'Another sort of courage is needed to write that sort of thing.'
"'I give him credit for plenty of courage,' she answered; 'he is faithful to me.'
"I was greatly tempted to show myself suddenly among the railers, like the shade of Banquo in Macbeth.
I should have lost a mistress, but I had a friend!
But love inspired me all at once, with one of those treacherous and fallacious subtleties that it can use to soothe all our pangs.
"If Foedora loved me, I thought, she would be sure to disguise her feelings by some mocking jest.
How often the heart protests against a lie on the lips!
"Well, very soon my audacious rival, left alone with the countess, rose to go.
"'What! already?' asked she in a coaxing voice that set my heart beating.
'Will you not give me a few more minutes?
Have you nothing more to say to me? will you never sacrifice any of your pleasures for me?'
"He went away.
"'Ah!' she yawned; 'how very tiresome they all are!'
"She pulled a cord energetically till the sound of a bell rang through the place; then, humming a few notes of Pria che spunti, the countess entered her room.
No one had ever heard her sing; her muteness had called forth the wildest explanations.
She had promised her first lover, so it was said, who had been held captive by her talent, and whose jealousy over her stretched beyond his grave, that she would never allow others to experience a happiness that he wished to be his and his alone.
"I exerted every power of my soul to catch the sounds.
Higher and higher rose the notes; Foedora's life seemed to dilate within her; her throat poured forth all its richest tones; something well-nigh divine entered into the melody.
There was a bright purity and clearness of tone in the countess' voice, a thrilling harmony which reached the heart and stirred its pulses.
Musicians are seldom unemotional; a woman who could sing like that must know how to love indeed.
Her beautiful voice made one more puzzle in a woman mysterious enough before.
I beheld her then, as plainly as I see you at this moment. She seemed to listen to herself, to experience a secret rapture of her own; she felt, as it were, an ecstasy like that of love.
"She stood before the hearth during the execution of the principal theme of the rondo; and when she ceased her face changed. She looked tired; her features seemed to alter.
She had laid the mask aside; her part as an actress was over.
Yet the faded look that came over her beautiful face, a result either of this performance or of the evening's fatigues, had its charms, too.
"'This is her real self,' I thought.
"She set her foot on a bronze bar of the fender as if to warm it, took off her gloves, and drew over her head the gold chain from which her bejeweled scent-bottle hung.
It gave me a quite indescribable pleasure to watch the feline grace of every movement; the supple grace a cat displays as it adjusts its toilette in the sun.
She looked at herself in the mirror and said aloud ill-humoredly—'I did not look well this evening, my complexion is going with alarming rapidity; perhaps I ought to keep earlier hours, and give up this life of dissipation. Does Justine mean to trifle with me?'
She rang again; her maid hurried in.
Where she had been I cannot tell; she came in by a secret staircase.
I was anxious to make a study of her.
I had lodged accusations, in my romantic imaginings, against this invisible waiting-woman, a tall, well-made brunette.
"'Did madame ring?'
"'Yes, twice,' answered Foedora; 'are you really growing deaf nowadays?'
"'I was preparing madame's milk of almonds.'
"Justine knelt down before her, unlaced her sandals and drew them off, while her mistress lay carelessly back on her cushioned armchair beside the fire, yawned, and scratched her head.
Every movement was perfectly natural; there was nothing whatever to indicate the secret sufferings or emotions with which I had credited her.
"'George must be in love!' she remarked. 'I shall dismiss him.
He has drawn the curtains again to-night.
What does he mean by it?'
"All the blood in my veins rushed to my heart at this observation, but no more was said about curtains.
"'Life is very empty,' the countess went on.
'Ah! be careful not to scratch me as you did yesterday.
Just look here, I still have the marks of your nails about me,' and she held out a silken knee.
She thrust her bare feet into velvet slippers bound with swan's-down, and unfastened her dress, while Justine prepared to comb her hair.
"'You ought to marry, madame, and have children.'
"'Children!' she cried; 'it wants no more than that to finish me at once; and a husband!
What man is there to whom I could——? Was my hair well arranged to-night?'
"'Not particularly.'