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    Chapter 26

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    Chapter XXVI:
    The Two Friends.

    At the very time M. de Baisemeaux was showing Aramis the prisoners in the
    Bastile, a carriage drew up at Madame de Belliere's door, and, at that
    still early hour, a young woman alighted, her head muffled in a silk
    hood. When the servants announced Madame Vanel to Madame de Belliere,
    the latter was engaged, or rather was absorbed, in reading a letter,
    which she hurriedly concealed. She had hardly finished her morning
    toilette, her maid being still in the next room. At the name - at the
    footsteps of Marguerite Vanel, Madame de Belliere ran to meet her. She
    fancied she could detect in her friend's eyes a brightness which was
    neither that of health nor of pleasure. Marguerite embraced her, pressed
    her hands, and hardly allowed her time to speak. "Dearest," she said,
    "have you forgotten me? Have you quite given yourself up to the
    pleasures of the court?"

    "I have not even seen the marriage _fetes_."

    "What are you doing with yourself, then?"

    "I am getting ready to leave for Belliere."

    "For Belliere?"

    "Yes."

    "You are becoming rustic in your tastes, then; I delight to see you so
    disposed. But you are pale."

    "No, I am perfectly well."

    "So much the better; I was becoming uneasy about you. You do not know
    what I have been told."

    "People say so many things."

    "Yes, but this is very singular."

    "How well you know how to excite curiosity, Marguerite."

    "Well, I was afraid of vexing you."

    "Never; you have yourself always admired me for my evenness of temper."

    "Well, then, it is said that - no, I shall never be able to tell you."

    "Do not let us talk about it, then," said Madame de Belliere, who
    detected the ill-nature that was concealed by all these prefaces, yet
    felt the most anxious curiosity on the subject.

    "Well, then, my dear marquise, it is said, for some time past, you no
    longer continue to regret Monsieur de Belliere as you used to."

    "It is an ill-natured report, Marguerite. I do regret, and shall always
    regret, my husband; but it is now two years since he died. I am only
    twenty-eight years old, and my grief at his loss ought not always to

    control every action and thought of my life. You, Marguerite, who are
    the model of a wife, would not believe me if I were to say so."

    "Why not? Your heart is so soft and yielding," she said, spitefully.

    "Yours is so, too, Marguerite, and yet I did not perceive that you
    allowed yourself to be overcome by grief when your heart was wounded."
    These words were in direct allusion to Marguerite's rupture with the
    superintendent, and were also a veiled but direct reproach made against
    her friend's heart.

    As if she only
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