“Why, it is charming!” said Dinah to her mother.
All the good folks of Sancerre sat with eyes as large as five-franc pieces.
“Go on, I beg,” said the hostess.
Lousteau went on:—
210 OLYMPIA
“Your key——”
“Have you lost it?”
“It is in the arbor.”
“Let us hasten.”
“Can the Cardinal have taken it?”
“No, here it is.”
“What danger we have escaped!”
Olympia looked at the key, and
fancied she recognized it as her own.
But Rinaldo had changed it; his
cunning had triumphed; he had the
right key. Like a modern Cartouche,
he was no less skilful than bold,
and suspecting that nothing but a
vast treasure could require a duchess
to carry it constantly at her belt.
“Guess!” cried Lousteau. “The corresponding page is not here. We must look to page 212 to relieve our anxiety.”
212 OLYMPIA
“If the key had been lost?”
“He would now be a dead man.”
“Dead? But ought you not to
grant the last request he made, and
to give him his liberty on the con-
ditions——”
“You do not know him.”
“But—”
“Silence! I took you for my
lover, not for my confessor.”
Adolphe was silent.
“And then comes an exquisite galloping goat, a tail-piece drawn by Normand, and cut by Duplat.—the names are signed,” said Lousteau.
“Well, and then?” said such of the audience as understood.
“That is the end of the chapter,” said Lousteau. “The fact of this tailpiece changes my views as to the authorship. To have his book got up, under the Empire, with vignettes engraved on wood, the writer must have been a Councillor of State, or Madame Barthelemy-Hadot, or the late lamented Desforges, or Sewrin.”