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Queen’s Necklace, The
Chapter 73
Alexandre Dumas
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       _ CHAPTER LXXIII
       "Roi ne puis, prince ne daigne,
       Rohan je suis."[B]
       [B] The motto of the Rohans.
       "Ah!" cried the queen, immediately they entered, "you have brought a reinforcement, M. Boehmer; so much the better."
       Boehmer kneeled at her feet, and Bossange followed his example.
       "Gentlemen," said she, "I have now grown calm, and an idea has come into my head which has modified my opinion with regard to you. It seems to me that we have both been duped."
       "Ah, madame, you suspect me no longer. Forger was a dreadful word."
       "No, I do not suspect you now."
       "Does your majesty suspect any one else?"
       "Reply to my questions. You say you have not these diamonds?"
       "No, madame, we have not."
       "It then matters little to you that I sent them--that is my affair. Did you not see Madame de la Motte?"
       "Yes, madame."
       "And she gave you nothing from me?"
       "No, madame; she only said to us, 'Wait.'"
       "But this letter--who brought it?"
       "An unknown messenger, during the night."
       She rang, and a servant entered.
       "Send for Madame de la Motte. And," continued the queen to M. Boehmer, "did you see M. de Rohan?"
       "Yes, madame; he paid us a visit in order to ask."
       "Good!" said the queen. "I wish to hear no more now; but if he be mixed up with this affair, I think you need not despair. I think I can guess what Madame de la Motte meant by saying 'Wait.' Meanwhile, go to M. de Rohan, and tell him all you have told us, and that I know it."
       The jewelers had a renewed spark of hope; only Bossange said that the receipt was a false one, and that that was a crime.
       "True," replied Marie Antoinette, "if you did not write it, it is a crime; but to prove this I must confront you with the person whom I charged to return you the jewels."
       "Whenever your majesty pleases; we do not fear the test."
       "Go first to M. de Rohan; he alone can enlighten you."
       "And will your majesty permit us to bring you his answer?"
       "Yes; but I dare say I shall know all before you do."
       When they were gone she was restless and unquiet, and despatched courier after courier for Madame de la Motte.
       We will, however, leave her for the present, and follow the jewelers in their search after the truth.
       The cardinal was at home, reading, with a rage impossible to describe, a little note which Madame de la Motte had just sent him, as she said, from Versailles. It was harsh, forbidding any hope, ordering him to think no more of the past, not to appear again at Versailles, and ending with an appeal to his loyalty not to attempt to renew relations which were become impossible.
       "Coquette, capricious, perfidious!" cried he. "Here are four letters which she has written to me, each more unjust and tyrannical than the other. She encouraged me only for a caprice, and now sacrifices me to a new one."
       It was at this moment that the jewelers presented themselves. Three times he refused them admittance, and each time the servant came back, saying that they would not go without an audience. "Let them come in, then," said he.
       "What means this rudeness, gentlemen? No one owes you anything here."
       The jewelers, driven to despair, made a half-menacing gesture.
       "Are you mad?" asked the cardinal.
       "Monseigneur," replied Boehmer, with a sigh, "do us justice, and do not compel us to be rude to an illustrious prince."
       "Either you are not mad, in which case my servants shall throw you out of the window; or you are mad, and they shall simply push you out of the door."
       "Monseigneur, we are not mad, but we have been robbed."
       "What is that to me? I am not lieutenant of police."
       "But you have had the necklace in your hands, and in justice----"
       "The necklace! is it the necklace that is stolen?"
       "Yes, monseigneur."
       "Well, what does the queen say about it?"
       "She sent me to you."
       "She is very amiable; but what can I do, my poor fellows?"
       "You can tell us, monseigneur, what has been done with it."
       "I?"
       "Doubtless."
       "Do you think I stole the necklace from the queen?"
       "It is not the queen from whom it was stolen."
       "Mon Dieu! from whom, then?"
       "The queen denies having had it in her possession."
       "How! she denies it? But I thought you had an acknowledgment from her."
       "She says it is a forged one."
       "Decidedly, you are mad!" cried the cardinal.
       "We simply speak the truth."
       "Then she denied it because some one was there."
       "No, monseigneur. And this is not all: not only does the queen deny her own acknowledgment, but she produced a receipt from us, purporting that we had received back the necklace."
       "A receipt from you?"
       "Which also is a forgery, M. le Cardinal--you know it."
       "A forgery, and I know it!"
       "Assuredly, for you came to confirm what Madame de la Motte had said; and you knew that we had sold the necklace to the queen."
       "Come," said the cardinal, "this seems a serious affair. This is what I did: first, I bought the necklace of you for her majesty, and paid you 100,000 francs."
       "True, monseigneur."
       "Afterwards you told me that the queen had acknowledged the debt in writing, and fixed the periods of payment."
       "We said so. Will your eminence look at this signature?"
       He looked at it, and said directly, "'Marie Antoinette of France:' you have been deceived, gentlemen; this is not her signature; she is of the House of Austria."
       "Then," cried the jewelers, "Madame de la Motte must know the forger and the robber."
       The cardinal appeared struck with this. He acted like the queen; he rang, and said, "Send for Madame de la Motte." His servants went after Jeanne's carriage, which had not long left the hotel.
       M. Boehmer continued, "But where is the necklace?"
       "How can I tell?" cried the cardinal; "I gave it to the queen. I know no more."
       "We must have our necklace, or our money," cried the jewelers.
       "Gentlemen, this is not my business."
       "It is Madame de la Motte," cried they in despair, "who has ruined us."
       "I forbid you to accuse her here."
       "Some one must be guilty; some one wrote the forged papers."
       "Was it I?" asked M. de Rohan, haughtily.
       "Monseigneur, we do not wish to say so."
       "Well, who then?"
       "Monseigneur, we desire an explanation."
       "Wait till I have one myself."
       "But, monseigneur, what are we to say to the queen? For she accused us at first."
       "What does she say now?"
       "She says that either you or Madame de la Motte has the necklace, for she has not."
       "Well," replied the cardinal, pale with rage and shame, "go and tell her--no, tell her nothing; there is scandal enough. But to-morrow I officiate at the chapel at Versailles: when I approach the queen, come to us; I will ask her again if she has the necklace, and you shall hear what she replies; if she denies it before me, then, gentlemen, I am a Rohan, and will pay." And with these words, pronounced with an indescribable dignity, he dismissed them. _
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本书目录

Prologue.--The Predictions
Chapter 1. Two Unknown Ladies
Chapter 2. An Interior
Chapter 3. Jeanne De La Motte Valois
Chapter 4. Belus
Chapter 5. The Road To Versailles
Chapter 6. Laurent
Chapter 7. The Queen's Bed-Chamber
Chapter 8. The Queen's Petite Levee
Chapter 9. The Swiss Lake
Chapter 10. The Tempter
Chapter 11. M. De Suffren
Chapter 12. M. De Charny
Chapter 13. The One Hundred Louis Of The Queen
Chapter 14. M. Fingret
Chapter 15. The Cardinal De Rohan
Chapter 16. Mesmer And St. Martin
Chapter 17. The Bucket
Chapter 18. Mademoiselle Oliva
Chapter 19. Monsieur Beausire
Chapter 20. Gold
Chapter 21. La Petite Maison
Chapter 22. Some Words About The Opera
Chapter 23. The Ball At The Opera
Chapter 24. The Examination
Chapter 25. The Academy Of M. Beausire
Chapter 26. The Ambassador
Chapter 27. Messrs. Boehmer And Bossange
Chapter 28. The Ambassador's Hotel
Chapter 29. The Bargain
Chapter 30. The Journalist's House
Chapter 31. How Two Friends Became Enemies
Chapter 32. The House In The Rue St. Gilles
Chapter 33. The Head Of The Taverney Family
Chapter 34. The Stanzas Of M. De Provence
Chapter 35. The Princess De Lamballe
Chapter 36. The Queen
Chapter 37. An Alibi
Chapter 38. M. De Crosne.
Chapter 39. The Temptress
Chapter 40. Two Ambitions That Wish To Pass For Two Loves
Chapter 41. Faces Under Their Masks
Chapter 42. In Which M. Ducorneau Understands Nothing Of What Is Passing
Chapter 43. Illusions And Realities
Chapter 44. Oliva Begins To Ask What They Want Of Her
Chapter 45. The Deserted House
Chapter 46. Jeanne The Protectress
Chapter 47. Jeanne Protected
Chapter 48. The Queen's Portfolio
Chapter 49. In Which We Find Dr. Louis
Chapter 50. Aegri Somnia
Chapter 51. Andree
Chapter 52. Delirium
Chapter 53. Convalescence
Chapter 54. Two Bleeding Hearts
Chapter 55. The Minister Of Finance
Chapter 56. The Cardinal De Rohan
Chapter 57. Debtor And Creditor
Chapter 58. Family Accounts
Chapter 59. Marie Antoinette As Queen, And Madame De La Motte As Woman
Chapter 60. The Receipt Of Mm. Boehmer And Bossange, And The Gratitude Of The Queen
Chapter 61 The Prisoner
Chapter 62. The Look Out
Chapter 63. The Two Neighbors
Chapter 64. The Rendezvous
Chapter 65. The Queen's Hand
Chapter 66. Woman And Queen
Chapter 67. Woman And Demon
Chapter 68. The Night
Chapter 69. The Conge
Chapter 70. The Jealousy Of The Cardinal
Chapter 71. The Flight
Chapter 72. The Letter And The Receipt
Chapter 73
Chapter 74. Love And Diplomacy
Chapter 75. Charny, Cardinal, And Queen
Chapter 76. Explanations
Chapter 77. The Arrest
Chapter 78. The Proces-Verbal
Chapter 79. The Last Accusation
Chapter 80. The Proposal Of Marriage
Chapter 81. St. Denis
Chapter 82. A Dead Heart
Chapter 83. In Which It Is Explained Why The Baron De Taverney Grew Fat
Chapter 84. The Father And The Fiancee
Chapter 85. After The Dragon, The Viper
Chapter 86. How It Came To Pass That M. Beausire Was Tracked By The Agents Of M. De Crosne
Chapter 87. The Turtles Are Caged
Chapter 88. The Last Hope Lost
Chapter 89. The Baptism Of The Little Beausire
Chapter 90. The Trial
Chapter 91. The Execution
Chapter 92. The Marriage