. . What more is there to be
said? And all this recalls what my father used to say. De Brissac and
the Marquis de Perigny were deadly enemies. It seems that De Brissac
had one love affair; Madame la Marquise while she was a Savoy princess.
She loved the marquis, and he married her because De Brissac wanted
her. But De Brissac evidently never had his revenge."
Madame felt that she could no longer sustain the conversation. In her
own mind she was positive that her daughter and the son of her old
flame had never met. A man does not fall in love with a woman after he
refuses to look at her; and the Chevalier had refused to look at
Gabrielle. Why? Her mind was not subtile enough to pierce the veil.
A lackey approached Beaufort.
"I was directed to give this note to your Highness." The lackey bowed
profoundly and retired.
Beaufort opened the note, scanned the lines, and grew deadly pale.
What he read was this: "Monsieur le Comte's private papers are missing,
taken by his assailant, who entered the hotel for that purpose. Be
careful." The note was unsigned.
At this moment Bernouin approached Mazarin and whispered something in
his ear.
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