<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXX" id="CHAPTER_XXX"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXX</h2>
<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="smcap">which treats of an affair of honour, and
which will afford the reader an opportunity
of judging whether, as arcade affirms,
the experience of our faults makes better
men and women of us</span></p>
</div>
<div class='clearfix'><div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/imgt.jpg" width-obs="73" height-obs="80" alt="" title="" /></div>
<p>THE ground chosen for the combat
was Colonel Manchon's garden, on
the Boulevard de la Reine at Versailles.
Messieurs de la Verdelière
and Le Truc de Ruffec, who had
both of them constant practice in affairs of honour
and knew the rules with great exactness, assisted
Maurice d'Esparvieu. No duel was ever fought
in the Catholic world without Monsieur de la
Verdelière being present; and, in making application
to this swordsman, Maurice had conformed to
custom, though not without a certain reluctance, for
he had been notorious as the lover of Madame de la
Verdelière; but Monsieur de la Verdelière was not
to be looked upon as a husband. He was an institution.
As to Monsieur Le Truc de Ruffec, honour
was his only known profession and avowedly his
sole resource, and when the matter was made the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</SPAN></span>
subject of ill-natured comment in Society, the
question was asked what finer career than that of
honour Monsieur Le Truc de Ruffec could possibly
have adopted. Arcade's seconds were Prince Istar
and Théophile. The celestial musician had not
voluntarily nor with a good grace taken a hand in
this affair. He had a horror of every kind of violence
and disapproved of single combat. The
report of pistols and the clash of swords were intolerable
to him, and the sight of blood made him
faint. This gentle son of Heaven had obstinately
refused to act as second to his brother Arcade, and
to bring him to the starting-point the Kerûb had had
to threaten to break a bottle of panclastite over his
head.</p>
</div>
<p>Besides the combatants, the seconds, and the
doctors, the only people in the garden were a few
officers from the barracks at Versailles and several
reporters. Although young d'Esparvieu was
known merely as a young man of family, and Arcade
had never been heard of at all, the duel had
attracted quite a large crowd of inquisitive individuals,
and the windows of the adjoining houses
were crammed with photographers, reporters, and
Society people. What had aroused much curiosity
was that a woman was known to be the cause
of the quarrel. Many mentioned Bouchotte, but
the majority said it was Madame des Aubels.
It had been remarked upon, moreover, that duels<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</SPAN></span>
in which Monsieur de la Verdelière acted as second
drew all Paris.</p>
<p>The sky was a soft blue, the garden all a-bloom
with roses, a blackbird was piping in a tree. Monsieur
de la Verdelière, who, stick in hand, conducted
the affair, laid the points of the swords together,
and said:</p>
<p>"<i>Allez, Messieurs.</i>"</p>
<p>Maurice d'Esparvieu attacked by doubling and
beating the blade. Arcade retired, keeping his
sword in line. The first engagement was without
result. The seconds were under the impression that
Monsieur d'Esparvieu was in a grievous state of
nervous irritability, and that his adversary would
wear him down. In the second encounter Maurice
attacked wildly, spread out his arms, and exposed
his breast. He attacked as he advanced, gave a
straight thrust, and the point of his sword grazed
Arcade on the shoulder. The latter was thought to
be wounded. But the seconds ascertained with
surprise that it was Maurice who had received a
scratch on the wrist. Maurice asserted that he felt
nothing, and Dr. Quille declared, after examination,
that his client might continue the fight. After the
regulation quarter of an hour the duel was resumed.
Maurice attacked with fury. His adversary was
obviously nursing him, and, what disturbed Monsieur
de la Verdelière, seemed to be paying very
little attention to his own defence. At the opening<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</SPAN></span>
of the fifth bout, a black spaniel that had got into
the garden no one knew how rushed out from a
clump of rose-bushes, made its way on to the space
reserved for the combatants, and, in spite of sticks
and cries, ran in between Maurice's legs. The
latter seemed as though his arm were benumbed,
merely gave a shoulder-thrust at his invulnerable
opponent. He then delivered a straight lunge and
impaled his arm on his adversary's sword, which
made a deep wound just below the elbow.</p>
<p>Monsieur de la Verdelière stopped the fight,
which had lasted an hour and a half. Maurice was
conscious of a painful shock. They laid him down
on a grassy bank against a wall covered with wistaria.
While the surgeon was dressing the wound Maurice
called Arcade and offered him his wounded hand.
And when the victor, saddened with his victory,
advanced, Maurice embraced him tenderly, saying:</p>
<p>"Be generous, Arcade; forgive my treachery.
Now that we have fought, I can ask you to be
reconciled with me."</p>
<p>He embraced his friend, weeping, and whispered
in his ear:</p>
<p>"Come and see me, and bring Gilberte."</p>
<p>Maurice, who was still unreconciled with his
parents, was taken to the little flat in the Rue de
Rome. No sooner was he stretched on the bed
at the far end of the bedroom where the curtains
were drawn as on the day of the apparition, than<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</SPAN></span>
he saw Arcade and Gilberte appear. He began to
suffer greatly from his wound; his temperature
was rising, but he was at peace, happy and contented.
Angel and woman, both in tears, threw themselves
at the foot of the bed. He took both their hands
with his left, smiled on them, and kissed them
tenderly.</p>
<p>"I am sure now that I shall never quarrel with
either of you again; you will deceive me no more.
I now know you are capable of anything."</p>
<p>Gilberte, weeping, swore that Maurice had been
misled by appearances, that she had never betrayed
him with Arcade, that she had never betrayed him
at all. And in a great gush of sincerity she persuaded
herself that this was so.</p>
<p>"You wrong yourself, Gilberte," replied the
wounded man. "It did happen; it had to. And
it is well. Gilberte, you were basely false to me
with my best friend in this very room, and you
were right. If you had not been we should not be
here, reunited, all three of us, and I should not be
at your side tasting the greatest happiness of my
life. Oh, Gilberte, how wrong of you to deny a
perfect and accomplished fact!"</p>
<p>"If you wish, my friend," replied Gilberte, a
little acidly, "I will not deny it. But it will only
be to please you."</p>
<p>Maurice made her sit down on the bed, and
begged Arcade to be seated in the arm-chair.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"My friend," said Arcade, "I was innocent.
I became man. Straightway I did evil. Then I
became better."</p>
<p>"Do not let us exaggerate things," said Maurice.
"Let's have a game of bridge."</p>
<p>Scarcely, however, had the patient seen three
aces in his hand and called "no trumps," than his
eyes began to swim, the cards slipped from his
fingers, head fell heavily back on the pillow, and
he complained of a violent headache. Almost
immediately, Madame des Aubels went off to pay
some calls, for she made a point of appearing in
Society, in order that the calmness and confidence
of her demeanour might give the lie to the various
rumours that were current concerning her. Arcade
saw her to the door, and, with a kiss, inhaled from
her a delicate perfume which he brought back with
him into the room where Maurice lay dozing.</p>
<p>"I am perfectly content," murmured the latter,
"that things should have happened as they have."</p>
<p>"It was bound to be so," answered the Spirit.
"All the other angels in revolt would have done as
I did with Gilberte. 'Women,' saith the Apostle,
'should pray with their heads covered, because of
the angels,' and the Apostle speaks thus because he
knows that the angels are disturbed when they look
upon them and see that they are beautiful. No
sooner do they touch the earth than they desire
to embrace mortal women and fulfil their desire.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</SPAN></span>
Their clasp is full of strength and sweetness, they
hold the secret of those ineffable caresses which
plunge the daughters of men into unfathomable
depths of delight. Laying upon the lips of their
happy victims a honey that burns like fire, making
their veins flow with torrents of refreshing flames,
they leave them raptured and undone."</p>
<p>"Stop your clatter, you unclean beast," cried
the wounded one.</p>
<p>"One word more!" said the angel; "just one
other word, my dear Maurice, to bear out what I
say, and I will let you rest quietly. There's nothing
like having sound references. In order to assure
yourself that I am not deceiving you, Maurice,
on this subject of the amorous embraces of angels
and women, look up Justin, <i>Apologies</i>, I and II;
Flavius Josephus, <i>Jewish Antiquities</i>, Book I,
Chapter III; Athenagoras, <i>Concerning the Resurrection</i>;
Lactantius, Book II, Chapter XV; Tertullian,
<i>On the Veil of the Virgins</i>; Marcus of Ephesus
in <i>Psellus</i>; Eusebius, <i>Præparatio Evangelica</i>,
Book V, Chapter IV; Saint Ambrose, in his
book on <i>Noah and the Ark</i>, Chapter V; Saint Augustine,
in his <i>City of God</i>, Book XV, Chapter
XXIII; Father Meldonat, the Jesuit, <i>Treatise on
Demons</i>, page 248; Pierre Lebyer the King's Counsellor——"</p>
<p>"Arcade, please, for pity's sake, be quiet; do,
please do, and send this dog away," cried Maurice,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</SPAN></span>
whose face was burning, and whose eyes were
starting from his head; for in his delirium he thought
he saw a black spaniel on his bed.</p>
<p>Madame de la Verdelière, who was assiduous in
every modish and patriotic practice, was reckoned,
in the best French society, as one of the most gracious
of the great ladies interested in good works. She
came herself to ask for news of Maurice, and
offered to nurse the wounded man. But at the
vehement instigation of Madame des Aubels, Arcade
shut the door in her face. Expressions of sympathy
were showered upon Maurice. Piled on
the salver, visiting cards displayed their innumerable
little dogs' ears. Monsieur Le Truc de Ruffec
was one of the first to show his manly sympathy at
the flat in the Rue de Rome, and, holding out his
loyal hand, asked young d'Esparvieu as one honourable
man to another for twenty-five louis to pay a
debt of honour.</p>
<p>"Of course, my dear Maurice, that is the sort of
thing one could not ask of everybody."</p>
<p>The same day Monsieur Gaétan came to press
his nephew's hand. The latter introduced Arcade.</p>
<p>"This is my guardian angel, whose foot you
thought so beautiful when you saw the print it
had made on the tell-tale powder, uncle. He
appeared to me last year in this very room. You
don't believe it? Well, it is true, nevertheless."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Then turning towards the Spirit he said:</p>
<p>"What say you, Arcade? The Abbé Patouille,
who is a great theologian and a good priest, does not
believe that you are an angel; and Uncle Gaétan,
who doesn't know his catechism and hasn't a scrap
of religion in him, doesn't think so either. They
deny you, the pair of them; the one because he
has faith, the other because he hasn't. After
that you may be sure that your history, if ever it
comes to be narrated, will scarcely appear credible.
Moreover, the man that took it into his head to
tell your story would not be a man of taste, and
would not come in for much approval. For your
story is not a pretty one. I love you, but I sit
in judgment upon you, too. Since you fell into
atheism, you have become an abominable scoundrel.
A bad angel, a bad friend, a traitor, and a homicide,
for I suppose it was to bring about my death that
you sent that black spaniel between my legs on the
duelling-ground."</p>
<p>The angel shrugged his shoulders and, addressing
Gaétan, said:</p>
<p>"Alas! Monsieur, I am not surprised at finding
little credit in your eyes. I have been told that you
have fallen out with the Judæo-Christian heaven,
which is where I came from."</p>
<p>"Monsieur," answered Gaétan, "my faith in
Jehovah is not sufficiently strong to enable me to
believe in his angels."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Monsieur, he whom you call Jehovah is really
a coarse and ignorant demiurge, and his name is
Ialdabaoth."</p>
<p>"In that case, Monsieur, I am perfectly ready
to believe in him. He is a narrow-minded ignoramus,
is he? Then belief in his existence offers me no
further difficulty. How is he getting on?"</p>
<p>"Badly! We are going to lay him low next
month."</p>
<p>"Don't make too sure of that, Monsieur. You
remind me of my brother-in-law, Cuissart, who has
been expecting to hear of the fall of the Republic
for the past thirty years."</p>
<p>"You see, Arcade," exclaimed Maurice, "Uncle
Gaétan thinks as I do. He knows you won't
succeed."</p>
<p>"And, pray, Monsieur Gaétan, what makes you
think I shall not succeed?"</p>
<p>"Your Ialdabaoth is still very powerful in this
world, if he isn't in the other. In days gone by he
used to be upheld by his priests, by those who
believed in him. Now he is supported by those
who do not believe in him, by the philosophers.
A pedant of a fellow called Picrochole has recently
come on the scene who wants to make a bankrupt of
science in order to do a good turn to the Church.
And just lately Pragmatism has been invented for
the express purpose of gaining credit for religion
in the minds of rationalists."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"You have been studying Pragmatism?"</p>
<p>"Not I! I was frivolous once, and I went in for
metaphysics. I read Hegel and Kant. I have
become serious with years, and now I only trouble
myself about things evident to the senses: what
the eye can see or what the ear can hear. Man is
summed up in Art. All the rest is moonshine."</p>
<p>Thus the conversation went on until evening;
it was marked by obscenities that would have
brought a blush—I will not say to a cuirassier, for
cuirassiers are frequently chaste, but even to a
Parisienne.</p>
<p>Monsieur Sariette came to see his old pupil.
When he entered the room the bust of Alexandre
d'Esparvieu seemed to take shape behind the
librarian's bald head. He drew near the bed.
In the place of blue curtains, mirrored wardrobe,
and chimney-piece, there straightway came into
view the heavy-laden bookcases of the room of the
globes and busts, and the air was heavy with piles
of papers, records, and files. Monsieur Sariette
could not be dissociated from his library; one
could not conceive of him or even see him apart
from it. He himself was paler, more vague, more
shadowy, and more a creature of the fancy than the
fancies he evoked.</p>
<p>Maurice, who had grown very quiet, was sensible
of this mark of friendship.</p>
<p>"Sit down, Monsieur Sariette,—you know<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</SPAN></span>
Madame des Aubels. May I introduce Arcade to
you,—my guardian angel. It was he who, while
yet invisible, pillaged your library for two years,
made you lose all desire for food and drink, and
drove you to the verge of madness. He it was who
moved piles of books from the room of the busts
to my summer-house one day; under your very
nose, he took away I know not what precious
volumes; and was the cause of your falling on the
staircase; another day he took a volume of Salomon
Reinach's, and, forced to go out with me (for he
never left me, as I have learnt later), he let the
volume drop in the gutter of the Rue Princesse.
Forgive him, Monsieur Sariette,—he had no pockets.
He was invisible. I bitterly regret, Monsieur
Sariette, that all your old books were not
devoured by fire or swallowed up by a flood. They
made my angel lose his head. He became man, and
now knows neither faith nor obedience to laws. It is
I, now, who am his guardian angel. God knows how
it will all end."</p>
<p>While listening to this speech, Monsieur Sariette's
face took on an expression of infinite, irreparable,
eternal sadness; the sadness of a mummy. Rising
to take his leave, the sorrowful librarian murmured
in Arcade's ear:</p>
<p>"The poor child is very ill. He is delirious."</p>
<p>Maurice called the old man back.</p>
<p>"Do stay, Monsieur Sariette. You shall have a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</SPAN></span>
game of bridge with us. Monsieur Sariette, listen
to my advice. Do not do as I did—do not keep
bad company. You will be lost. I shudder at the
mere thought. Monsieur Sariette, do not go yet.
I have something very important to ask you. When
you come again, bring me a book on the truth of
religion, so that I may study it. I must restore to
my guardian-angel the faith which he has lost."</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</SPAN></span></p>
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