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  Chapter XXIII. Triumfeminate.

  On the king's arrival in Paris, he sat at the council which had beensummoned, and worked for a certain portion of the day. The queenremained with the queen-mother, and burst into tears as soon as she hadtaken leave of the king. "Ah, madame!" she said, "the king no longerloves me! What will become of me?"

  "A husband always loves his wife when she is like you," replied Anne ofAustria.

  "A time may come when he will love another woman instead of me."

  "What do you call loving?"

  "Always thinking of a person--always seeking her society."

  "Do you happen to have remarked," said Anne of Austria, "that the kinghas ever done anything of the sort?"

  "No, madame," said the young queen, hesitatingly.

  "What is there to complain of, then, Marie?"

  "You will admit that the king leaves me?"

  "The king, my daughter, belongs to his people."

  "And that is the very reason why he no longer belongs to me; and that isthe reason, too, why I shall find myself, as so many queens before me,forsaken and forgotten, whilst glory and honors will be reserved forothers. Oh, my mother! the king is so handsome! how often will otherstell him that they love him, and how much, indeed, they must do so!"

  "It is very seldom, indeed, that women love the man in loving the king.But if such a thing happened, which I doubt, you would do better towish, Marie, that such women should really love your husband. In thefirst place, the devoted love of a mistress is a rapid element of thedissolution of a lover's affection; and then, by dint of loving, themistress loses all influence over her lover, whose power of wealth shedoes not covet, caring only for his affection. Wish, therefore, that theking should love but lightly, and that his mistress should love with allher heart."

  "Oh, my mother, what power may not a deep affection exercise over him!"

  "And yet you say you are resigned?"

  "Quite true, quite true; I speak absurdly. There is a feeling ofanguish, however, which I can never control."

  "And that is?"

  "The king may make a happy choice--may find a home, with all the tenderinfluences of home, not far from that we can offer him,--a home withchildren round him, the children of another woman. Oh, madame! I shoulddie if I were but to see the king's children."

  "Marie, Marie," replied the queen-mother with a smile, and she took theyoung queen's hand in her own, "remember what I am going to say, andlet it always be a consolation to you: the king cannot have a Dauphinwithout _you_."

  With this remark the queen-mother quitted her daughter-in-law, inorder to meet Madame, whose arrival in the grand cabinet had just beenannounced by one of the pages. Madame had scarcely taken time to changeher dress. Her face revealed her agitation, which betrayed a plan, theexecution of which occupied, while the result disturbed, her mind.

  "I came to ascertain," she said, "if your majesties are suffering anyfatigue from our journey."

  "None at all," said the queen-mother.

  "A little," replied Maria Theresa.

  "I have suffered from annoyance more than anything else," said Madame.

  "How was that?" inquired Anne of Austria.

  "The fatigue the king undergoes in riding about on horseback."

  "That does the king good."

  "And it was I who advised him," said Maria Theresa, turning pale.

  Madame said not a word in reply; but one of those smiles which werepeculiarly her own flitted for a moment across her lips, without passingover the rest of her face; then, immediately changing the conversation,she continued, "We shall find Paris precisely the Paris we quitted; thesame intrigues, plots, and flirtations going on."

  "Intrigues! What intrigues do you allude to?" inquired the queen-mother.

  "People are talking a good deal about M. Fouquet and MadamePlessis-Belliere."

  "Who makes up the number to about ten thousand," replied thequeen-mother. "But what are the plots you speak of?"

  "We have, it seems, certain misunderstandings with Holland to settle."

  "What about?"

  "Monsieur has been telling me the story of the medals."

  "Oh!" exclaimed the young queen, "you mean those medals struck inHolland, on which a cloud is seen passing across the sun, which is theking's device. You are wrong in calling that a plot--it is an insult."

  "But so contemptible that the king can well despise it," replied thequeen-mother. "Well, what are the flirtations which are alluded to? Doyou mean that of Madame d'Olonne?"

  "No, no; nearer ourselves than that."

  "_Casa de usted_," murmured the queen-mother, and without moving herlips, in her daughter-in-law's ear, without being overheard by Madame,who thus continued:--"You know the terrible news?" [4]

  "Oh, yes; M. de Guiche's wound."

  "And you attribute it, I suppose, as every one else does, to an accidentwhich happened to him while hunting?"

  "Yes, of course," said both the queens together, their interestawakened.

  Madame drew closer to them, as she said, in a low tone of voice, "It wasa duel."

  "Ah!" said Anne of Austria, in a severe tone; for, in her ears, the word"duel," which had been forbidden in France all the time she reigned overit, had a strange sound.

  "A most deplorable duel, which has nearly cost Monsieur two of his bestfriends, and the king two of his best servants."

  "What was the cause of the duel?" inquired the young queen, animated bya secret instinct.

  "Flirtation," repeated Madame, triumphantly. "The gentlemen in questionwere conversing about the virtue of a particular lady belonging to thecourt. One of them thought that Pallas was a very second-rate personcompared to her; the other pretended that the lady in question was animitation of Venus alluring Mars; and thereupon the two gentlemen foughtas fiercely as Hector and Achilles."

  "Venus alluring Mars?" said the young queen in a low tone of voicewithout venturing to examine into the allegory very deeply.

  "Who is the lady?" inquired Anne of Austria abruptly. "You said, Ibelieve, she was one of the ladies of honor?"

  "Did I say so?" replied Madame.

  "Yes; at least I thought I heard you mention it."

  "Are you not aware that such a woman is of ill-omen to a royal house?"

  "Is it not Mademoiselle de la Valliere?" said the queen-mother.

  "Yes, indeed, that plain-looking creature."

  "I thought she was affianced to a gentleman who certainly is not, atleast so I have heard, either M. de Guiche or M. de Wardes?"

  "Very possibly, madame."

  The young queen took up a piece of tapestry, and began to broider withan affectation of tranquillity her trembling fingers contradicted.

  "What were you saying about Venus and Mars?" pursued the queen-mother."Is there a Mars also?"

  "She boasts of that being the case."

  "Did you say she boasts of it?"

  "That was the cause of the duel."

  "And M. de Guiche upheld the cause of Mars?"

  "Yes, certainly; like the devoted servant he is."

  "The devoted servant of whom?" exclaimed the young queen, forgetting herreserve in allowing her jealous feeling to escape.

  "Mars, not to be defended except at the expense of Venus," repliedMadame. "M. de Guiche maintained the perfect innocence of Mars, and nodoubt affirmed that it was all a mere boast."

  "And M. de Wardes," said Anne of Austria, quietly, "spread the reportthat Venus was within her rights, I suppose?"

  "Oh, De Wardes," thought Madame, "you shall pay dearly for the wound youhave given that noblest--best of men!" And she began to attack De Wardeswith the greatest bitterness; thus discharging her own and De Guiche'sdebt, with the assurance that she was working the future ruin of herenemy. She said so much, in fact, that had Manicamp been there, he wouldhave regretted he had shown such firm regard for his friend, inasmuch asit resulted in the ruin of his unfortunate foe.

  "I see nothing in the whole affair but _one_ cause
of mischief, and thatis La Valliere herself," said the queen-mother.

  The young queen resumed her work with perfect indifference of manner,while Madame listened eagerly.

  "I do not yet quite understand what you said just now about the dangerof coquetry," resumed Anne of Austria.

  "It is quite true," Madame hastened to say, "that if the girl had notbeen a coquette, Mars would not have thought at all about her."

  The repetition of this word Mars brought a passing color to the queen'sface; but she still continued her work.

  "I will not permit that, in my court, gentlemen should be set againsteach other in this manner," said Anne of Austria, calmly. "Such mannerswere useful enough, perhaps, in days when the divided nobility had noother rallying-point than mere gallantry. At that time women, whose swaywas absolute and undivided, were privileged to encourage men's valor byfrequent trials of their courage. But now, thank Heaven, there is butone master in France, and to him every instinct of the mind, everypulse of the body are due. I will not allow my son to be deprived ofany single one of his servants." And she turned towards the young queen,saying, "What is to be done with this La Valliere?"

  "La Valliere?" said the queen, apparently surprised, "I do not even knowthe name;" and she accompanied this remark by one of those cold, fixedsmiles only to be observed on royal lips.

  Madame was herself a princess great in every respect, great inintelligence, great by birth, by pride; the queen's reply, however,completely astonished her, and she was obliged to pause for a momentin order to recover herself. "She is one of my maids of honor," shereplied, with a bow.

  "In that case," retorted Maria Theresa, in the same tone, "it is youraffair, my sister, and not ours."

  "I beg your pardon," resumed Anne of Austria, "it is my affair. AndI perfectly well understand," she pursued, addressing a look full ofintelligence at Madame, "Madame's motive for saying what she has justsaid."

  "Everything which emanates from you, madame," said the English princess,"proceeds from the lips of Wisdom."

  "If we send this girl back to her own family," said Maria Theresa,gently, "we must bestow a pension upon her."

  "Which I will provide for out of my income," exclaimed Madame.

  "No, no," interrupted Anne of Austria, "no disturbance, I beg. The kingdislikes that the slightest disrespectful remark should be made ofany lady. Let everything be done quietly. Will you have the kindness,Madame, to send for this girl here; and you, my daughter, will have thegoodness to retire to your own room."

  The dowager queen's entreaties were commands, and as Maria Theresa roseto return to her apartments, Madame rose in order to send a page tosummon La Valliere.