<h3><SPAN name="linkC2HCH0011" id="linkC2HCH0011"></SPAN> Chapter 11. The Corsican Ogre</h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>t the sight of this
agitation Louis XVIII. pushed from him violently the table at which he was
sitting.</p>
<p>“What ails you, baron?” he exclaimed. “You appear quite
aghast. Has your uneasiness anything to do with what M. de Blacas has told me,
and M. de Villefort has just confirmed?” M. de Blacas moved suddenly
towards the baron, but the fright of the courtier pleaded for the forbearance
of the statesman; and besides, as matters were, it was much more to his
advantage that the prefect of police should triumph over him than that he
should humiliate the prefect.</p>
<p>“Sire,——” stammered the baron.</p>
<p>“Well, what is it?” asked Louis XVIII. The minister of police,
giving way to an impulse of despair, was about to throw himself at the feet of
Louis XVIII., who retreated a step and frowned.</p>
<p>“Will you speak?” he said.</p>
<p>“Oh, sire, what a dreadful misfortune! I am, indeed, to be pitied. I can
never forgive myself!”</p>
<p>“Monsieur,” said Louis XVIII., “I command you to
speak.”</p>
<p>“Well, sire, the usurper left Elba on the 26th February, and landed on
the 1st of March.”</p>
<p>“And where? In Italy?” asked the king eagerly.</p>
<p>“In France, sire,—at a small port, near Antibes, in the Gulf of
Juan.”</p>
<p>“The usurper landed in France, near Antibes, in the Gulf of Juan, two
hundred and fifty leagues from Paris, on the 1st of March, and you only
acquired this information today, the 3rd of March! Well, sir, what you tell me
is impossible. You must have received a false report, or you have gone
mad.”</p>
<p>“Alas, sire, it is but too true!” Louis made a gesture of
indescribable anger and alarm, and then drew himself up as if this sudden blow
had struck him at the same moment in heart and countenance.</p>
<p>“In France!” he cried, “the usurper in France! Then they did
not watch over this man. Who knows? they were, perhaps, in league with
him.”</p>
<p>“Oh, sire,” exclaimed the Duc de Blacas, “M. Dandré is not a
man to be accused of treason! Sire, we have all been blind, and the minister of
police has shared the general blindness, that is all.”</p>
<p>“But——” said Villefort, and then suddenly checking
himself, he was silent; then he continued, “Your pardon, sire,” he
said, bowing, “my zeal carried me away. Will your majesty deign to excuse
me?”</p>
<p>“Speak, sir, speak boldly,” replied Louis. “You alone
forewarned us of the evil; now try and aid us with the remedy.”</p>
<p>“Sire,” said Villefort, “the usurper is detested in the
south; and it seems to me that if he ventured into the south, it would be easy
to raise Languedoc and Provence against him.”</p>
<p>“Yes, assuredly,” replied the minister; “but he is advancing
by Gap and Sisteron.”</p>
<p>“Advancing—he is advancing!” said Louis XVIII. “Is he
then advancing on Paris?” The minister of police maintained a silence
which was equivalent to a complete avowal.</p>
<p>“And Dauphiné, sir?” inquired the king, of Villefort. “Do you
think it possible to rouse that as well as Provence?”</p>
<p>“Sire, I am sorry to tell your majesty a cruel fact; but the feeling in
Dauphiné is quite the reverse of that in Provence or Languedoc. The
mountaineers are Bonapartists, sire.”</p>
<p>“Then,” murmured Louis, “he was well informed. And how many
men had he with him?”</p>
<p>“I do not know, sire,” answered the minister of police.</p>
<p>“What, you do not know! Have you neglected to obtain information on that
point? Of course it is of no consequence,” he added, with a withering
smile.</p>
<p>“Sire, it was impossible to learn; the despatch simply stated the fact of
the landing and the route taken by the usurper.”</p>
<p>“And how did this despatch reach you?” inquired the king. The
minister bowed his head, and while a deep color overspread his cheeks, he
stammered out:</p>
<p>“By the telegraph, sire.” Louis XVIII. advanced a step, and folded
his arms over his chest as Napoleon would have done.</p>
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<p>“So then,” he exclaimed, turning pale with anger, “seven
conjoined and allied armies overthrew that man. A miracle of heaven replaced me
on the throne of my fathers after five-and-twenty years of exile. I have,
during those five-and-twenty years, spared no pains to understand the people of
France and the interests which were confided to me; and now, when I see the
fruition of my wishes almost within reach, the power I hold in my hands bursts
and shatters me to atoms!”</p>
<p>“Sire, it is fatality!” murmured the minister, feeling that the
pressure of circumstances, however light a thing to destiny, was too much for
any human strength to endure.</p>
<p>“What our enemies say of us is then true. We have learnt nothing,
forgotten nothing! If I were betrayed as he was, I would console myself; but to
be in the midst of persons elevated by myself to places of honor, who ought to
watch over me more carefully than over themselves,—for my fortune is
theirs—before me they were nothing—after me they will be nothing,
and perish miserably from incapacity—ineptitude! Oh, yes, sir, you are
right—it is fatality!”</p>
<p>The minister quailed before this outburst of sarcasm. M. de Blacas wiped the
moisture from his brow. Villefort smiled within himself, for he felt his
increased importance.</p>
<p>“To fall,” continued King Louis, who at the first glance had
sounded the abyss on which the monarchy hung suspended,—“to fall,
and learn of that fall by telegraph! Oh, I would rather mount the scaffold of
my brother, Louis XVI., than thus descend the staircase at the Tuileries driven
away by ridicule. Ridicule, sir—why, you know not its power in France,
and yet you ought to know it!”</p>
<p>“Sire, sire,” murmured the minister, “for
pity’s——”</p>
<p>“Approach, M. de Villefort,” resumed the king, addressing the young
man, who, motionless and breathless, was listening to a conversation on which
depended the destiny of a kingdom. “Approach, and tell monsieur that it
is possible to know beforehand all that he has not known.”</p>
<p>“Sire, it was really impossible to learn secrets which that man concealed
from all the world.”</p>
<p>“Really impossible! Yes—that is a great word, sir. Unfortunately,
there are great words, as there are great men; I have measured them. Really
impossible for a minister who has an office, agents, spies, and fifteen hundred
thousand francs for secret service money, to know what is going on at sixty
leagues from the coast of France! Well, then, see, here is a gentleman who had
none of these resources at his disposal—a gentleman, only a simple
magistrate, who learned more than you with all your police, and who would have
saved my crown, if, like you, he had the power of directing a telegraph.”
The look of the minister of police was turned with concentrated spite on
Villefort, who bent his head in modest triumph.</p>
<p>“I do not mean that for you, Blacas,” continued Louis XVIII.;
“for if you have discovered nothing, at least you have had the good sense
to persevere in your suspicions. Any other than yourself would have considered
the disclosure of M. de Villefort insignificant, or else dictated by venal
ambition.” These words were an allusion to the sentiments which the
minister of police had uttered with so much confidence an hour before.</p>
<p>Villefort understood the king’s intent. Any other person would, perhaps,
have been overcome by such an intoxicating draught of praise; but he feared to
make for himself a mortal enemy of the police minister, although he saw that
Dandré was irrevocably lost. In fact, the minister, who, in the plenitude of
his power, had been unable to unearth Napoleon’s secret, might in despair
at his own downfall interrogate Dantès and so lay bare the motives of
Villefort’s plot. Realizing this, Villefort came to the rescue of the
crest-fallen minister, instead of aiding to crush him.</p>
<p>“Sire,” said Villefort, “the suddenness of this event must
prove to your majesty that the issue is in the hands of Providence; what your
majesty is pleased to attribute to me as profound perspicacity is simply owing
to chance, and I have profited by that chance, like a good and devoted
servant—that’s all. Do not attribute to me more than I deserve,
sire, that your majesty may never have occasion to recall the first opinion you
have been pleased to form of me.” The minister of police thanked the
young man by an eloquent look, and Villefort understood that he had succeeded
in his design; that is to say, that without forfeiting the gratitude of the
king, he had made a friend of one on whom, in case of necessity, he might rely.</p>
<p>“’Tis well,” resumed the king. “And now,
gentlemen,” he continued, turning towards M. de Blacas and the minister
of police, “I have no further occasion for you, and you may retire; what
now remains to do is in the department of the minister of war.”</p>
<p>“Fortunately, sire,” said M. de Blacas, “we can rely on the
army; your majesty knows how every report confirms their loyalty and
attachment.”</p>
<p>“Do not mention reports, duke, to me, for I know now what confidence to
place in them. Yet, speaking of reports, baron, what have you learned with
regard to the affair in the Rue Saint-Jacques?”</p>
<p>“The affair in the Rue Saint-Jacques!” exclaimed Villefort, unable
to repress an exclamation. Then, suddenly pausing, he added, “Your
pardon, sire, but my devotion to your majesty has made me forget, not the
respect I have, for that is too deeply engraved in my heart, but the rules of
etiquette.”</p>
<p>“Go on, go on, sir,” replied the king; “you have today earned
the right to make inquiries here.”</p>
<p>“Sire,” interposed the minister of police, “I came a moment
ago to give your majesty fresh information which I had obtained on this head,
when your majesty’s attention was attracted by the terrible event that
has occurred in the gulf, and now these facts will cease to interest your
majesty.”</p>
<p>“On the contrary, sir,—on the contrary,” said Louis XVIII.,
“this affair seems to me to have a decided connection with that which
occupies our attention, and the death of General Quesnel will, perhaps, put us
on the direct track of a great internal conspiracy.” At the name of
General Quesnel, Villefort trembled.</p>
<p>“Everything points to the conclusion, sire,” said the minister of
police, “that death was not the result of suicide, as we first believed,
but of assassination. General Quesnel, it appears, had just left a Bonapartist
club when he disappeared. An unknown person had been with him that morning, and
made an appointment with him in the Rue Saint-Jacques; unfortunately, the
general’s valet, who was dressing his hair at the moment when the
stranger entered, heard the street mentioned, but did not catch the
number.” As the police minister related this to the king, Villefort, who
looked as if his very life hung on the speaker’s lips, turned alternately
red and pale. The king looked towards him.</p>
<p>“Do you not think with me, M. de Villefort, that General Quesnel, whom
they believed attached to the usurper, but who was really entirely devoted to
me, has perished the victim of a Bonapartist ambush?”</p>
<p>“It is probable, sire,” replied Villefort. “But is this all
that is known?”</p>
<p>“They are on the track of the man who appointed the meeting with
him.”</p>
<p>“On his track?” said Villefort.</p>
<p>“Yes, the servant has given his description. He is a man of from fifty to
fifty-two years of age, dark, with black eyes covered with shaggy eyebrows, and
a thick moustache. He was dressed in a blue frock-coat, buttoned up to the
chin, and wore at his button-hole the rosette of an officer of the Legion of
Honor. Yesterday a person exactly corresponding with this description was
followed, but he was lost sight of at the corner of the Rue de la Jussienne and
the Rue Coq-Héron.” Villefort leaned on the back of an armchair, for as
the minister of police went on speaking he felt his legs bend under him; but
when he learned that the unknown had escaped the vigilance of the agent who
followed him, he breathed again.</p>
<p>“Continue to seek for this man, sir,” said the king to the minister
of police; “for if, as I am all but convinced, General Quesnel, who would
have been so useful to us at this moment, has been murdered, his assassins,
Bonapartists or not, shall be cruelly punished.” It required all
Villefort’s coolness not to betray the terror with which this declaration
of the king inspired him.</p>
<p>“How strange,” continued the king, with some asperity; “the
police think that they have disposed of the whole matter when they say,
‘A murder has been committed,’ and especially so when they can add,
‘And we are on the track of the guilty persons.’”</p>
<p>“Sire, your majesty will, I trust, be amply satisfied on this point at
least.”</p>
<p>“We shall see. I will no longer detain you, M. de Villefort, for you must
be fatigued after so long a journey; go and rest. Of course you stopped at your
father’s?” A feeling of faintness came over Villefort.</p>
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<p>“No, sire,” he replied, “I alighted at the Hotel de Madrid,
in the Rue de Tournon.”</p>
<p>“But you have seen him?”</p>
<p>“Sire, I went straight to the Duc de Blacas.”</p>
<p>“But you will see him, then?”</p>
<p>“I think not, sire.”</p>
<p>“Ah, I forgot,” said Louis, smiling in a manner which proved that
all these questions were not made without a motive; “I forgot you and M.
Noirtier are not on the best terms possible, and that is another sacrifice made
to the royal cause, and for which you should be recompensed.”</p>
<p>“Sire, the kindness your majesty deigns to evince towards me is a
recompense which so far surpasses my utmost ambition that I have nothing more
to ask for.”</p>
<p>“Never mind, sir, we will not forget you; make your mind easy. In the
meanwhile” (the king here detached the cross of the Legion of Honor which
he usually wore over his blue coat, near the cross of St. Louis, above the
order of Notre-Dame-du-Mont-Carmel and St. Lazare, and gave it to
Villefort)—“in the meanwhile take this cross.”</p>
<p>“Sire,” said Villefort, “your majesty mistakes; this is an
officer’s cross.”</p>
<p>“<i>Ma foi!</i>” said Louis XVIII., “take it, such as it is,
for I have not the time to procure you another. Blacas, let it be your care to
see that the brevet is made out and sent to M. de Villefort.”
Villefort’s eyes were filled with tears of joy and pride; he took the
cross and kissed it.</p>
<p>“And now,” he said, “may I inquire what are the orders with
which your majesty deigns to honor me?”</p>
<p>“Take what rest you require, and remember that if you are not able to
serve me here in Paris, you may be of the greatest service to me at
Marseilles.”</p>
<p>“Sire,” replied Villefort, bowing, “in an hour I shall have
quitted Paris.”</p>
<p>“Go, sir,” said the king; “and should I forget you
(kings’ memories are short), do not be afraid to bring yourself to my
recollection. Baron, send for the minister of war. Blacas, remain.”</p>
<p>“Ah, sir,” said the minister of police to Villefort, as they left
the Tuileries, “you entered by luck’s door—your fortune is
made.”</p>
<p>“Will it be long first?” muttered Villefort, saluting the minister,
whose career was ended, and looking about him for a hackney-coach. One passed
at the moment, which he hailed; he gave his address to the driver, and
springing in, threw himself on the seat, and gave loose to dreams of ambition.</p>
<p>Ten minutes afterwards Villefort reached his hotel, ordered horses to be ready
in two hours, and asked to have his breakfast brought to him. He was about to
begin his repast when the sound of the bell rang sharp and loud. The valet
opened the door, and Villefort heard someone speak his name.</p>
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<p>“Who could know that I was here already?” said the young man. The
valet entered.</p>
<p>“Well,” said Villefort, “what is it?—Who
rang?—Who asked for me?”</p>
<p>“A stranger who will not send in his name.”</p>
<p>“A stranger who will not send in his name! What can he want with
me?”</p>
<p>“He wishes to speak to you.”</p>
<p>“To me?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“Did he mention my name?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“What sort of person is he?”</p>
<p>“Why, sir, a man of about fifty.”</p>
<p>“Short or tall?”</p>
<p>“About your own height, sir.”</p>
<p>“Dark or fair?”</p>
<p>“Dark,—very dark; with black eyes, black hair, black
eyebrows.”</p>
<p>“And how dressed?” asked Villefort quickly.</p>
<p>“In a blue frock-coat, buttoned up close, decorated with the Legion of
Honor.”</p>
<p>“It is he!” said Villefort, turning pale.</p>
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<p>“Eh, <i>pardieu!</i>” said the individual whose description we have
twice given, entering the door, “what a great deal of ceremony! Is it the
custom in Marseilles for sons to keep their fathers waiting in their
anterooms?”</p>
<p>“Father!” cried Villefort, “then I was not deceived; I felt
sure it must be you.”</p>
<p>“Well, then, if you felt so sure,” replied the new-comer, putting
his cane in a corner and his hat on a chair, “allow me to say, my dear
Gérard, that it was not very filial of you to keep me waiting at the
door.”</p>
<p>“Leave us, Germain,” said Villefort. The servant quitted the
apartment with evident signs of astonishment.</p>
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