is really this fact which gives me my claim to become your husband. You have need of a man to do you this little service. I know of at least one person whose happiness it would be to die if thereby he might save you a toothache. This man you cannot deny–you have not the right to deny this man his single opportunity of serving you.”
“I like you very much,” she faltered; and then, with disheartening hastiness, “Of course, I like you very much; but I am not in love with you.”
He shook his head at her, “I would think the worse of your intellect if you were. I adore you. Granted: but that constitutes no cut-throat mortgage. It is merely a state of mind which I have somehow blundered into, and with which you have no concern. So I ask nothing of you save to marry me. You may, if you like, look upon me as insane; it is the view toward which I myself incline. However, mine is a domesticated mania and vexes no one save myself; and even I derive no little amusement from its manifestations. Eh, Monsieur Jourdain may laugh at me for a puling lover!” cried John Bulmer; “but, heavens! if only he could see the unplumbed depths of ludicrousness I discover in my own soul! The mirth of Atlas could not do it justice.”
Claire meditated for a while, her eyes inscrutable and yet not unkindly. “It shall be as you will,” she said at last. “Yes, certainly, I will marry you.”