“My mistress,” he thought, “never, evidently, but my wife. Why not?”
But the very next moment he became a prey to the bitterest discouragement. He thought that perhaps Mlle. Lucienne might have some capital interest in thus making a confidant of him. She had not told him the explanation given her by the peace-officer. Had she not, perhaps, succeeded in lifting a corner of the veil which covered the secret of her birth? Was she on the track of her enemies? and had she discovered the motive of their animosity?
“Is it possible,” thought Maxence, “that I should be but one of the powers in the game she is playing? How do I know, that, if she wins, she will not cast me off?”
In the midst of these thoughts, he had gradually fallen asleep, murmuring to the last the name of Lucienne.
The creaking of his opening door woke him up suddenly. He started to his feet, and met Mlle. Lucienne coming in.
“How is this?” said she. “You did not go to bed?”
“You recommended me to reflect,” he replied. “I’ve been reflecting.”
He looked at his watch: it was twelve o’clock.
“Which, however,” he added, “did not keep me from going to sleep.”
All the doubts that besieged him at the moment when he had been overcome by sleep now came back to his mind with painful vividness.