"Frighten her!" he repeated proudly, and he had cause to be proud.
"Madame de Renal always doubted even in her happiest moments if my love was equal to her own.
In this case I have to subjugate a demon, consequently I must subjugate her."
He knew quite well that Mathilde would be in the library at eight o'clock in the morning of the following day. He did not appear before nine o'clock. He was burning with love, but his head dominated his heart.
Scarcely a single minute passed without his repeating to himself.
"Keep her obsessed by this great doubt. Does he love me?"
Her own brilliant position, together with the flattery of all who speak to her, tend a little too much to make her reassure herself.
He found her sitting on the divan pale and calm, but apparently completely incapable of making a single movement.
She held out her hand,
"Dear one, it is true I have offended you, perhaps you are angry with me."
Julien had not been expecting this simple tone.
He was on the point of betraying himself.
"You want guarantees, my dear, she added after a silence which she had hoped would be broken.
Take me away, let us leave for London. I shall be ruined, dishonoured for ever." She had the courage to take her hand away from Julien to cover her eyes with it.
All her feelings of reserve and feminine virtue had come back into her soul.
"Well, dishonour me," she said at last with a sigh, "that will be a guarantee."
"I was happy yesterday, because I had the courage to be severe with myself," thought Julien.
After a short silence he had sufficient control over his heart to say in an icy tone,
"Once we are on the road to London, once you are dishonoured, to employ your own expression, who will answer that you will still love me? that my very presence in the post-chaise will not seem importunate?
I am not a monster; to have ruined your reputation will only make me still more unhappy.
It is not your position in society which is the obstacle, it is unfortunately your own character.
Can you yourself guarantee that you will love me for eight days?"
"Ah! let her love me for eight days, just eight days," whispered Julien to himself, "and I will die of happiness.
What do I care for the future, what do I care for life?
And yet if I wish that divine happiness can commence this very minute, it only depends on me."
Mathilde saw that he was pensive.
"So I am completely unworthy of you," she said to him, taking his hand.
Julien kissed her, but at the same time the iron hand of duty gripped his heart.
If she sees how much I adore her I shall lose her.
And before leaving her arms, he had reassumed all that dignity which is proper to a man.
He managed on this and the following days to conceal his inordinate happiness. There were moments when he even refused himself the pleasure of clasping her in his arms.
At other times the delirium of happiness prevailed over all the counsels of prudence.
He had been accustomed to station himself near a bower of honeysuckle in the garden arranged in such a way so as to conceal the ladder when he had looked up at Mathilde's blind in the distance, and lamented her inconstancy.
A very big oak tree was quite near, and the trunk of that tree prevented him from being seen by the indiscreet.
As he passed with Mathilde over this very place which recalled his excessive unhappiness so vividly, the contrast between his former despair and his present happiness proved too much for his character. Tears inundated his eyes, and he carried his sweetheart's hand to his lips:
"It was here I used to live in my thoughts of you, it was from here that I used to look at that blind, and waited whole hours for the happy moment when I would see that hand open it."
His weakness was unreserved.
He portrayed the extremity of his former despair in genuine colours which could not possibly have been invented.
Short interjections testified to that present happiness which had put an end to that awful agony.
"My God, what am I doing?" thought Julien, suddenly recovering himself.
"I am ruining myself."
In his excessive alarm he thought that he already detected a diminution of the love in mademoiselle de la Mole's eyes.
It was an illusion, but Julien's face suddenly changed its expression and became overspread by a mortal pallor.
His eyes lost their fire, and an expression of haughtiness touched with malice soon succeeded to his look of the most genuine and unreserved love.
"But what is the matter with you, my dear," said Mathilde to him, both tenderly and anxiously.
"I am lying," said Julien irritably, "and I am lying to you.
I am reproaching myself for it, and yet God knows that I respect you sufficiently not to lie to you.
You love me, you are devoted to me, and I have no need of praises in order to please you."
"Great heavens! are all the charming things you have been telling me for the last two minutes mere phrases?"
"And I reproach myself for it keenly, dear one.