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    Chapter 24

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    THE INFLUENCE OF SOCIAL RELATIONS AND POSITION

    In accordance with the advice of the Abbe Brossette the Duchesse de
    Grandlieu asked the Marquis d'Ajuda to bring her that king of
    political cut-throats, the celebrated Comte Maxime de Trailles,
    archduke of Bohemia, the youngest of young men, though he was now
    fully fifty years of age. Monsieur d'Ajuda arranged to dine with
    Maxime at the club in the rue de Beuane, and proposed to him after
    dinner to go and play dummy whist with the Duc de Grandlieu, who had
    an attack of gout and was all alone.

    Though the son-in-law of the duke and the cousin of the duchess had
    every right to present him in a salon where he had never yet set foot,
    Maxime de Trailles did not deceive himself as to the meaning of an
    invitation thus given. He felt certain that the duke or the duchess
    had some need of him. Club life where men play cards with other men
    whom they do not receive in their own houses is by no means one of the
    most trifling signs of the present age.

    The Duc de Grandlieu did Maxime the honor of appearing to suffer from
    his gout. After several games of whist he went to bed, leaving his
    wife /tete-a-tete/ with Maxime and d'Ajuda. The duchess, seconded by
    the marquis, communicated her project to Monsieur de Trailles, and
    asked his assistance, while ostensibly asking only for his advice.
    Maxime listened to the end without committing himself, and waited till
    the duchess should ask point-blank for his co-operation before
    replying.

    "Madame, I fully understand you," he then said, casting on her and the
    marquis one of those shrewd, penetrating, astute, comprehensive
    glances by which such great scamps compromise their interlocutors.
    "D'Ajuda will tell you that if any one in Paris can conduct that
    difficult negotiation, it is I,--of course without mixing you up in
    it; without its being even known that I have come here this evening.
    Only, before anything is done, we must settle preliminaries. How much
    are you willing to sacrifice?"

    "All that is necessary."

    "Very well, then, Madame la duchesse. As the price of my efforts you
    must do me the honor to receive in your house and seriously protect
    Madame la Comtesse de Trailles."

    "What! are you married?" cried d'Ajuda.

    "I shall be married within a fortnight to the heiress of a rich but
    extremely bourgeois family,--a sacrifice to opinion! I imbibe the very
    spirit of my government, and start upon a new career. Consequently,
    Madame la duchesse will understand how important it is to me to have
    my wife adopted by her and by her family. I am certain of being made
    deputy by the resignation of my father-in-law, and I am promised a
    diplomatic
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