He stood and watched her meditatively. He was wondering why it was that grief like this had never touched him so before. His eyes were moist. Though he had been many things in his life, he had never been abashed; but a curious timidity possessed him now.
He leaned over and touched her shoulder with a kindly abruptness, a friendly awkwardness. “Cheer up,” he said. “You shall have your child, if Dauphin can help you to it.”
“If he ever tries to take him from me”—she sprang to her feet, her face in a fury—“I will—”
For an instant her overpowering passion possessed her, and she stood violent and wilful; then, under his fixed, exacting gaze, her rage ceased; she became still and grey and quiet.
“I shall know to-morrow evening, Monsieur? Where?” Her voice was weak and distant.
He thought for a time. “At my house-at nine o’clock,” he answered at last.
“Monsieur,” she said, in a choking voice, “if I get my child again, I will bless you to my dying day.”
“No, no; it will be Dauphin you must bless,” he said, and opened the door for her. As she disappeared into the dusk and silence he adjusted his eye-glass, and stared musingly after her, though there was nothing to see save the summer darkness, nothing to hear save the croak of the frogs in the village pond. He was thinking of the trial of Joseph Nadeau, and of a woman in the gallery, who laughed.
“Monsieur, Monsieur,” called the voice of the Notary from the bedroom.