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<h2> Chapter X </h2>
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THE BLACK VEIL
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<p>Speaking the language fluently, and with unlimited money,
there was nothing to prevent my enjoying all that was
enjoyable in the French capital. You may easily suppose how
two days were passed. At the end of that time, and at about
the same hour, Monsieur Droqville called again.</p>
<p>Courtly, good-natured, gay, as usual, he told me that the
masquerade ball was fixed for the next Wednesday, and that he
had applied for a card for me.</p>
<p>How awfully unlucky. I was so afraid I should not be able to
go.</p>
<p>He stared at me for a moment with a suspicious and menacing
look, which I did not understand, in silence, and then
inquired rather sharply. And will Monsieur Beckett be good
enough to say why not?</p>
<p>I was a little surprised, but answered the simple truth: I
had made an engagement for that evening with two or three
English friends, and did not see how I could.</p>
<p>"Just so! You English, wherever you are, always look out for
your English boors, your beer and <i>'bifstek'</i>; and when
you come here, instead of trying to learn something of the
people you visit, and pretend to study, you are guzzling and
swearing, and smoking with one another, and no wiser or more
polished at the end of your travels than if you had been all
the time carousing in a booth at Greenwich."</p>
<p>He laughed sarcastically, and looked as if he could have
poisoned me.</p>
<p>"There it is," said he, throwing the card on the table. "Take
it or leave it, just as you please. I suppose I shall have my
trouble for my pains; but it is not usual when a man such as
I takes trouble, asks a favor, and secures a privilege for an
acquaintance, to treat him so."</p>
<p>This was astonishingly impertinent.</p>
<p>I was shocked, offended, penitent. I had possibly committed
unwittingly a breach of good breeding, according to French
ideas, which almost justified the brusque severity of the
Marquis's undignified rebuke.</p>
<p>In a confusion, therefore, of many feelings, I hastened to
make my apologies, and to propitiate the chance friend who
had showed me so much disinterested kindness.</p>
<p>I told him that I would, at any cost, break through the
engagement in which I had unluckily entangled myself; that I
had spoken with too little reflection, and that I certainly
had not thanked him at all in proportion to his kindness, and
to my real estimate of it.</p>
<p>"Pray say not a word more; my vexation was entirely on your
account; and I expressed it, I am only too conscious, in
terms a great deal too strong, which, I am sure, your good
nature will pardon. Those who know me a little better are
aware that I sometimes say a good deal more than I intend;
and am always sorry when I do. Monsieur Beckett will forget
that his old friend Monsieur Droqville has lost his temper in
his cause, for a moment, and—we are as good friends as
before."</p>
<p>He smiled like the Monsieur Droqville of the Belle
Étoile, and extended his hand, which I took very
respectfully and cordially.</p>
<p>Our momentary quarrel had left us only better friends.</p>
<p>The Marquis then told me I had better secure a bed in some
hotel at Versailles, as a rush would be made to take them;
and advised my going down next morning for the purpose.</p>
<p>I ordered horses accordingly for eleven o'clock; and, after a
little more conversation, the Marquis d'Harmonville bade me
good-night, and ran down the stairs with his handkerchief to
his mouth and nose, and, as I saw from my window, jumped into
his close carriage again and drove away.</p>
<p>Next day I was at Versailles. As I approached the door of the
Hotel de France it was plain that I was not a moment too
soon, if, indeed, I were not already too late.</p>
<p>A crowd of carriages were drawn up about the entrance, so
that I had no chance of approaching except by dismounting and
pushing my way among the horses. The hall was full of
servants and gentlemen screaming to the proprietor, who in a
state of polite distraction was assuring them, one and all,
that there was not a room or a closet disengaged in his
entire house.</p>
<p>I slipped out again, leaving the hall to those who were
shouting, expostulating, and wheedling, in the delusion that
the host might, if he pleased, manage something for them. I
jumped into my carriage and drove, at my horses' best pace,
to the Hotel du Reservoir. The blockade about this door was
as complete as the other. The result was the same. It was
very provoking, but what was to be done? My postilion had, a
little officiously, while I was in the hall talking with the
hotel authorities, got his horses, bit by bit, as other
carriages moved away, to the very steps of the inn door.</p>
<p>This arrangement was very convenient so far as getting in
again was concerned. But, this accomplished, how were we to
get on? There were carriages in front, and carriages behind,
and no less than four rows of carriages, of all sorts,
outside.</p>
<p>I had at this time remarkably long and clear sight, and if I
had been impatient before, guess what my feelings were when I
saw an open carriage pass along the narrow strip of roadway
left open at the other side, a barouche in which I was
certain I recognized the veiled Countess and her husband.
This carriage had been brought to a walk by a cart which
occupied the whole breadth of the narrow way, and was moving
with the customary tardiness of such vehicles.</p>
<p>I should have done more wisely if I had jumped down on the
<i>trottoir</i>, and run round the block of carriages in
front of the barouche. But, unfortunately, I was more of a
Murat than a Moltke, and preferred a direct charge upon my
object to relying on <i>tactique</i>. I dashed across the
back seat of a carriage which was next mine, I don't know
how; tumbled through a sort of gig, in which an old gentleman
and a dog were dozing; stepped with an incoherent apology
over the side of an open carriage, in which were four
gentlemen engaged in a hot dispute; tripped at the far side
in getting out, and fell flat across the backs of a pair of
horses, who instantly began plunging and threw me head
foremost in the dust.</p>
<p>To those who observed my reckless charge, without being in
the secret of my object, I must have appeared demented.
Fortunately, the interesting barouche had passed before the
catastrophe, and covered as I was with dust, and my hat
blocked, you may be sure I did not care to present myself
before the object of my Quixotic devotion.</p>
<p>I stood for a while amid a storm of <i>sacré</i>-ing,
tempered disagreeably with laughter; and in the midst of
these, while endeavoring to beat the dust from my clothes
with my handkerchief, I heard a voice with which I was
acquainted call, "Monsieur Beckett."</p>
<p>I looked and saw the Marquis peeping from a carriage-window.
It was a welcome sight. In a moment I was at his carriage
side.</p>
<p>"You may as well leave Versailles," he said; "you have
learned, no doubt, that there is not a bed to hire in either
of the hotels; and I can add that there is not a room to let
in the whole town. But I have managed something for you that
will answer just as well. Tell your servant to follow us, and
get in here and sit beside me."</p>
<p>Fortunately an opening in the closely-packed carriages had
just occurred, and mine was approaching.</p>
<p>I directed the servant to follow us; and the Marquis having
said a word to his driver, we were immediately in motion.</p>
<p>"I will bring you to a comfortable place, the very existence
of which is known to but few Parisians, where, knowing how
things were here, I secured a room for you. It is only a mile
away, and an old comfortable inn, called the Le Dragon
Volant. It was fortunate for you that my tiresome business
called me to this place so early."</p>
<p>I think we had driven about a mile-and-a-half to the further
side of the palace when we found ourselves upon a narrow old
road, with the woods of Versailles on one side, and much
older trees, of a size seldom seen in France, on the other.</p>
<p>We pulled up before an antique and solid inn, built of Caen
stone, in a fashion richer and more florid than was ever
usual in such houses, and which indicated that it was
originally designed for the private mansion of some person of
wealth, and probably, as the wall bore many carved shields
and supporters, of distinction also. A kind of porch, less
ancient than the rest, projected hospitably with a wide and
florid arch, over which, cut in high relief in stone, and
painted and gilded, was the sign of the inn. This was the
Flying Dragon, with wings of brilliant red and gold,
expanded, and its tail, pale green and gold, twisted and
knotted into ever so many rings, and ending in a burnished
point barbed like the dart of death.</p>
<p>"I shan't go in—but you will find it a comfortable
place; at all events better than nothing. I would go in with
you, but my incognito forbids. You will, I daresay, be all
the better pleased to learn that the inn is haunted—I
should have been, in my young days, I know. But don't allude
to that awful fact in hearing of your host, for I believe it
is a sore subject. Adieu. If you want to enjoy yourself at
the ball, take my advice and go in a domino. I think I shall
look in; and certainly, if I do, in the same costume. How
shall we recognize one another? Let me see, something held in
the fingers—a flower won't do, so many people will have
flowers. Suppose you get a red cross a couple of inches
long—you're an Englishman—stitched or pinned on
the breast of your domino, and I a white one? Yes, that will
do very well; and whatever room you go into keep near the
door till we meet. I shall look for you at all the doors I
pass; and you, in the same way, for me; and we <i>must</i>
find each other soon. So that is understood. I can't enjoy a
thing of that kind with any but a young person; a man of my
age requires the contagion of young spirits and the
companionship of someone who enjoys everything spontaneously.
Farewell; we meet tonight."</p>
<p>By this time I was standing on the road; I shut the
carriage-door; bid him good-bye; and away he drove.</p>
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