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ning some further intelligence; she had been able to learn nothing satisfactory。 She did not lose courage; she well knew that; in the important affairs of life; M。 Moriaz found it difficult to dispense with her approbation; and she promised herself to choose with discretion the moment to make a decisive assault upon him。 In the meanwhile she gave herself the pleasure of tormenting him by her silence; and of grieving him by her long…continued pouting。 One day M。 Moriaz said to his daughter:
〃Mme。 de Lorcy is displeased with us; this grieves me。 I fear you have dropped some word that has wounded her。 I shall be greatly obliged to you if you will go and see her and coax her into good…humour。〃
〃You gave me a far from agreeable commission;〃 she rejoined; 〃but I can refuse you nothing; I shall go to…morrow to Maisons。〃
At the precise moment when this conversation was taking place; Mme。 de Lorcy; who was passing the day in Paris; entered the Ecole des Beaux… Arts。 The exhibition of the work of a celebrated painter; recently deceased; had attracted thither a great throng of people。 Mme。 de Lorcy moved to and fro; when suddenly she descried a little old woman; sixty years of age; with a snub nose; whose little gray eyes gleamed with malice and impertinence。 Her chin in the air; holding up her eye… glasses with her hand; she scrutinized all the pictures with a critical; disdainful air。
〃Ah! truly it is the Princess Gulof;〃 said Mme。 de Lorcy to herself; and turned away to avoid an encounter。 It was at Ostend; three years previous; during the season of the baths; that she had made the acquaintance of the princess; she did not care to renew it。 This haughty; capricious Russian; with whom a chance occurrence at the /table d'hote/ had thrown her into intercourse; had not taken a place among her pleasantest reminiscences。
Princess Gulof was the wife of a governor…general whom she had wedded in second marriage after a long widowhood。 He did not see her often; two or three times a year; that was all。 Floating about from one end of Europe to another; they kept up a regular exchange of letters; the prince never took any step without consulting his wife; who usually gave him sound advice。 During the first years of their marriage; he had committed the error of being seriously in love with her: there are some species of ugliness that inspire actually insane passions。 The princess found this in the most wretched taste; and soon brought Dimitri Paulovitch to his senses。 From that moment perfect concord reigned between this wedded couple; who were parted by the entire continent of Europe; united by the mail…bags。 The princess did not bear a very irreproachable record。 She looked upon morality as pure matter of conventionality; and she made no secret of her thoughts。 She was always on the alert for new discoveries; fresh experiences; she never waited to read a book to the end before flinging it into the waste…paper basket; most frequently the first chapter sufficed; she had met with many disappointments; she had wearied of many caprices; and she had arrived at the conclusion that man is; after all; of but small account。 Nevertheless; there had come to her late in life a comparatively lasting caprice; during nearly five years she had flattered herself that she had found what she sought。 Alas! for the first time she had been abandoned; forsaken; and that before she had herself grown tired of her fancy。 This desertion had inflicted a sharp wound on her pride; she had conceived an implacable hatred for the faithless one; and then she had forgotten him。 She had plunged into the natural sciences; she had made dissectionsit was her way of being avenged。 She held very advanced ideas; she believed in the most radical of the doctrines of evolution; she deemed it a clearly demonstrated fact that man is a development of the monkey; the monkey of the monad。 She profoundly despised any one who permitted himself to doubt this。 She did not count melancholy; to analyze or dissect everything; that was her way of being happy。
During their common sojourn at Ostend; Mme。 de Lorcy had gained the good graces of the Princess Gulof through the dexterity with which she had dressed the wounds of Moufflard; her lapdog; whose paw had been injured by some awkward individual。 She had been quite pleased with Mme。 de Lorcy; her sympathy and her kindly services; and she had bestowed her most amiable attentions upon her。 Mme。 de Lorcy had done her best to respond to her advances; but she found herself revolted by this old magpie whose prattling never ceased; and whose chief delight was in the recital of the secret chronicles of every capital of Europe; Mme。 de Lorcy; in fact; soon grew disgusted with her cosmopolitan gossip and her physiology; she found her cynical and evil…minded。 In meeting her at the Ecole des Beaux…Arts; her first impulse was to evade her; but suddenly she changed her mind。 For some weeks past she had been governed by a fixed idea; about which all else revolved; an inspiration came over her; which doubtless fell directly from the skies。
〃Princess Gulof;〃 said she to herself; 〃has passed her life in running around the world; her real home is a railroad…car; there is not a large city where she has failed to make a sojourn; she is acquainted with the whole world: is it not possible that she knows Count Larinski?〃
Mme。 de Lorcy retraced her steps; cut her way through the crowd; succeeded in approaching the princess; and; taking her by the arm; exclaimed: 〃Ah! is it you; princess! How is Moufflard?〃
The princess turned her head; regarded her fixedly a moment; and then pressing her hand between her thumb and forefinger she rejoined with as little ceremony as though they had met the day before: 〃Moufflard does very poorly indeed; my dear。 He died two months ago of indigestion。〃
〃How you must have mourned his loss!〃
〃I am still inconsolable。〃
〃Ah! well; princess; I shall undertake to console you。 I own a lapdog; not yet six months old: you never saw a more charming one or one with a shorter nose or whiter and more delicate hair。 I am a great utilitarian; as you know。 I only care for large dogs that are of some use。 Will you accept of me Moufflard II? But you must come and fetch him yourself; which will procure me the pleasure of seeing you at Maisons。〃
The princess replied that she was on her way to England; that she was merely taking Paris in passing; that her hours were numbered; and two minutes later she announced to Mme。 de Lorcy that she would call on her the following day; in the afternoon。
True to her appointment; Princess Gulof entered Mme。 de Lorcy's /salon/ the following day。 The ladies occupied themselves first of all with the lapdog; which was found charming and quite worthy to succeed to Moufflard I。 Mme。 de Lorcy watched all the time for a suitable opportunity of introducing the subject nearest to her heart; when she thought it had come; she observed:
〃Apropos; princess; you who know everything; you who are a true cosmopolitan; have you ever heard of a mysterious personage who calls himself Count Abel Larinski?〃
〃Not that I am aware of; my dear; although his name may not be absolutely unknown to me。〃
〃Search among