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A former soldier seduces and manipulates women in order to rise through Parisian society.

Page 363 of 405
Table of Contents

XVI

“It may be so, but he is stupid, ruined by play, and worn out by dissipation. It is really a nice match for you, so pretty, so fresh, and so intelligent.”

She inquired, smiling: “What have you against him?”

“I, nothing.”

“Yes, you have. He is not all that you say.”

“Nonsense. He is a fool and an intriguer.”

She turned round somewhat, leaving off looking into the water, and said: “Come, what is the matter with you?”

He said, as though a secret was being wrenched from the bottom of his heart: “I⁠—I⁠—am jealous of him.”

She was slightly astonished, saying: “You?”

“Yes, I.”

“Why so?”

“Because I am in love with you, and you know it very well, you naughty girl.”

She said, in a severe tone: “You are mad, Pretty-boy.”

He replied; “I know very well that I am mad. Ought I to have admitted that⁠—I, a married man, to you, a young girl? I am more than mad, I am guilty. I have no possible hope, and the thought of that drives me out of my senses. And when I hear it said that you are going to be married, I have fits of rage enough to kill someone. You must forgive me this, Susan.”

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