“Oh! it is quite sure, my lord. What must she not have felt, when she saw you at the theatre with another woman!—If she loved you only a little, she must have been deeply wounded in her self-esteem; if she loved you with passion, she must have been struck to the heart. At length, you see, wearied out with suffering, she has come to you.”
“So that, any way, she must have suffered—and that does not move your pity?” said Djalma, in a constrained, but still very mild voice.
“Before thinking of others, my lord, I think of your distresses; and they touch me too nearly to leave me any pity for other woes,” added Faringhea hypocritically, so greatly had the influence of Rodin already modified the character of the Phansegar.
“It is strange!” said Djalma, speaking to himself, as he viewed the half caste with a glance still kind but piercing.
“What is strange, my lord?”
“Nothing. But tell me, since your advice has hitherto prospered so well, what think you of the future?”
“Of the future, my lord?”
“Yes; in an hour I shall be with Mdlle. de Cardoville.”
“That is a serious matter, my lord. The whole future will depend upon this interview.”
“That is what I was just thinking.”